Lewm: My table basically went through all the symptoms you describe and then some. My tech reasoned through and tried testing many of the complex explanations. But in the end, we discovered that it was all attributable to bad solder joints on the 'feed thru eyelets'. He resoldered ALL of them. He said he knew of companies that used such type of boards and that they had reliability problems. Since you're handy with a solder gun, I'd try this brute method first before potentially wasting time investigating the subtler possibilities.
Aigenga: No worries. The thing is, I did note the number of turns and even marked the spot but when I put it back together the platter was completely locked up. Obviously, I screwed up somewhere--but I believe I know how to count, so it's still unclear to me what happened. I have zero plans on doing that again for the next 30 years.
Halcro: I don't have a general problem reproducing bass, but the double basses on that Mahler record, while better after the pantsing, sound far from adequate. I blame my speakers or the lack of subwoofers. Or, for all I know, it's the record itself. I just purchased another better copy of that record so I can test the last possibility soon.
fwiw, I don't have anything invested in the new set up except 15 minutes of time (2 to take the cover off and the rest to realign the tonearm and cartridge). The improvement is remarkable. It's along the same trajectory as the improvements I noted when I moved from my sp10 to the victor.
Aigenga: No worries. The thing is, I did note the number of turns and even marked the spot but when I put it back together the platter was completely locked up. Obviously, I screwed up somewhere--but I believe I know how to count, so it's still unclear to me what happened. I have zero plans on doing that again for the next 30 years.
Halcro: I don't have a general problem reproducing bass, but the double basses on that Mahler record, while better after the pantsing, sound far from adequate. I blame my speakers or the lack of subwoofers. Or, for all I know, it's the record itself. I just purchased another better copy of that record so I can test the last possibility soon.
fwiw, I don't have anything invested in the new set up except 15 minutes of time (2 to take the cover off and the rest to realign the tonearm and cartridge). The improvement is remarkable. It's along the same trajectory as the improvements I noted when I moved from my sp10 to the victor.