Ralph, The defective stylus WERE sent to Steven Medved and he sent them after checking for a more detailed look to Ron H. Those diamonds were damaged with chips or fractures. All were new ones. The one old one I sent him while not showing any run off marking none the less was worn which effected the clarity of the sound. Expert replaced the damaged stylus.pughphonos wrote:It doesn't necessarily follow that the run offs were subject to noticeable marking from the start.larryh wrote:Just a thought. If the run offs had been subject to noticeable marking from the start then we wouldn't be complaining today about the stylus leaving the marks on our pristine records.
Larry
This is where some pretty esoteric historical research is needed. What was the likelihood back in the day that the limit pin would hit the limit loop in the run off? Was that a product of differing rear hinges in differing reproducers (note my comment somewhere above that I have one that has two securing screws while another has three). Also, might not 90 years of aging, adjustments, and replacements have loosened some of these reproducers so that they would shift in the run off in ways not originally intended?
Here's a question for you, Larry. One of my reproducers is one of the Duncan stop ones; it has the hole in the back for the electrode. THAT was one model, if ever there was one, that was MEANT to allow the limit pin to hit the limit loop in the run off as that was necessary for the Duncan stop. Guess what? In the one I have, when it proceeds into the run-off, the limit pin remains centered!![]()
Now, see: here's another example of an Edison component NOT acting the way it should. Why? Because we've had 90 years of people making adjustments to these components. So, plenty of DD reproducers are acting today in ways they did not 90 years ago; ones that originally would have allowed "drift" and the Duncan connection no longer do (as is the case with mine)--whereas others that originally did not allow that drift now DO.
I can tell, my friend (and you know I genuinely regard you as such), that you still want to blame the styli. In your household you have a bunch of DD styli you've sent to bed without supper because you assume they've been bad--based on run-off scoring alone. They're crying their little eyes out--sobbing into their pillows. At least send them out to be checked under a microscope.
On the adjustments to the reproducer it would seem to me that so long as all parts are free an properly installed they should act pretty much as intended. If the pin is not moving in the run off it might be that the rear pivot is not working freely. I have run into the spring material that the weight is attached to the pivot being mildly bent causing the weight to not float properly which might counteract the weights ability to ride to the side. The duncan stop was eliminated fairly early on and after that if one set the shut off to prevent the stylus from entering the label area and to not shut off before the music quits on longer sides you would naturally have a situation where the run off would be used almost to its maximum.
Greigs findings are good as Its been questioned off an on if some records show more run off marking than others. I have too noticed that some will show it more than another. A cutting type mark, (some even will show brown if left running) is not a situation you want to see. I agree that very faint markings may be something you can live with. Still many old recordings in good shape have almost impossible to see light lines, and many have none.
Larry