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May 2008
CAUTION: On most tonearms, you will not be able to adjust the VTA while playing a record or with the stylus even resting on a record (without destroying the record and/or cartridge cantilever or stylus). You have been warned! For initial setup of your VTA, place a medium thickness album (no 180 gram re-issues or flabby RCA Dyna-flex Red Seals) on the turntable and place the stylus on the record (do not have the turntable rotating for these adjustments). With the stylus resting on this medium thickness album, the bottom of the cartridge should be parallel to the album. By this, I mean the flat area near the front of the cartridge where the cantilever / stylus assembly protrudes from the bottom of the cartridge. CAUTION: Make all adjustments on the tonearm with it sitting on the tonearm rest.
After setting the starting point of your VTA session using your eyesight, listen to a section of all 3 albums. What you want to listen for is the senority of the strings, the "air" around the instruments and the width of the hall. If you set your VTA correctly for nominal thickness albums, you will hear the following: 1.The medium thickness album will have extended stage width, a hint of air or rich harmonics around the individual instruments and singing in the upper strings without any stridency. 2.The thin album will have good stage width but the strings will sound unnatural, edgy and irritating. 3.The thick album will sound slightly muffled, with a lack of high frequencies and air around the instruments.
To reiterate, once you have found the correct VTA setting for a medium thickness album, you can use this starting point when you want to adjust your VTA for best sonics. For very thin albums (flabby Red Seal), or Angel and late Columbia, you will have to lower the back of the tonearm by as much as 0.005". For very thick albums and many of the Decca, Classic or EMI reissues, you will have to raise the back of the tonearm by as much as 0.010" or 0.015". Also remember that during the course of the life of your cartridge, the nominal setting will change as the cantilever ages and flexes making it sound as if the back of the tonearm is too low. After a short period of time of focusing on the sound (and not the music), you will learn to identify when the VTA is adjusted properly. After this adjustment is correctly made, listen and as always... Enjoy the Music, Sedrik Harris
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