Dear @nandric : """
What Kessler and Pisha discovered is that by te most tonearms
the offset angle and overhang were wrongly chosen...""
for me that only speaks that not all tonearm manufacturers took with the necessary professional attitude the tonearm/cartridge alignment and its critical main importance because as I posted before and if the designer is " serious " about he only ned it to choose the EL of his design and the other parameters are the result/output of an orthodox alignment calculations. There is no way/margin of error, he only needs to paste the calculated values and that's all.
Other " confusion " that could happened with the gentlemans you named is that their observations were made using IEC standard and maybe do not try with DIN/JIS standards. Who knows from where came those " mix-up ".
R.
the offset angle and overhang were wrongly chosen...""
for me that only speaks that not all tonearm manufacturers took with the necessary professional attitude the tonearm/cartridge alignment and its critical main importance because as I posted before and if the designer is " serious " about he only ned it to choose the EL of his design and the other parameters are the result/output of an orthodox alignment calculations. There is no way/margin of error, he only needs to paste the calculated values and that's all.
Other " confusion " that could happened with the gentlemans you named is that their observations were made using IEC standard and maybe do not try with DIN/JIS standards. Who knows from where came those " mix-up ".
R.

