Hi Lewm,
Congratulations on your purchase.
The only Mk-I I've seen did not have a lateral balance weight either, so I can't report on its benefits.
Lateral balance refers to equal left/right loading of the bearings and not to azimuth.
Yes, the 505 Mk I is capable of azimuth adjustment, but only if you purchase an accessory headshell like the one sold by Sumiko, Ikeda, or the Artisan Audio headshell I'll soon be stocking.
None of the 505's do VTA on the fly, but they do VTF (tracking force) on the fly.
The Mk-I and the two Mk-III's I've experienced all use the exact same VTA locking mechanism - the rotating wand which tightens a collet around the arm stub.
With respect to tracking force, I always calibrate the tracking force with these arms. The procedure is simple: set the dial to the desired number (let's say 2.0 g for example) and then adjust the counterweight until your digital scale reads out that same number (e.g. 2.0 g). In this way, you know that your starting point is spot on - even if the dial isn't perfectly zeroed out or linear.
Cheers,
Thom @ Galibier
Congratulations on your purchase.
The only Mk-I I've seen did not have a lateral balance weight either, so I can't report on its benefits.
Lateral balance refers to equal left/right loading of the bearings and not to azimuth.
Yes, the 505 Mk I is capable of azimuth adjustment, but only if you purchase an accessory headshell like the one sold by Sumiko, Ikeda, or the Artisan Audio headshell I'll soon be stocking.
None of the 505's do VTA on the fly, but they do VTF (tracking force) on the fly.
The Mk-I and the two Mk-III's I've experienced all use the exact same VTA locking mechanism - the rotating wand which tightens a collet around the arm stub.
With respect to tracking force, I always calibrate the tracking force with these arms. The procedure is simple: set the dial to the desired number (let's say 2.0 g for example) and then adjust the counterweight until your digital scale reads out that same number (e.g. 2.0 g). In this way, you know that your starting point is spot on - even if the dial isn't perfectly zeroed out or linear.
Cheers,
Thom @ Galibier