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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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I just had my first experience with both and neither left me very
impressed, to say the very least. The unipivot is a poor design because there is no stability on the axis that needs to be the most stable. You need a long tight bearing to keep the arm in a perpendicular arc. As for the Harbeths-these are the small ones, and a regular old speaker they are, but the price is quite high. Maybe the bigger ones are more impressive, I hope so. My advice to the buyer of these both was to send them back-but a dfferent arm for the VPI table and get new speakers altogether. |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On 23 Sep, 20:55, wrote:
*I just had my first experience with both and neither left me very impressed, to say the very least. The unipivot is a poor design because there is no stability on the axis that needs to be the most stable. You need a long tight bearing to keep the arm in a perpendicular arc. As for the Harbeths-these are the small ones, and a regular old speaker they are, but the price is quite high. Maybe the bigger ones are more impressive, I hope so. My advice to the buyer of these both was to send them back-but a dfferent arm for the VPI table and get new speakers altogether. We made too many wrong mistakes. Yogi Berra (1925 - ) |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On Sep 23, 5:55�pm, wrote:
�I just had my first experience with both and neither left me very impressed, to say the very least. The unipivot is a poor design because there is no stability on the axis that needs to be the most stable. You need a long tight bearing to keep the arm in a perpendicular arc. As for the Harbeths-these are the small ones, and a regular old speaker they are, but the price is quite high. Maybe the bigger ones are more impressive, I hope so. My advice to the buyer of these both was to send them back-but a dfferent arm for the VPI table and get new speakers altogether. I heartily disagree. The Naim ARO is a great-sounding arm, as is the Immedia RPM. The Harbeth Monitor 30s, 40s and Compact 7s are among the finest speakers I've heard. I'm not nuts about the sound of VPI 'tables, though. Boon |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article
, Clyde Slick wrote: On 23 Sep, 20:55, wrote: *I just had my first experience with both and neither left me very impressed, to say the very least. The unipivot is a poor design because there is no stability on the axis that needs to be the most stable. You need a long tight bearing to keep the arm in a perpendicular arc. As for the Harbeths-these are the small ones, and a regular old speaker they are, but the price is quite high. Maybe the bigger ones are more impressive, I hope so. My advice to the buyer of these both was to send them back-but a dfferent arm for the VPI table and get new speakers altogether. We made too many wrong mistakes. Yogi Berra (1925 - ) It is my opinion that the people are intending. The Monkees |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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wrote in message
I just had my first experience with both and neither left me very impressed, to say the very least. The unipivot is a poor design because there is no stability on the axis that needs to be the most stable. You need a long tight bearing to keep the arm in a perpendicular arc. Agreed. I built my first unipivot arm when in my early teens. In those days (1960s) there was at least one production unipivot arm that was reasonably popular. It looked a little odd because the pivot was raised well above (an inch or more) the body of the tonearm, which seems to be a pretty good idea. The advantage is far greater mechanical stability. I find no modern designs that carry this feature to the same extent - the pivot may be raised but the tone arm looks nearly conventional. The problem is as you suggest - normal operation adds longitudinal and side forces at the stylus tip that act through a virtual lever arm between the tip and the unipivot. thus adding undesirable angles to the mounting of the cartridge. Since these forces change as the record is played, they can't be compensated for by the usual static means. IOW, you can balance the unipivot with the needle sitting at one point, and as you play the record, the cartridge's orientation can change signficantly. |
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