Andrew,
We've never evaluated the sound with the counterweight screws at different tightnesses. I've always kept them quite snug to avoid weight movement, as you said. This is especially important since I'm back there every day messing with O-rings.
My baseline VTF (sans O-rings) never drifts by more than .01g, and that could be attributable to variations in weighing technique, air currents, etc.
I agree with Ralph and Albert on the improved tolerances in the newer arms. Dan_Ed's VTA threads are notably tighter than mine. It still can't hurt to take up the backlash, as Albert said. Repeatable results really matter since the VTA sweet spot is so tiny - and I sure wish someone could explain that!
Tip #11 (old news to many):
If you don't use the damping fluid, lift the arm and remove the damping trough. It's a resonance trap which feeds airborne energies back into the arm. Removing it lowers the sound floor, a nice little upgrade for free.
Leave the dipping screw in place, snugged down tight. It provides useful effective mass and removing it impairs bass and dynamics a tad (at least with our cartridge, it could vary with others).
We've never evaluated the sound with the counterweight screws at different tightnesses. I've always kept them quite snug to avoid weight movement, as you said. This is especially important since I'm back there every day messing with O-rings.
My baseline VTF (sans O-rings) never drifts by more than .01g, and that could be attributable to variations in weighing technique, air currents, etc.
I agree with Ralph and Albert on the improved tolerances in the newer arms. Dan_Ed's VTA threads are notably tighter than mine. It still can't hurt to take up the backlash, as Albert said. Repeatable results really matter since the VTA sweet spot is so tiny - and I sure wish someone could explain that!
Tip #11 (old news to many):
If you don't use the damping fluid, lift the arm and remove the damping trough. It's a resonance trap which feeds airborne energies back into the arm. Removing it lowers the sound floor, a nice little upgrade for free.
Leave the dipping screw in place, snugged down tight. It provides useful effective mass and removing it impairs bass and dynamics a tad (at least with our cartridge, it could vary with others).