by Rob-NYC »
Fri Sep 06, 2013 6:45 am
Steve, the answer to this sort of problem is NOT more pressure. that just ruins records.
Two suggestions:
1) Check that the trip switch spring that biases the switch is doing it's job and making the trip action easier. In general I set them with the biasing spring as far down as possible without it causing erroneous tripping The trip "whisker" ideally should not load the arm till the arm is in/right near the end spiral.
2) Be sure that the arm is balanced. There should be no tendency for the arm to want to swing outward or inward at any point of it's arc. This can be tricky to determine give the nature of the arm position, but try to adjust it so that it will ride on your finger nail without slipping off.
That cart will track just fine at 3 grams especially if you eliminate the damping. Ron and I disagree on this, but I have long disabled the vertical damping cylinder on all my location machines. This allows the arm to more quickly follow minor variations in the record "flatness". To eliminate the damping, loosen the locknut at the canter-front of the arm's cylinder. then back the screw in the center of it just enough to allow the arm to freely move as it would following vertical warp on a record. Then re-tighten the locknut -don not over-tighten.
That arm/cart should work well with springs at their minimum force.
I used two HLPCs on location and currently have an LPC floor model in service. This is how I set them up.
Rob
"If we believe absurdities, we shall commit atrocities" -- Voltaire