Turntable set up HELP


OK, I have majorly messed something up and need expert advice. I set up my turntable a few months ago, and had no real problems, but I wanted to take it to the next level so I bought a Walley Tractor (well I ordered it in October, got it in January) and I tried to use it today. Well after I adjusted the cartridge using the Wally tractor, re-adjusted the needle force and anti-skate and put on a record. Well about 2 minutes in the record started to skip. Adjusting cartridge force again, anti-skate nothing helps. All the records skip. Platter is still level, I can't figure it out. Took everything off, re-set up, still skipping???

Help!!!!!
macdadtexas
OK More Turntable Drama:

1)Checked the VTA, seemed fine, but I re-adjusted it very carefully again, per the instructions and the Michael Fremer video....Still skipped past about 1 minute of play time.

2) rechecked all of the levels, the platter was level, but I re-leveled the rack shelf so the Gingko platform was level then re-leveled the turntable platter (when the platter is level the plinth is slightly out of level??).. anyway got all of them as level as possible with the platter still hitting the center mark for level and.....Still skipped past about 1 minute of play time

3) all through these I have used both the Wally Tractor and then the Clearaudio grid to adjust the cartridge to see if either would work, neither did.

So, I decided to go to the attic and get the cartridge (Shure M104E)off of my college turntable (Reference "By Quadraflex" 620t), hook it up to the Clearaudio and see if it was the cartridge? Well, even after 20 yrs of no use, the Shure came off no problem and played fine after adjustments (it's a much lighter tracking force 1.25g) and then.....Still skipped past about 1 minute of play time.

4) Took the Clearaudio out of play and hooked up the old turntable, but installed the Sumiko Blackbird on it. Well, the old turntbale has no arm height adjustment, and I didn't have any tool/grid to adjust the tracking angle of the cartridge, just had to eyeball it and.....played fine. Great in fact, boy that's a good cartridge. The old direct drive turntable sounds pretty freaking good, it's going to my nephew back in Chicago now. I got it from his Dad, so it seems ineviteable that it should go back to him.

Anyway now I am really lost. Cartridge is fine, what happened to the tracking on the Clearaudio?? It was fine before I started the Wally Tractor adjustment, and now I cannot even get it back to the pre-adjustment state? I am going to start all over, disassemble the Performance and begin again.

5) Does anyone have the name of someone in Houston who can do a turntable set up? Might as well pay and get it over with, didn't seem that hard, just time consuming, but I am obviously missing something.

Also, all the guys I work with give me greif about this hobby, and I finally invited, or they invited themselves actually, over tomorrow to have a listen, and looks like I may have to go with an all Digital demo. Very disappointing.

Any more suggestions??

Thx.
If you set the arms tracking force to zero so it floats evenly, does it move from the outside to the inside with out any problems. Set the anti skate to zero. It should move with no effort.
Man, that stinks with "the guys" coming over, especially as they ALREADY give you grief. My in-laws are un-believers...
A little advice- Don't give "the guys" any audiophile speak, just let them hear!
Good luck!
Based on your experiments, my guess is there is a problem with the arm, or arm setup.

You should perhaps look into using Hi-Fi News Analogue Test LP for setting up the anti-skating. There are four tracks used to the setup the anti-skating. You should get it to track the first three of the anti-skating tracks and the tonearm should be fine, as far as anti-skating goes.

If possible, for setting the vertical tracking force, make sure that the tonearm rests parallel to the platter while the tip of the stylus is on the scale. The weight reading will change depending on whether the arm is parallel or not, with the stylus resting on the scale. Based on the scales available today, the tonearm should probable be raised a bit for setting the VTF, and then move down the VTA again to play.

Best,

iSanchez