Got my new analog rig - help setting VTA?

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spectral

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So I set up the VPI Aries 3/10.5i arm/SDS/Dynavector XX-2 MkII/Ayre P-5xe/Nordost Tyr (XLR-XLR) combo and the sound is spectacular even though the system has not even begun to break in. Comparing Brubeck's Take 5 on 200gm LP vs the HDCD version beats the digital copy by a very wide margin, and it's the easiest A/B test I have ever done: night and day. It sounds like the CD transfer was done very poorly...

So any suggestions on how to best set VTA? Yes, I have the Analogue Productions Test LP and no I don't have an IMD testing harness.

Some preliminary feedback: with the KAB strobe the speed needed to be adjusted with the SDS, so it has already justified its cost. Also, with the VPI jig the cartridge is set up perfectly, but I have a MintLP Tractor on order to fine-tune this. Finally, as I was expecting, the table/cartridge combo offers exhilarating dynamics and frightening transparency - this is MUSIC. What's interesting here is also the Ayre's performance, something I was skeptical about before; its build quality is simply outstanding and its noise floor extremely low - and I measure lower noise plugged in directly to the wall than the MIT Z Strip (using the Revox's VU meters with the gain at full throttle) by 3dB; in fact, with the same technique I measured a 7dB drop in the noise floor after the first 24 hours; and the balanced inputs are indeed quieter by about 6dB.

More thoughts on the performance of the combo will be forthcoming as the equipment breaks in over the next 2-4 weeks. But the initial reaction is one of disbelief and excitement.

Thanks
 
The best place to start is with the arm perfectly parallel to the platter. What I use to view that is a lined 3x5 index card folded along a line so that you have a 90 degree bend in it, sitting on the disk. It is then easy to see if the arm is parallel or not relative to the other lines.

I do not have the test disk you mention, but I do have one produced by Ortofon. I find that my cartridge (Koetsu Rosewood) is not sensitive to VTA, but that may well not be the case with yours.

Do get a Shure Stylus Force Gauge and an Onzow stylus cleaner.
 
Congratulations Spectral!!!! I know you have to be excited with your new setup. When you do get things broken in I would be very interested to hear your thoughts on the Ayre phono preamp and your Dynavector cartridge. Both of these are on my short list of upgrades for my analog setup. Ayre is a company I think is pretty hard to beat for the price range and the symmetry they have with their other gear all running balanced is amazing. As for the VTA, I thought the VTF made a lot more difference than adjusting the former. At least until I made a huge VTA adjustment, then there was a noticeable difference. But when I made only a tenth VTF adjustment, maybe a little more, there would be easy to hear differences. So you may want to just level it out parallel as has already been suggested and play around with the VTF. Also, you may want to let it break in a little while longer so as not to give you false conclusions as to what sounds best. In my experience with Dynavector carts they seem to like the upper limits of their tracking force range, but I have never owned an XX2 so this may not apply to yours. Anyway, enjoy and have fun listening!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:music:

Glen
 
As for the VTA, I thought the VTF made a lot more difference than adjusting the former. At least until I made a huge VTA adjustment, then there was a noticeable difference. But when I made only a tenth VTF adjustment, maybe a little more, there would be easy to hear differences.

Remember a change in VTA will have and impact on VTF depending on the magnitude of the change.

As for the Aries III with 10.5 arm (which I have as well) VTA couldn't be easier to adj. My initial setting is optomized for 180 slabs with arm tube parallel to record surface.
 
Congrats on your new rig!

One way to adjust the VTA is by ear (assuming the arm you're using allows you to easily change VTA on the fly). Start with the arm parallel to the record and then slowly raise and lower the arm until the image snaps into focus.
 
Remember a change in VTA will have and impact on VTF depending on the magnitude of the change.

As for the Aries III with 10.5 arm (which I have as well) VTA couldn't be easier to adj. My initial setting is optomized for 180 slabs with arm tube parallel to record surface.

Very true. I did check the VTF though after changing my VTA, but I forgot to mention it. Thanks for catching my mistake.

Glen
 
One way to adjust the VTA is by ear (assuming the arm you're using allows you to easily change VTA on the fly). Start with the arm parallel to the record and then slowly raise and lower the arm until the image snaps into focus.

exactly Rich and given the fact that the 10.5i arm is one of the easiest to "adj on the fly" it's a no brainer !
 
As it's really hard to adjust VTA on the fly and hear what's going on, if you have a good set of phones, it might make it easier!
 
As it's really hard to adjust VTA on the fly and hear what's going on, if you have a good set of phones, it might make it easier!

Correct Jeff...or and extra set of hands (someone you can trust with your rig !) so you can stay firmly planted in the sweet spot !
 
Congratulations Spectral!!!! I know you have to be excited with your new setup. When you do get things broken in I would be very interested to hear your thoughts on the Ayre phono preamp and your Dynavector cartridge. Both of these are on my short list of upgrades for my analog setup. Ayre is a company I think is pretty hard to beat for the price range and the symmetry they have with their other gear all running balanced is amazing. As for the VTA, I thought the VTF made a lot more difference than adjusting the former. At least until I made a huge VTA adjustment, then there was a noticeable difference. But when I made only a tenth VTF adjustment, maybe a little more, there would be easy to hear differences. So you may want to just level it out parallel as has already been suggested and play around with the VTF. Also, you may want to let it break in a little while longer so as not to give you false conclusions as to what sounds best. In my experience with Dynavector carts they seem to like the upper limits of their tracking force range, but I have never owned an XX2 so this may not apply to yours. Anyway, enjoy and have fun listening!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:music:

Glen

Yes I started with leveling the arm so that it's parallel to the record and then experimented with the VTA acoustically - I'll be damned if I hear a difference even with huge swings. I track at 2.0XX to 2.1XX using a digital stylus force gauge, and it all depends also on the VTA.

Some thoughts on the Ayre: the build quality is outstanding, approaching the Spectral gear by about 80% I would say. They use custom electrolytic caps in the amplification stage and some of them are 1% tolerance. And then there are a myriad of small green LEDs on the board, presumably for testing purposes, always illuminated. More on it later, but if the below observations are any indication, this is one fine phono preamp... There are some caveats - I think this unit is meant to be run balanced in; there is a low frequency hum at above-normal listening levels, which is probably just noise from the power supply (i.e. not a ground loop - no tweaks have "fixed" it; and recall I am running XLR-to-XLR from the table); I don't believe I heard this with the Nagra BPS at the dealer's, although there was plenty of hiss there at those levels. So far it does not bother me.

The sound on good recordings like Brubeck's is just exhilarating from the entire combo. Carefully lining up timewise CDs and their equivalent LPs has exposed some significant observations:

1) Dave Brubeck/Time Out: The LP trounces the HDCD version by a very wide margin; the difference is simply STUNNING. So, bad CD transfer
2) Miles Davis/Kind of Blue: The CD (with the Spectral DAC/Xport combo) sounds easily more open with silkier highs. This could be attributed to a number of factors:
a) Assuming equal quality of transfers, the Spectral gear is still classes above all else
b) I am hearing the effect of the Kimber Hero cables I am temporarily using between the phono and preamp. The digital gear enjoys silver Kimber cables.
c) The analog rig is not yet fully broken in, and will open up later
d) The analog rig has reached its limits (unlikely)
e) A combination of the above
3) Santana/Santana: Here I have the luxury of owning a copy of the original master tape, and while the LP and CD (MoFi both) sound the same, the tape on the Revox B77 is clearly superior, with more detail and much better highs. Here the tape wins hands down and by a significant margin, despite its age.

If the end if the analog rig turns out to be as good as the Spectral digital gear, I will be happy. If it turns out to be better all else being equal, I will be thrilled.

I will be experimenting with the Berkeley Alpha DAC soon as well...
 
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Remember a change in VTA will have and impact on VTF depending on the magnitude of the change.

As for the Aries III with 10.5 arm (which I have as well) VTA couldn't be easier to adj. My initial setting is optomized for 180 slabs with arm tube parallel to record surface.

Dave, where the heck do you add dumping fluid in this arm and why would one want to do it? I added some to the cavity that sits on the unipivot needle to dampen the azimuth play, and due to its low viscosity it has not drifted down... I feel I am missing something... Thanks.
 
Dave, where the heck do you add dumping fluid in this arm and why would one want to do it? I added some to the cavity that sits on the unipivot needle


Peter, that is correct. As to why some use and some don't (like me)...arm stabilzation mainly, I suspect ones tt placement within your listening room would have an effect, overall isolation factor, etc.

It is felt that too much fluid can "slow" the cartridge down, muddy up the sound if you will.
 
Good write up Spectral. Thank you for giving me an idea of what to expect when I demo the Ayre. As for the fluid in the dwell, I used some when I had my Scoutmaster, and to be honest I'm not sure if I heard a whole lot of difference. Of course there did creep up a problem with my arm over time and this may have covered up some of the minute differences when experimenting. Good luck and have fun!!!

Glen
 
Peter, that is correct. As to why some use and some don't (like me)...arm stabilzation mainly, I suspect ones tt placement within your listening room would have an effect, overall isolation factor, etc.

It is felt that too much fluid can "slow" the cartridge down, muddy up the sound if you will.

Don't know about the VPI arm, but with SME arms, I've always added the damping fluid a drop at a time and it only takes a few. Otherwise, as you said it's easy to over damp. That's why so many people complain about SME arms having muddy bass. It's because many people fill the damping trough!
 
An update on the Ayre hum

So I was experimenting last night with the power cables and interconnects to the phono preamp, as well as other power cables in the vicinity. I got to a point that there was extremely low hum, and could only be barely heard when turning the volume all the way up, and the Revox needles did not move either at full input gain... And I have been completely unable to reproduce it since...

I recall crossing the power cables, perhaps even with the interconnects, but I can't fully recall. At one point, just moving the interconnects around had an audible and measurable change, others it didn't. Hmm.... so this is not a power supply issue as I suspected before, but some sort of interference. Then I turn off everything else but the preamp, phono and Revox - no improvement; no improvement whether stuff is plugged into the wall vs. the MIT Z Strip.

So I then touched the RCA inputs on the phono - made it significantly worse as expected. Touching the junction box on the turntable made it better. Running a ground wire from the phono's ground plug to the wall's ground made no difference. So I then put the phono on top of the tt platter, far away from anything else, same. Plugged the RCA inputs with Cardas caps - no difference.

So it's a puzzle how I got it to be silent with that one configuration, and I should have left it alone. It sounds to me the very high sensitivity of the phono is at play here, potentially picking up 60Hz noise from the RCA inputs, so I will look at some shielded power cables and call Ayre.

If anyone has any other thoughts please let me know. Thanks.
 
how does it sound during quiet passages of music?

The Analogue Productions Test LP has a quiet track to evaluate rumble... with the volume at 12 o'clock - my normal listening level, it's audible. And since I brought this up... with the sub on, there is no rumble to speak of, no subwoofer port chuffing, not even at full volume - excellent turntable performance!
 
I have been able to reduce the hum to virtually nothing again by plugging and unplugging the power cord. This has got to be a trivial issue of a loose ground wire inside it, or more likely, bad connection of the ground receptacle in the MIT Z Strip. This time I have left it alone to enjoy the music. I talked to Ayre and Nordost who both claimed that this is a clear ground issue, so I confirmed that the interconnects and XLR junction box on the VPI are all connected properly. A happy ending...
 
Update on the sound of the new analog rig

The new rig has sounded so incredibly life-like from the very beginning that it raised doubts about the Spectral DAC's ability to compete, and I mentioned before that I will be auditioning the Berkeley DAC shortly. Well, I did A/B the two DACs about 10 days ago - a mere 4 days after playing the very first LP - and the SDR-2000 has already been sold!

To make a long story short, the Berkeley Alpha DAC is to these ears nothing short of a crowning achievement! I also compared it with the new Spectral 4000 Pro and I couldn't tell the difference. The sound coming out of this DAC is simply jaw-dropping and life-like, and everything Harley said in the TAS review appears to be true. On 16-bit Reference Recordings HDCD encoded discs the sound is pure analog and utterly musical, and when I auditioned it at the store with Reference Recordings HRx 24/176 HDCD discs I felt I was listening to the master tape! The alpha DAC is a steal at this price, and I will be getting mine in about a week, at which point I will update the system's pictures and comments with more details on how it compares with the analog rig.

Moreover, a two-day comparison between the alpha DAC and the analog rig indicates that the VPI/Dynavector/Ayre combo is still a tad better than the alpha DAC, as compared with Brubeck's Take 5 LP vs HDCD disc, with purer highs and a bit more vivid sound (greater attack and sustain), but the alpha DAC is rendering pure analog bliss and thrilling sounds with Reference Recordings HDCD discs, and it's impossible for me to tell the difference between the two sources with spectacular recordings. Curiously enough, the alpha DAC manages to match the analog performance playing Diana Krall's Live from Paris (ORG 200g LP and non-HDCD disc).

I think I can safely proclaim that both sources have taken the system to a level where pure live MUSIC is coming out the Odysseys for the first time (as opposed to great sound). Although I knew the VPI and Dynavector would not let me down, I am really impressed with the Ayre P-5xe managing to out-perform both the Spectral 2000 and in certain occasions the Berkeley DAC (as described above), as it well should.

More details when the Alpha arrives and have had the chance to compare them with large classical orchestral pieces like Holst's Planets (Decca/Mehta 200g LP reissue vs XRCD of the same).
 

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