A few more words about the tangential tonearm, because most of you have never dealt with it. It has two advantages that are insurmountable for rotary tonearms:
- the first is the tangential error towards the end, especially towards the mark of recorded LPs. The distortion in this part increases disturbingly audibly with 9-inch and even 12-inch tonearm. And that is where songs end with pompous endings in classical music. You can partially defend yourself with very long tonearm !!!, but you can also give up on such records. Crying or Very sad
- the second is - in my opinion, much more important than the first - the absence of problems with slipping - you don't need anti-slip.
Of course, we can reduce (so that this doesn't erode us psychologically) by saying that this is not audible. Of course, you can not hear this on the same tonearm that has this problem, because the trick is not only in the exact dose of anti-slip, but in the fact that it cripples the output dose.
I will start with the force dosing - the problem of the anti-slip force cannot be solved even theoretically !!!, because it is tied to the modulation of the record, which is constantly changing.
More importantly - the sliding force, which pulls the tonarm inward, acts on the needle. The anti-slip force acts on the tonear . Between the needle and the tonarm there is a soft damper, which allows the needle to follow the modulations of the groove.
So the needle and its damper are under a constant one-sided lateral load. Which is constantly changing and, in addition, changes the tangential error at the moment (due to the deflection of the needle), so it must be set to some average modulation value.
In measurements, the distortion curves are strongly asymmetric between the left and right channels, as well as intermodulation and channel separation.
In addition, the consequences on 'soft' heads are already visible to the eye, and with high coherence (usually MM), over time the needle protrudes strongly to the side, inward. Because the damper is permanently deformed. On hard MCs this is less, but still.
With the tangential tonearm this is not there, which is felt as a relief when listening, a certain relaxation in the sound and listening towards the end of the LP in general becomes a pleasure - a real relief after decades of turning the tonearm of all possible manufacturers, when the fear of how the anxiety will increase towards the end of the LP creeps under your skin.
The belief is that a higher circumferential speed at the beginning gives a better result. But I have seen measurements of the mechanical noise of the record (unmodulated grooves), which decreases as the end of the LP approaches. So a better signal/noise of the needle sliding due to the lower speed towards the end!! The curve shows a difference of about 2.5 dB at 1 kHz, which increases continuously and reaches about 5 dB above 14 kHz. The tangential lever allows you to hear this clearly, because it is not covered by distortion due to the tangential error, wow.
It was translated with a translator, I hope it is understandable.
p.s. long tonearm is a new story though