Dust cover up or down?


Is it better to play albums with dust cover up or down?

3607

A proper dust cover is a big plus for a turntable both sonically and for protection for records and tonearms. What is a proper dust cover?

@herbreichert has notice no problem with his Linn. @fbgbill I do not know if you think a Sota Cosmos is a high end turntable but it does have a dust cover and like Herb's Linn the Sota's dustcover is isolated from the turntable, tonearm and cartridge which are floating on a separate sub chassis.  That is the most important criteria for a proper dust cover. It can not directly transfer vibrations to the working parts of the turntable. Used like this a dust cover actually improves the sound by attenuating the sound that gets to the cartridge like wearing ear muffs. In a system with Electrostatic speakers the improvement in detail is noticeable. 

This leaves a lot of turntables out in the weather but, there is a solution that can be used with any turntable. You have a baseplate made that is larger than the plan view of the turntable to which you can hinge the dust cover. The baseplate could be made out of wood, acrylic or even granite. There are plenty of companies that can make a dust cover of any size. You place the turntable on the base and the dust cover closes over it. I'm surprise there is not a company that makes the whole rig.

I am not the only one who thinks this way about dust cover. In an email conversation with Mark Dohmann he related that he was working on such a dust cover for his Helix turntables. 

@jagjag , unless you live in an industrial clean room there is no such thing as a dust free environment. Another issue is there is no such thing as a static free record. There is always a slight charge on records. Even if you ground out the record with a dead short within a short period of time the record will develop a charge. Why? The paper label and PVC are at opposite ends of the triboelectric series. Electrons migrate from the paper label to the vinyl giving the paper a slight positive charge and the record a slight negative charge, more than enough to collect dust. During play the record also develops a little more of a charge.

FWIW I have a VPI HW-40 and even though it has a hinged dust cover, I do not use the hinges. When I play, I simply take the cover off and set it aside. It goes back on after I am through. That is a lot better than dusting around the top of the table all the time. 

Mijo, I am trying to understand the structure of your Cosmos. Am I correct in thinking the cover hinges to the rear of the wood that forms the visible outer appearance of the TT? And you’re saying that the wood plus dust cover are isolated from the works by the spring suspension? If I’ve got it right, doesn’t the peripheral edge of the lucite also contact the wood, on at least 3 of 4 sides? Or is there a spacer that keeps them apart?

There doesn't seem to be much concern about the dust itself-- which is bad for your turntable-- it gets everywhere-- and bad for your records. It gets in the grooves, creates ticks and pops that are not always easily removed with cleanings. 

Some turntables should be used with the cover completely removed while others, like a SOTA Star Sapphire are designed to work with the cover on and closed. So like most things audio-- it just depends.

The least good thing to do is leave the cover on and up during playback.

I use a fine quality paintbrush to dust off the platter between plays, and the plinth every few days. Dust accumulation is bad for your gear. 

@lewm , the sub chassis, a 1" thick aluminum plate is hanging from 4 dampened springs that are attached to the underside of the plinth (Sota calls it the cover) top surface. The Three adjustable feet are threaded to posts that travel through holes in the sub chassis and also attach to the underside of the plinth upper surface. Nothing touches the sub chassis but the four springs, the main bearing and the tonearm board. The duct cover is hinged to the back surface of the plinth (cover). As supplied by Sota there were two rubber pads on the front upper surface of the plinth that the dust cover rested on. I did not like this arrangement as it left an open slot of about 1/16th inch all the way around the turntable. Fortunately, the dust cover hinges are adjustable. I removed the rubber pads and applied 1/4" wide, 1/16" thick heavy felt strips all the way around turntable and adjusted the hinges so that the dust cover sits flat on the felt completely closing off the upper chamber of the turntable. The sub chassis is further isolated from sound by the skirt that I made which closes off the bottom chamber of the table. There just happen to be two pictures of the table on my system page. The picture without the maple skirt shows the table as supplied by Sota with the two rubber pads at the front corners. The picture with the temporary maple skirt show the table with the felt gasket on the sides. The felt is brown so you have to look closely to see it. I had yet to install tthe felt along the front and back. 

When I get a chance I'll take a picture of the table as it is now. I'll also run another sine sweep with the microphone under the dust cover to see how much quieter it is. I just have to figure out how to get the mic's cable in there without breaking the seal. I'm hoping to get another 5 dB of attenuation, maybe more?  Whatever, the turntable sounds great.

I’ve found that since I’ve dramatically improved my room, it doesn’t matter if it’s up, down, or off.