TT drive belt comparison


Hi folks,

Last night and today we A/B'd the two drive belts that came with our new Teres 265. One is the standard silk string as explained on the Teres web site. The other is a 1/2" wide length of spliced magnetic tape. Chris Brady is now supplying a 1/2" high motor pulley, at least on some models, and is testing a variety of belt materials.

SUMMARY: the magnetic tape beats the silk string very handily

Why? Because the tape provides better speed stability. The audible differences are at the micro-detail and instrumental/voice timbre levels, but they are clear and entirely in favor of the tape. The tape significantly reduces the time-smearing of notes, making the whole system sound faster and cleaner.

Soprano soloists and choruses are notably clearer, cleaner, better differentiated, less shrill, less sibilant. Very high-pitched organ notes are far less smeared or distorted, as is every note and overtone on that notoriously difficult beast, the harpsichord. The voice of a bowed cello or bass is weightier and more authentic because each vibration of the string is now clear. Individual voices in the orchestra are more individual, less mushed together. Nearly all attacks are quicker and weightier.

I could go on but you get the idea. If your Teres (or other TT) will accomodate a tape rather than a string or rubber belt, I recommend you try it. It's fussier to set up. The motor and platter must be levelled exactly the same or the tape will crawl off the pulley. I shimmed the cups beneath our motor spikes with varous thicknesses of paper and now the tape stays in the center of the pulley.

Good job Chris!
dougdeacon
You're just jealous because you don't get to fiddle with belts and strings! :)

Wouldn't spinning a 30+ pound platter via DD require a larger, much higher torque motor? How would Teres maintain "almost non-existent levels of cogging and vibration" without driving costs up to the Walker level?
Dougdeacon...In my time I did my share of fiddling with belts and strings, not to mention little rubber idler wheels(which preceeded belts). I guess it's your turn. Enjoy!

With regard to motor power, the weight of the platter has minimal impact on torque requirement, unless you are a disc jockey and want to get up to speed fast. Motor torque depends on bearing friction, which, for a suitable bearing, varies only slightly with loading.
Eldartford... it's okay, I've always been a slow starter. There's not much DJ work for us classical lovers and a Teres isn't exactly portable anyway. I guess it might be if it were direct drive, one less box to lug around...

You certainly raise an interesting question. Almost makes me want to mod my TT for DD and report results. Now where did I put that chainsaw?
Hi

I supplied a few Teres owners with our drive belts which we use on our Hydraulic Reference model turntable, they must have been impressed with the results as they bought another ten.