Tang, As I recall you have a special 14" Axiom on your EMT, but I believe you have another Axiom at play. Could you remind me what table it lives on? Just so I can digest this thread better
Yes. At present I have two Axiom XL 14" on the 927. I used to have a 12" normal one on the AF1P and AS2000. I had SAT, 12" Axiom, SAEC506 and 3012R all on the AS2000 at the same time for a while to learn.Tang, As I recall you have a special 14" Axiom on your EMT, but I believe you have another Axiom at play. Could you remind me what table it lives on? Just so I can digest this thread better
I am only a user of a standard offering of an equipment. The material of arm base, titanium screw, internal wire, etc to be used were provIded by the designer or a vendor of the arm knowing what tt it will be on. So I used what the designer or the vender thought was appropriate or at least not acting detrimentally to the sound. The opinion I gave was just a data point from an actual user for over a few years time. I also encourage people who are interested on any equipment to look into as many datapoint as possible. Study the system of the person who makes comment. Study he who makes comment too.
On every turntable the tolerances of the parallelism of the platter surface and the arm base surface ist important and mostly not 100% given.
If you add the length of a 12" Tonearmbase plus the length of a 12" arm as such, you will see, that even 1/100 of a mm surface tolerance can become a serious adjustment situation for the Azimuth. As the Azimuth is in most tonearm Designs easy to fine-tune, the bearing of the Tonearm still "sees" this tolerance.
To my knowledge the Axiom provides on this matter a unique solution. Around the M5 screw are 3 spikes placed.
With the supplied spirit level it is now possible to tune the Axiom in the best parallel way, so that the bearing can move with minimal resistance.
Dietrich definitely prefers to reduce the forces to the bearing, so he likes, that even the tonearm tube as such is fitted in a parallel way only. All adjustments to the cartridge should be done on that place, where the cartridge is fitted, means the Axiom headshell can be used for the VTA optimization as well.
"Why should it matters"On one hand I understand this unique feature of adjustment.
On the other hand this is a tonearm with excellent bearings. Why should it matters, that the tonearm is not just moving horizontally, but as well in a minimal movement in the vertical bearing, too, if the level of the tonearm is not exactly the same as the platter.
The vertical movement will still be necessary with nearly all not completely flat records, so who cares.
The same question is: why should it be better for the forces in the bearing, that the tonearm is exactly horizontal and not rising or falling some 0,01 degrees. The only important thing could be the height of the bearing axis for vertical movement and the tip of the needle in the groove. But as the cartridges have different heights, even this cannot be designed in advance.
The length of the tonearm doesn’t magnifies the slightly azimuth error of a not parallel mounted tonearm, this degree is the same at the base and at the end of the headshell, regardless of the length.