tone arm drifts towards the outside when lowering


I'm setting up a new table and cart. set the alignment, VTF, VTA and it sounds very nice.

When I lower or raise the tone arm it "drifts" to the outside.

It tracks fine on the record.

thoughts?
relsteamboat
correct directives from the previous 2 posters. Use a bubble level to make sure the table is level. Also, make sure the arm is perpedicular to the table itself. If you have an anti-skating adjustment it could be set very loose in the sense of it trying to counteract the rotational forces exhibited by the TT. You want the anti-skating force exerted on the arm to be pushing towards the center of the platter. Also, check your down force adjustment to make sure that the cartridge is sitting on the surface with not too little pressure. Now, here is something that effected my setup in the same way. I had rewired my tonearm and after seeing the same phenomenon as you, I realized that the wires were oriented in a way as to exert some force on the tonearm. The tonearm would just lightly move as you described until I re-adjusted the positioning of the wires in relation to the arm mechanism. Good luck.
An issue here. Quoting VPI , without anti-skating , and using a pivoted arm with an offset head, "Putting a stylus down on a flat grooveless record will cause the arm to shoot in toward the center of the record." If you use anti-skating at all (some don't), you want to COUNTERACT this tendency, not bolster it. Thus the OP's situation is better than the opposite, but it sounds like he has a bit too much anti-skating, for whatever reason.
check to make sure the contact points between the arm and lift platform are free of dust and oil.
Check your antiskating by carefully viewing the cartridge head-on while a record is being played. Viewed from that perspective, the cantilever should be at the same left vs. right angle relative to the cartridge body that it is at when the stylus is lifted off of the record (which for most properly designed and manufactured cartridges will be straight ahead).

In my experience, most of the guidelines for setting anti-skating force which may be offered by tonearm or turntable manufacturers result in too much force being applied, and I have typically found that about 2/3 of the recommended setting gives the right results.

Regards,
-- Al