Nick sr,
I imagined that the turntable produces vibrations when it rotates. These mechanical rotations are not the same as the indentations on the record and would be transmitted to a coupled tonearm (no matter how small the transmission). To isolate the tt is to isolate it from external vibrations but not its own self produced ones: here you can consider the difference that we get from isolating CDp's say with rollerblocks or the like!
To decouple the tonearm from the tt would therefore be to remove these additional vibrations. The issue about mating with the vibrations on the record would then (once the decoupled tonearm and armpod are equally isolated) become a question of the quality of bearings and trackng force accuracy and of the ability of that tonearm to match the movement of the indentations that are on the record's surface.
This is just me trying to understand what I hear in a (possibly) completely 'unscientific' way.
I imagined that the turntable produces vibrations when it rotates. These mechanical rotations are not the same as the indentations on the record and would be transmitted to a coupled tonearm (no matter how small the transmission). To isolate the tt is to isolate it from external vibrations but not its own self produced ones: here you can consider the difference that we get from isolating CDp's say with rollerblocks or the like!
To decouple the tonearm from the tt would therefore be to remove these additional vibrations. The issue about mating with the vibrations on the record would then (once the decoupled tonearm and armpod are equally isolated) become a question of the quality of bearings and trackng force accuracy and of the ability of that tonearm to match the movement of the indentations that are on the record's surface.
This is just me trying to understand what I hear in a (possibly) completely 'unscientific' way.