Oracle Delphi Mk V suspension height


I just acquired a Delphi Mk V to replace my old MK I/II.
When I set the suspension height to 20 mm the belt falls below the inner rim. I have finally set it to 17 mm & can see about 1 mm of the inner rim below the belt when playing a record. The distance from the top of the plinth to the top of the drive pulley is 70 mm for a spec of 71 mm. Can anyone comment on their suspension height (bottom of tower skirt to plinth)?
oldears
Check the sub chassis to make sure it is seated on the posts (towers) correctly. Maybe one might be off just a bit and not fully engaged into the post/tower.
Oldears, when you get this sorted out, can you tell us how the Oracle V compares to the Oracle 2? I'm less interested in the sound(other than in the bass), and more interested in the effect it has on listening enjoyment-not so much in discovering new information from well-known lps.
Wrote Oracle Tues & Wed, no response yet. Went to Lowes & got a faucet handle removal tool. Raised the pulley by 2 mm to a height of 72 mm above plinth (spec 71). Raised the skirt height to 19mm (spec 20). Good enough for me. But the Oracle specs will not allow the belt to stay on for this model.
Note I have owned & maintained an Oracle for 33 years.
For the sound question: The old Oracle is a Mk I with the Pabst Hall effect DC motor, the Mk II suspension, a Perfectionist Engineering polymer bearing, a separate linear 27 V DC power supply, an acrylic platter mat from Holland, and is in good working order. The replacement is a Mk V SE (with granite base and Turbo PS). I took the tonearm & disc from the old table to the new, & made minor adjustments in VTA and azimuth.
The individual sound differences are not as large as you might think, but they do add up. The biggest difference is in "jump" (macro-dynamics?). The bass goes only a little lower, but is cleaner. The imaging width & depth is a little better, the noise level a little better (micro-dynamics?). The sound is a little more precise throughout. The sense of realism is much improved. I couldn't go back.
Thanks. I'm pretty sure I never even came close to setting up my Oracle Mk 2 correctly.