Albert,
If the rubbery protective sleeve on the cueing support bar were just the tiniest bit softer, problem #2 wouldn't exist. There'd be enough friction to keep the arm from sliding randomly left or right during cueing. Maybe your arm was supplied so.
On mine and on one I installed for a dealer's customer the rubber sleeve is so hard there's no "grip" on the armtube. Since antiskating is disengaged until after the stylus is down, the armtube floats willy-nilly in whichever direction the wind's blowing. It's a simple fix though, for those who need it.
4yanx,
It does take getting used to. I guarantee every new user will do the following once: forget to re-raise the cueing lever before moving the arm back out over a new side. This gets very exciting. There's nothing quite like letting go of the finger lift and watching some fancy cartridge PLONK! down onto a record to invoke terror and build careful habits. ;-)
If the rubbery protective sleeve on the cueing support bar were just the tiniest bit softer, problem #2 wouldn't exist. There'd be enough friction to keep the arm from sliding randomly left or right during cueing. Maybe your arm was supplied so.
On mine and on one I installed for a dealer's customer the rubber sleeve is so hard there's no "grip" on the armtube. Since antiskating is disengaged until after the stylus is down, the armtube floats willy-nilly in whichever direction the wind's blowing. It's a simple fix though, for those who need it.
4yanx,
It does take getting used to. I guarantee every new user will do the following once: forget to re-raise the cueing lever before moving the arm back out over a new side. This gets very exciting. There's nothing quite like letting go of the finger lift and watching some fancy cartridge PLONK! down onto a record to invoke terror and build careful habits. ;-)