If I correctly understand the needle in a sound box needs to put the ideal weight upon the record to produce the best possible play back quality without damaging the record. If the tracking force (the downward pressure applied by the needle) is not set correctly, the needle is very likely to sit too heavily or too lightly on the grooves. Heavy tracking weight may distort the sound, reduce the detail, and damage the shellac, whereas needle with light tracking force may be thrown up wards making the tone arm skate across the record. Thus, one first needs to know the right tracking force to play a record on a gramophone and then add a weight to the back of the tone arm to reduce the needle's downward force . Once the right tracking force is known, counterweights can be properly adjusted for optimal audio performance. One may discover the right tracking force through hit and trial (playing with counterweights) if one trusts one's ears. Otherwise, one needs an electronic balance to measure grammage (the mass per unit area) of the tracking force. Once the tracking force is known, one needs to know the right counterweight for it. Sometime back, I read somewhere about the digital tracking force gauge, which is meant for measuring the stylus weight or the tracking force between 1.25 g and 4 gram but I trust tracking force of a gramophone needle in a sound box is beyond this range.Orchorsol wrote: Wed Sep 11, 2024 4:59 pm Yes, there were various counterweights. Probably the most elegant was one made by Joe Ginn, E.M.Ginn's son, to fit the tonearms of Expert gramophones: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wc3Ngqcsd18
Some may disagree, but when using thorn or bamboo fibre needles I find it actually helps to have more tracking force rather than less, and I know other enthusiasts over the years have found the same - but the Expert Dynamic soundboxes (as seen in the video) are very heavy indeed!
In the absence of a gauge designed for measuring gramophones' tracking force , what is the best way to know the tracking force of one's gramophone needle? and what is standard relationship between tracking force and counterweight?