Hi Tony,
Yes....I think speed accuracy was indeed mastered over 30 years ago but as I mentioned elsewhere......with the dominance of belt-drive over DD turntables due in large part to the Linn propaganda and the reviewers who championed it.....'speed accuracy/consistency'.......never was mentioned as a critical factor in their design philosophy?
How do we get back to it?........I think discussions such as this is certainly one of the ways and thanks to the Timeline......I hope more designers and manufacturers will be able to judge their successes or failures and hopefully make some corrections?
'Awareness'.....is our best hope?
The .5mm speed drift I am seeing on the Raven AC-2 is almost negligible.
For instance.......the Victor TT-101 allows me to speed up or slow down, the actual speed of the platter in 6Hz increments.
33.33rpm apparently gives a pitch of 440Hz which is the de-facto standard
pitch for orchestras.
However many of the world's orchestras use a pitch either 6Hz or 12Hz up or down from this?
When I adjust the speed on the TT-101 to 6Hz lower (33.25rpm).....the drift from the wallmark is 5mm every revolution and when the speed is increased to 33.40rpm (6Hz higher).....again the drift is 5mm per revolution.
So the Raven.....running at 0.5mm per revolution could really be called...'spot-on'?
And Lew is right Tony......the Timeline is not so valuable in terms of 'cumulative' drift or speed error (as even a 6Hz pitch deviation will add or subtract 5mm drift to each and every revolution which will appear quite dire over the full side of a record).....rather it is the instantaneous speed drift due to stylus drag which is valuable for us to know about our turntable's performance?
Instead of 'fear' governing our apprehension of the Timeline and what it will reveal about our turntables.......we should really welcome this information.
Knowledge is power....and ultimately the more we know about our system's objective performance.....the more equipped we are to effect improvements?
Yes....I think speed accuracy was indeed mastered over 30 years ago but as I mentioned elsewhere......with the dominance of belt-drive over DD turntables due in large part to the Linn propaganda and the reviewers who championed it.....'speed accuracy/consistency'.......never was mentioned as a critical factor in their design philosophy?
How do we get back to it?........I think discussions such as this is certainly one of the ways and thanks to the Timeline......I hope more designers and manufacturers will be able to judge their successes or failures and hopefully make some corrections?
'Awareness'.....is our best hope?
The .5mm speed drift I am seeing on the Raven AC-2 is almost negligible.
For instance.......the Victor TT-101 allows me to speed up or slow down, the actual speed of the platter in 6Hz increments.
33.33rpm apparently gives a pitch of 440Hz which is the de-facto standard
pitch for orchestras.
However many of the world's orchestras use a pitch either 6Hz or 12Hz up or down from this?
When I adjust the speed on the TT-101 to 6Hz lower (33.25rpm).....the drift from the wallmark is 5mm every revolution and when the speed is increased to 33.40rpm (6Hz higher).....again the drift is 5mm per revolution.
So the Raven.....running at 0.5mm per revolution could really be called...'spot-on'?
And Lew is right Tony......the Timeline is not so valuable in terms of 'cumulative' drift or speed error (as even a 6Hz pitch deviation will add or subtract 5mm drift to each and every revolution which will appear quite dire over the full side of a record).....rather it is the instantaneous speed drift due to stylus drag which is valuable for us to know about our turntable's performance?
Instead of 'fear' governing our apprehension of the Timeline and what it will reveal about our turntables.......we should really welcome this information.
Knowledge is power....and ultimately the more we know about our system's objective performance.....the more equipped we are to effect improvements?

