OK, now I am confused and a bit concerned. I used the Tesla meter to measure stray magnetic fields (as the device tells me) and lo and behold the only area that had high readings was at the top of the platter mostly on the right side of the table. Right where the cartridge tracks the record!
I repeated the measurements with the table grounded and not grounded, with my lead mat on and off, with the platter spinning and stopped, with the power on and off.
I even tried it on a TT-81 that hasn't spun in a year and got similar results! Is this a problem for DD turntables?
There is something in the TT itself that emits a notable magnetic field - I would guess it is the motor. I don't know how to address this but I certainly think that the magnetic operation of the cartridge is affected by this and not in a good way.
I would really like to hear that someone else has repeated this experiment and what they found.
Time to investigate Mu metal and how I can fashion a shield.
Gary
I repeated the measurements with the table grounded and not grounded, with my lead mat on and off, with the platter spinning and stopped, with the power on and off.
I even tried it on a TT-81 that hasn't spun in a year and got similar results! Is this a problem for DD turntables?
There is something in the TT itself that emits a notable magnetic field - I would guess it is the motor. I don't know how to address this but I certainly think that the magnetic operation of the cartridge is affected by this and not in a good way.
I would really like to hear that someone else has repeated this experiment and what they found.
Time to investigate Mu metal and how I can fashion a shield.
Gary