The problem is the crude tonearm. Unless a counterweight is used to replace that idiotic
spring and a couple of other simple steps are not taken, there is no way to get really
decent tracking without heavy weight and crude, stiff stylus cantilever. There is a reason
for the term "juked". The machines were notorious for ruining records.
Things did get better in the mid-sixties when it came to Seeburg and Rowe --if-- the arms
were set up properly/
RobNYC
On Monday, March 20, 2023 at 01:59:40 AM GMT-8, Federico Croci via Jukebox-list
<jukebox-list(a)lists.netlojix.com> wrote:
Hello everyone!
I found a Shure M44-7 cartridge installed on my AMI Continental 2.
I'd like to fit it with a N44-C stylus, as some of the 45 records I use
are obviously not in very good conditions; I'd like to find out if I can
reduce the skips and jumps I have when playing them.
My question is - if I install a replacement N44-C stylus on a M44-7
cartridge, I'll have the correct tracking force for the N44-C stylus, or
I should install it on a M44-7 cartridge for better results? I'm
interested in the tracking force alone, small differences in audio
quality does not really matter.
The tracking force should be a matter of the stylus installed, not the
cartridge, am I correct...?
Thanks...!
--
Federico Croci
wiz(a)tilt.it
www.tilt.it
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