by Rob-NYC »
Thu Apr 16, 2015 2:51 am
I can tell you that the cartridge is a Pickering 345D
OK, now I know the problem. Static electricity is building up due to friction of stylus and record. This happens at times right after I install a new stylus. After a period of use this stops happening. I suspect that it has to do with ambient dirt and oil forming a conductive path to the cart shell. New, or freshly washed vinyl records hold charge more readily then the reground plastic.
The shell of the cart is supposed to be grounded but Pickering's "quality control" was crap for these low-end carts and the split-shell design made for this sort of problem.
I opened one of the NOS 345-03d retro cart tubes I have here. One side of the shell shows 54 ohms to one pin -the other side is totally floating. Another one has both side showing 3.4 ohms to one pin. I'm sure if I test the other five here I'll find similar variations.
Try this: Do an ohmmeter test from the shell of the RCA pickup plug (remove it from the amp) and the cart shell. If the reading shows low resistance to the center pin of the RCA plug that means that the cart shell is on the 'high" side of the signal line. Reverse the wires at the terminal strip on the pickup assembly so as to put the cart shell and RCA shell in continuity. That should reduce-eliminate the problem. If there is high resistance, or open from cart shell to the RCA shell, the cart was poorly constructed and all you can do is use the machine and, as I mentioned, after a while the problem will go away.
In my commercial locations I just ignore this and it eventually stops.
I wish you luck and patience.

Rob/NYC
"If we believe absurdities, we shall commit atrocities" -- Voltaire