Arm Differences ...... ,etc.


I'm fairly new to the analog world and you've probably read some of my posts in the past. I've now got a good handle on brands and models, but now the technical.

What are the pros and cons of a unipivot arm compared to a gymbal pivot or non-unipivot? Which work more effectively with a suspended table? Does a type of cartridge lend itself more to a suspended table?

Your responses continue to be most enlightening. Thanks.
richardmr
Tom's suggestion is just great. I believe that the table was designed around the SME arms which can be an important consideration as far as synergy is concerned, so a model V, or better yet, a IV.VI may prove to be a viable alernative. I'm an old fart and my cartridge preference leans to the Koetsu's, which are a lot more linear now than in the days of old. I have not had the pleasure of hearing the Shelter line. Either the Origin Live or SME arms should be able to accomodate a wide range of cartridges so this may be the point at which to tune to your system. Having high sensitivity speakers will be more of an issue in your choice of phono preamp and preamp than your choice of analog front end.
Audiophiles love arms because there are so many complex angles and dangles to adjust!

The dirty little secret is that a Linear Tracking arm eliminates all these sources of error, many of which cannot be eliminated over the full range of arm motion across the record. Linear tracking arms can have problems of their own, but not as many as a pivoted arm. A decent linear tracking arm beats any pivoted unit.

Excuse me now...I must go to the bomb shelter.
I don't think that the advantages of a linear tracking arm are much of a secret, dirty or clean. Given a much larger discretionary budget.....
I would take issue with the superiority of the linear trakers. The drawbacks are quite different than in fixed pivot arms and ones musical preferences would probably dictate which set of drawbacks one prefers. In solving some problems, others are introduced. I'd go into it but I used up my fifteen minutes several posts ago. I would also point out that since the Avid Volvere, which we are speaking about, is a suspended turntable specifically designed around the SME arms that there may be issues of weight distribution and rigidity associated with tacking on a linear tracker.
I agree linear trackers on a suspended table is a very difficult application. There are all kinds of pitfalls involved with that kind of setup. Most people tend to shy away from that combination.