Sorry to the OP for my generic response, not related to his arm. I read "servo controlled" and assumed we were discussing a linear tracker. "Servo dampened" would have clued me in to googling first. Thanks to Hiho and Kirkus for addressing the real question.
I also wonder how an active servo mechanism could respond effectively to the varying resonance damping characteristics of different cartridge suspensions. Every adjustment it would make would be after the event.
A servo could be adjusted to control horizontal and lateral resonance frequencies of the whole arm, but that doesn't address the real challenge in cartridge/tonearm interaction - controlling internal resonances that feed back into the cartridge and alter the signal it generates.
The internal energies in a cartridge/tonearm occur at all sonic frequencies and with constantly varying amplitudes, all at the speed of sound. Quite a challenge for an active system to deal with.
I also wonder how an active servo mechanism could respond effectively to the varying resonance damping characteristics of different cartridge suspensions. Every adjustment it would make would be after the event.
A servo could be adjusted to control horizontal and lateral resonance frequencies of the whole arm, but that doesn't address the real challenge in cartridge/tonearm interaction - controlling internal resonances that feed back into the cartridge and alter the signal it generates.
The internal energies in a cartridge/tonearm occur at all sonic frequencies and with constantly varying amplitudes, all at the speed of sound. Quite a challenge for an active system to deal with.