In all my years of looking at TH-cam clips for information on everything under the sun, this guy is the best teacher. No gimmicks, no split screens, no lame jokes. He isn't called Brad and saying 'hey don't you just hate it when this happens?' with a goofy wide-eyed, wake up dude attitude. He isn't breathing heavily into a headset mic, it isn't over-edited, nor under-edited....he's nicely paced, he's CLEAR and HE GETS ON WITH IT!! The ego is left out of the programme. He's here to help. And...sorry but it's nice to have someone with a straightforward South East accent (and this is coming from a Geordie!) without all the 'yo's' and 'dude' and 'check this out' nonsense. Well done this man!
100% agree. He's just saved my vinyl collection from further damage. My counter-weight was the wrong way round, after I sent it for servicing; and I didn't notice.. records damaged !
Haha, same here, been watching this video on & off for about 10 years as well. Always wondered what happened to the lad that did it. Superb, easy to follow practical advice, it was top work.
I've been spinning vinyl for decades but admittedly I've been a total amateur regarding proper tone-are functions. Your video was very useful and well made. Thank you!
Awesome tutorial, I knew the first 3 steps, but then I didn't knew that there is a huge difference between normal Tech's Cartridges and Bananas... Thanks a lot. Great job.
Totally had my weights on backward. Adjusted per your instruction and cartridge specs. Wow! Improved sound and now my records don't skip. Thank you for your help. Totally useful contribution.
After watching this video and crying for some of my rare jazz vinyls that have been jumping; then reading your useful comment, I have some hope that maybe some of my tunes are not completely wrecked. .
Fair play mate - this and the other three tone arm videos are exactly what I needed to refresh myself on how to set up my old Technics. Thanks for this!
Many thanks for you videos on height, anti-skate, weight-arm and cleaning the cartridge connections.. I've had by 1210's for 20 years and this is the first time I've got them properly setup and have resolved issue with poor sound quality after watching your vids!
Very helpful information my friend. Even though I grew up with vinyl the turntables I used to were not able to be dialed in like this, probably why that old vinyl is now ruined. Again, very informative video's.
This is the forth video on your channel that I've found really helpful for my new 1210 Technics mk2. Really appreciate what you are doing. All the best!
Legit technical / tutorial videos Bro. I have been watching your videos back to back, learning about turntables and my Technics 1200 I bought. You have been a great help, thank you very much Mate. Big thumbs up from Down under in Oz haha.
thank dude you save me according to sherwoods instructions and a lot of other utube vids they were saying just to move the gram dial to set you weight after balancing, to which I would just get my arm skateing across, until I saw your vid on turning the whole weight great stuff thanks
You have to know you're doing a good job if all of your comments are positive on TH-cam, of all places. So, I'll add another one, gold mine of knowledge, thanks again!
Excellent tips mate....thanks a ton. It's always a great idea to check and re-calibrate several things after the decks have been moved. As always....good job...!!!
instant classic!...needed this to get my sl1200mk2 going..used your other video to replace the RCAs and the Tone arm height adjuster which was seized up! thanks from cross the pond!
thank you for the help. I just got my first record player ever the lp120 and needed more guidance trying to figure it out. I will keep watching more and learn. I got stuck on how to make correct every time and make I get it the right way.
No problem, just glad the video was useful, thank you for your comment and your feed back, hopefully more videos on the way soon. thank again. Nice One ; )
You just totally solved a problem for me! I picked up a pair of 2nd hand Numark TTX1s a few months back. Went through all the balancing and height adjustment and they were still jumping. I just assumed the guy that sold them to me had some kind of clue - he didn't. He had the counter weight on backwards. Kicking myself for not seeing such a school boy error! Cheers mate.
Thanks for all the tips 👍 really helped me out on my 1210 mk2. The seller said it was set professionaly to all the stats of my catredige. But the tonearm, weight and anti skate were way off as I found out about two weeks later.
Thank you, really helpful. Didn’t have a problem till a bought a brand new vinyl and randomly started to skip really aggressively but everything’s fine now
I got SHURE M447-H preloaded cartridge with Technics headshell and says to use 1.5-3 grams, I use from 2.5-3 grams on mine, this vid helped me a lot thanks viperfrank...
Great thank you James! Trying to set up an old Garard TT to play my dad's old 78 collection...the volume dawn...ear trick... Should help me a lot! Thanks again Cheers!
Yes, very informative. Much appreciated. Only thing I'm not so sure about is when you emphatically state that all turntables have an adjustable tonearm (unless I misunderstood). In fact, one of my turntables is a Technics SD-22. The weight is factory set, and it is not adjustable. But it's good to know that the optimal weight is generally around 2.5 grams. So a penny is good - a nickel is bad, because it weighs twice as much, and will wreak havoc on my vinyl.
@undatone hi there, thanks for your comment, its doesn't normally matter too much what order you do it in but it's quite a good idea to do the weight first and than the anti skate, you may find it easer to adjust the anti skate when the weight is set properly. but generally as long as you do them its don't really matter what order you do them in, im glad the video was helpful and thanks again for your comment. nice one!!!
Nice one, James! I turned my 1210 upside down yesterday to take it partially apart to install dust cover hinge sockets. When I flipped it back up again the weight must have been changed slightly (when upside down I put it on a pillow). I forgot how to set the counterweight, this video helped me a lot, thanks!
I had a similar problem, I got a Stanton T.62 It was apart new in box. I had to assemble the tone arm, they said to balance the tone arm without the stylus cartridge attached, I couldn't get it right till I seen this video. Thanks for your help!
Thanks! I believe my tone arm is putting too much weight on the needle. I get distortion, especially during the higher pitch portions of music. I've also done the test recommended and it sounds fuzzy. At any rate, when trying to do the initial balance, the weight must be turned all the way back to get close to balancing, so it looks needle heavy. Just as it's about to get balanced, the weight disengages a bit and feels lose on the arm and then it looks weight heavy.
Setting the weight up correctly on the tonearm IS definitely the most important part of tonearm set up. I'm a vinyl hi-fi enthusiast, not a DJ, using Rega decks, with cartridges that track at between 1.75 and 2g. Getting the arm to float is probably the hardest bit, and Shure make a reasonably cheap tracking force gauge so that you can check it properly. I'd advocate this above and beyond digital versions, because the really cheap digital versions fail very quickly, and the good ones, such as the one made by Rega, cost an arm and a leg. Incidentally, you can help save your turntable when transporting it, by removing the platter and the counterweight during transit. So, as you say, you are then forced to re-calibrate the arm every time the deck is moved. It's a faff, but the job of calibrating takes 5 mins, and it's worth it to preserve the deck and the records.
definitely the best video i've watched on youtube about this... One question though, on one of my tables, the tonearm weight is pushed way further up on the arm in order to achieve weightlessness than in some of the videos I've seen. Does that mean there's something I need to fix? It seems like I'm putting too much weight on it with the weight so far forward. Thanks again, your videos are super helpful!
@kazywaz I am just getting back into doing videos again, I'm going to be changing the format of my TH-cam channel a bit, I will hopefully be doing some computer related and electrical hobbyist videos as well as some more Technics videos. I was thinking of doing some videos on equipment respires as well maybe, so fixing receiver channels will come under that.. I really need to get to it and make some more videos. thanks for your comment and all your positive feed back. nice one!!!
Thanks. This helped giving me a more "secure" setting for my recordplayer. AT125LC Cartridge could take 1-1.8grams pressure, so i put mine at 1.4grams.
yo man. nice vids. deffo the best tonearm tutorials! just wondering tho which order should i do all the tonearm shit, like weight first, height first or skate?? thanks
Good video you got here, really helped me. It was pretty much the same info as in my installation manual that came with my new turntable. Seems like i've done the adjustments right. Thanks:)
@nverwijk If you don't have enough weight on the needle than the needle will not sit right into the groove, this will effect sound quality and cause the needle to jump when queuing up/scratching. another thing that tends to happen is when the record reaches the end that the needle gets to the end groove and it jumps out on goes across the label. Hope this was a help and thank you for your comment. Nice One ; )
hello mate. first you forgot to mention that before adjusting the tonearm weight you have to adjust the anti-skating to 0. also based on the "ortofon" specification about the cartridge you use the correct amounts are: Tracking force range : 2,0-4,0 g Tracking force recommended : 3,0 g so the correct weight you should put isn't between 2,0-2,8 g but between 2,0-4,0 g , with 3,0g recommended. also there are concorde (banana) cartridges,e.g. ortofon scratch,elektro,etc. that the recommended tracking force is 4,0 g. always friendly,Vaggelis.
great tutorial for balancing man! Was definitely what I needed. Just bought my first 1200MK2... Only thing is i feel like my needle is drifting away from the record as it floats. Anyone know what this means... is this 'skating'
Slick as fuck man. Seriously, soooo many people out there should see your vid. I've seen so many DJs putting like 86kg on their vynils... some guys just don't get it. Im gonna forward this - really good tutorial.
Ok thanks man! Can I put the tone-arm in zero-G state and test the skating like that?? I just watched this guy's video on skating and he used blank vinyl, which I don't have. Might try to find one at this flea market near me but it's mostly classic rock there..
@viperfrank Thanks James. it was confusing when I was watching the other tutorials, I swore they said, "Consult your manual for the WEIGHT." But I could've been wrong 1.7 sounds a whole lot more doable than 4.6. Thanks again. You're incredibly informative and I appreciate all you've taught me about turntables. Do you do any other vidoes with electronic equipment, like how to clean the inside of a receiver, when the channels cut off & on because they're dusty? Just curious.
@ronniedean89th You could add some more weight to the counter weight, try taping some coins to the back of the weight, or if you have some of those little brass weights that you use for old scales they work good for that. Hope this helps and thanks for your comment. Nice One ; )
Thanks brotha! How does this effect time coded vinyl, such as for Torq or Serato Scratch Live? What should I clean my vinyl and time coded vinyl with? Is standard glass cleaner and paper towel ok? Thanks!..been loving your videos, well detailed, descriptive, and educational. peace from toronto canada!
@viperfrank love your tuts man, these have solved many of my problems. just a quick Q, i have technics with all of the original fittings still in place (except cart and styli). it turns out that my cartridges (numark cc1) which are concorde style cartridges, instruct you to have a counterweight of 3-6 grams, which seems like a very wide range, and obviously this extends past the counterweight markings, but i want to have my weight somewhere in the middle of this range i guess. what should i do?
hey mister, thank you so much, iva got a problem with my turntable, when I fix the correct weight I still hearing a wahwahawawh sound behind the main sound, what about skating? how could I eliminate that crappy sound? thank you so much, your information is huge and practical greetings
In all my years of looking at TH-cam clips for information on everything under the sun, this guy is the best teacher. No gimmicks, no split screens, no lame jokes. He isn't called Brad and saying 'hey don't you just hate it when this happens?' with a goofy wide-eyed, wake up dude attitude. He isn't breathing heavily into a headset mic, it isn't over-edited, nor under-edited....he's nicely paced, he's CLEAR and HE GETS ON WITH IT!! The ego is left out of the programme. He's here to help. And...sorry but it's nice to have someone with a straightforward South East accent (and this is coming from a Geordie!) without all the 'yo's' and 'dude' and 'check this out' nonsense. Well done this man!
100% agree. He's just saved my vinyl collection from further damage. My counter-weight was the wrong way round, after I sent it for servicing; and I didn't notice.. records damaged !
I still check back to your 3 videos when resetting my tone arm and anti skate, must be at least 10 yrs now, fair play to you mate, 👏
Haha, same here, been watching this video on & off for about 10 years as well. Always wondered what happened to the lad that did it. Superb, easy to follow practical advice, it was top work.
I've been spinning vinyl for decades but admittedly I've been a total amateur regarding proper tone-are functions. Your video was very useful and well made. Thank you!
Awesome tutorial, I knew the first 3 steps, but then I didn't knew that there is a huge difference between normal Tech's Cartridges and Bananas... Thanks a lot.
Great job.
Back when I was playing records on the radio, we called the hissy nasty sound 'cue burn' Great video. :) JC
Totally had my weights on backward. Adjusted per your instruction and cartridge specs. Wow! Improved sound and now my records don't skip. Thank you for your help. Totally useful contribution.
no worries, I'm glad the video was of some help, it's always nice to know my videos are helping others.
thank you for your comment.
After watching this video and crying for some of my rare jazz vinyls that have been jumping; then reading your useful comment, I have some hope that maybe some of my tunes are not completely wrecked. .
Fair play mate - this and the other three tone arm videos are exactly what I needed to refresh myself on how to set up my old Technics. Thanks for this!
Many thanks for you videos on height, anti-skate, weight-arm and cleaning the cartridge connections.. I've had by 1210's for 20 years and this is the first time I've got them properly setup and have resolved issue with poor sound quality after watching your vids!
Very helpful information my friend. Even though I grew up with vinyl the turntables I used to were not able to be dialed in like this, probably why that old vinyl is now ruined. Again, very informative video's.
This is the forth video on your channel that I've found really helpful for my new 1210 Technics mk2. Really appreciate what you are doing. All the best!
Wow, thanks so much. Not a DJ, just getting into vinyl for listening, but this improved my sound quality by at least 50%. Wow, cheers!
Legit technical / tutorial videos Bro. I have been watching your videos back to back, learning about turntables and my Technics 1200 I bought. You have been a great help, thank you very much Mate. Big thumbs up from Down under in Oz haha.
Annabelle Jones ... ditto!
thank you!! im glad it was helpful, thanks for all your positive feed back and thank you for your kind words.
nice one!!!
11 years later and was still A BIG HELP!
thank dude you save me according to sherwoods instructions and a lot of other utube vids they were saying just to move the gram dial to set you weight after balancing, to which I would just get my arm skateing across, until I saw your vid on turning the whole weight great stuff thanks
Yes, finally sorted out a problem I've had for a while: my counterweight was set up completely wrong. Great tutorial, thanks.
I watched 10 videos on this and only yours was simple to understand - my turntable sounds awesome now! Thankyou!! 😀🙌
You have to know you're doing a good job if all of your comments are positive on TH-cam, of all places. So, I'll add another one, gold mine of knowledge, thanks again!
Excellent tips mate....thanks a ton. It's always a great idea to check and re-calibrate several things after the decks have been moved. As always....good job...!!!
Wish I watched this one before the other dribble out there. Cheers , answered a lot of questions.
instant classic!...needed this to get my sl1200mk2 going..used your other video to replace the RCAs and the Tone arm height adjuster which was seized up! thanks from cross the pond!
Great tutorial and excellent explanation, very helpful and completely solved the audio issues I was having with my turntables.
Great video, James. Thanks a lot with all your helping, it's been of very great use! Greetings from Germany.
Says the man with a guitar in the background ffs! Thanks nutts your a great help!
thank you for the help. I just got my first record player ever the lp120 and needed more guidance trying to figure it out. I will keep watching more and learn. I got stuck on how to make correct every time and make I get it the right way.
old video but still the best adjustment video. keep up the good work.
Thanks for the refresher course. Concise and to the point. Well done.
Very useful video James. Easily explained and handy. Thank you
No problem, just glad the video was useful, thank you for your comment and your feed back, hopefully more videos on the way soon.
thank again.
Nice One ; )
Perfect video, I bought a new platter and cart and this made it very easy to understand.
Yes, I agree with the other Gentleman, you are a Gentleman. I've been guessing at it until I watched your video. Good job, thanks.
Thanks for the tutorial! I had no idea the adjustment was so important.
This is the SECOND time this same vid has helped me out. Thank a million my friend! PEACE
You just totally solved a problem for me! I picked up a pair of 2nd hand Numark TTX1s a few months back. Went through all the balancing and height adjustment and they were still jumping. I just assumed the guy that sold them to me had some kind of clue - he didn't. He had the counter weight on backwards. Kicking myself for not seeing such a school boy error! Cheers mate.
Thanks alot. Great tutorials. I'd never been sure about setting up the the anti-skating before.
Thank you very very much!! I am so stupid and thought a bit of distortion has to be.... now it sounds better than any cd! :)
Thanks for all the tips 👍 really helped me out on my 1210 mk2. The seller said it was set professionaly to all the stats of my catredige. But the tonearm, weight and anti skate were way off as I found out about two weeks later.
thanks, now i know how much weight i have to put on my tone arm, stupid technics manuel didn't say anything, thank you very much :)
Love your explanations and musical taste!
Thank you, really helpful. Didn’t have a problem till a bought a brand new vinyl and randomly started to skip really aggressively but everything’s fine now
Such a big help. How come I just found your tutorial just now? And wait, had somebody told you you're cute? Thank you so much.🙂
I got SHURE M447-H preloaded cartridge with Technics headshell and says to use 1.5-3 grams, I use from 2.5-3 grams on mine, this vid helped me a lot thanks viperfrank...
Top post! Cheers! To the point & great advice, not enough like this on youtube!
Great thank you James! Trying to set up an old Garard TT to play my dad's old 78 collection...the volume dawn...ear trick... Should help me a lot! Thanks again Cheers!
Yes, very informative. Much appreciated. Only thing I'm not so sure about is when you emphatically state that all turntables have an adjustable tonearm (unless I misunderstood). In fact, one of my turntables is a Technics SD-22. The weight is factory set, and it is not adjustable. But it's good to know that the optimal weight is generally around 2.5 grams. So a penny is good - a nickel is bad, because it weighs twice as much, and will wreak havoc on my vinyl.
James please keep up the good work.You're great mate.This is John from Greece!
@undatone hi there, thanks for your comment, its doesn't normally matter too much what order you do it in but it's quite a good idea to do the weight first and than the anti skate, you may find it easer to adjust the anti skate when the weight is set properly. but generally as long as you do them its don't really matter what order you do them in, im glad the video was helpful and thanks again for your comment.
nice one!!!
Great vids - I've just bought a couple of decks and one of them is distorting and jumping so now I know what to do - thanks James
Best video covering this subject. Much appreciated guy.
Can't thank you enough, this is a huge
help in setting up my new turntable.
Thanks for great video! Best explained on youtube by far!
Bro so many years and your videos still help! Btw I had that Stanton mixer and it sucks balls you probably know this too lol
... I’ve been bunglefucking and guessing at this on SLs for around 25 years until now. Nothing but total gratitude for your tutorials boss
Steven Champion ecpfkhxis lzhmb. Hggywad ayn
Nice one, James! I turned my 1210 upside down yesterday to take it partially apart to install dust cover hinge sockets. When I flipped it back up again the weight must have been changed slightly (when upside down I put it on a pillow). I forgot how to set the counterweight, this video helped me a lot, thanks!
Helped a lot with my Denon turntable. Thanks, James!
Your videos are extremely helpful and thank you for providing so much information!
I had a similar problem, I got a Stanton T.62 It was apart new in box. I had to assemble the tone arm, they said to balance the tone arm without the stylus cartridge attached, I couldn't get it right till I seen this video. Thanks for your help!
no worries, glad I can help.
thank you for your comment.
Thanks! I believe my tone arm is putting too much weight on the needle. I get distortion, especially during the higher pitch portions of music. I've also done the test recommended and it sounds fuzzy. At any rate, when trying to do the initial balance, the weight must be turned all the way back to get close to balancing, so it looks needle heavy. Just as it's about to get balanced, the weight disengages a bit and feels lose on the arm and then it looks weight heavy.
yeah... read in another video that you were good .... and you are!, thank you for sharing this!
Setting the weight up correctly on the tonearm IS definitely the most important part of tonearm set up. I'm a vinyl hi-fi enthusiast, not a DJ, using Rega decks, with cartridges that track at between 1.75 and 2g. Getting the arm to float is probably the hardest bit, and Shure make a reasonably cheap tracking force gauge so that you can check it properly. I'd advocate this above and beyond digital versions, because the really cheap digital versions fail very quickly, and the good ones, such as the one made by Rega, cost an arm and a leg. Incidentally, you can help save your turntable when transporting it, by removing the platter and the counterweight during transit. So, as you say, you are then forced to re-calibrate the arm every time the deck is moved. It's a faff, but the job of calibrating takes 5 mins, and it's worth it to preserve the deck and the records.
Dude, 5/5 no joke, your vids are indeed helpful!
Cheers.
definitely the best video i've watched on youtube about this... One question though, on one of my tables, the tonearm weight is pushed way further up on the arm in order to achieve weightlessness than in some of the videos I've seen. Does that mean there's something I need to fix? It seems like I'm putting too much weight on it with the weight so far forward.
Thanks again, your videos are super helpful!
Great video! You explained things really well. Thank you!
Thanks dude. Very straightforward and helpful. I'm trying to sort out my Sharp Optonica RP1400. I've got Star Wars to play on it.
@kazywaz I am just getting back into doing videos again, I'm going to be changing the format of my TH-cam channel a bit, I will hopefully be doing some computer related and electrical hobbyist videos as well as some more Technics videos. I was thinking of doing some videos on equipment respires as well maybe, so fixing receiver channels will come under that..
I really need to get to it and make some more videos.
thanks for your comment and all your positive feed back.
nice one!!!
Thanks. This helped giving me a more "secure" setting for my recordplayer.
AT125LC Cartridge could take 1-1.8grams pressure, so i put mine at 1.4grams.
Interesting - ready to watch your other videos
yo man. nice vids. deffo the best tonearm tutorials! just wondering tho which order should i do all the tonearm shit, like weight first, height first or skate?? thanks
@pdripps8866 No problem, thank you for your comment and support.
Nice One ; )
Good video you got here, really helped me. It was pretty much the same info as in my installation manual that came with my new turntable. Seems like i've done the adjustments right.
Thanks:)
@nverwijk If you don't have enough weight on the needle than the needle will not sit right into the groove, this will effect sound quality and cause the needle to jump when queuing up/scratching. another thing that tends to happen is when the record reaches the end that the needle gets to the end groove and it jumps out on goes across the label.
Hope this was a help and thank you for your comment.
Nice One ; )
hello mate.
first you forgot to mention that before adjusting the tonearm weight you have to adjust the anti-skating to 0.
also based on the "ortofon" specification about the cartridge you use the correct amounts are:
Tracking force range : 2,0-4,0 g
Tracking force recommended : 3,0 g
so the correct weight you should put isn't between 2,0-2,8 g but between 2,0-4,0 g , with 3,0g recommended.
also there are concorde (banana) cartridges,e.g. ortofon scratch,elektro,etc. that the recommended tracking force is 4,0 g.
always friendly,Vaggelis.
@Jimmywillmott thank you very much, im glad the video was helpful and thanks for your comment.
nice one!!!
great tip about listening to the needle, thanks
Thanks again. Always very helpful.
great tutorial for balancing man! Was definitely what I needed. Just bought my first 1200MK2... Only thing is i feel like my needle is drifting away from the record as it floats. Anyone know what this means... is this 'skating'
Thank you, I'm glad you like the video.
Thank you for your comment.
Nice One ; )
another cracking video.. great tune to demonstrate with too ;)
Slick as fuck man. Seriously, soooo many people out there should see your vid. I've seen so many DJs putting like 86kg on their vynils... some guys just don't get it. Im gonna forward this - really good tutorial.
Awesome mate! Very clearly explained! Thanks! Cheers!
Thanks a lot mate, this was very helpful 👌🏻
Ok thanks man! Can I put the tone-arm in zero-G state and test the skating like that?? I just watched this guy's video on skating and he used blank vinyl, which I don't have. Might try to find one at this flea market near me but it's mostly classic rock there..
Nice vid, thanks a lot. Any ideas why my tone is swinging back toward the rest when i try and get it to "float" ?
Great video, very informative.
I just realized today I could weigh some bud with my turntable ahah.. wish I didn't buy a scale. lol
Thanks for the video you have shared a lot of great tips! thanks again man!
@viperfrank Thanks James. it was confusing when I was watching the other tutorials, I swore they said, "Consult your manual for the WEIGHT." But I could've been wrong 1.7 sounds a whole lot more doable than 4.6. Thanks again. You're incredibly informative and I appreciate all you've taught me about turntables. Do you do any other vidoes with electronic equipment, like how to clean the inside of a receiver, when the channels cut off & on because they're dusty? Just curious.
@ronniedean89th You could add some more weight to the counter weight, try taping some coins to the back of the weight, or if you have some of those little brass weights that you use for old scales they work good for that.
Hope this helps and thanks for your comment.
Nice One ; )
four dislikes ?? the guy knows his stuff and is helping people out. fucking haters man
tanx for sharing all your videos really help me two thumbs up !
thanks a lot men, best tutorial I have seen
Cheers fella, been a big help this video!
Thanks brotha! How does this effect time coded vinyl, such as for Torq or Serato Scratch Live? What should I clean my vinyl and time coded vinyl with? Is standard glass cleaner and paper towel ok? Thanks!..been loving your videos, well detailed, descriptive, and educational. peace from toronto canada!
@etizzle09 no problem, thank you for your comment.
nice one!!!
Great tips man, keep up the great work.
thank you for the info
You just saved my day! Thanks mate!
that was soo cool when he did a close up of the grooves
@viperfrank love your tuts man, these have solved many of my problems. just a quick Q, i have technics with all of the original fittings still in place (except cart and styli). it turns out that my cartridges (numark cc1) which are concorde style cartridges, instruct you to have a counterweight of 3-6 grams, which seems like a very wide range, and obviously this extends past the counterweight markings, but i want to have my weight somewhere in the middle of this range i guess. what should i do?
Awesome video! Thanks, bro!
hey mister, thank you so much, iva got a problem with my turntable, when I fix the correct weight I still hearing a wahwahawawh sound behind the main sound, what about skating? how could I eliminate that crappy sound?
thank you so much, your information is huge and practical
greetings