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H I - F I   C A R T R I D G E   A L I G N I N G   T O O L S

Tools required are an alignment gauge, a tracking force gauge, a FLAT record, 
a screwdriver or Allen keys of the right size (usually 2mm), a good light may 
also be helpful. Small needle-nose pliers and a magnifying glass all help. It also 
helps to have the hi-fi news test record. Treat the arm with care, as some parts 
are fragile. To this end ensure that tightening of any bolts is carried out gently 
and without causing undue strain. 

C H E C K   H I - F I   C A R T R I D G E   C L I P  
C O N N E C T I O N S   A N D   M O U N T I N G

Tonearm wiring uses a standard colour code for left channel (L) and right 
channel (R) and polarity. Coding is as follows: White = L Hot, Blue = L 
Ground, Red = R Hot, and Green = R Ground. If the cartridge pins aren’t 
colour-coded the same way, they will have letter identifications next to them. 
Make sure that the arm’s wires, wire clips, and solder joints are in very good 
condition. At minimum, clean the contact between cartridge pins and wire 
clips by removing and replacing each clip. Holding the clips with needle-nose 
pliers can make this easier, but be careful that you don’t strain the wires where 
they join the clip. Check the clips for a proper fit on the cartridge pins, and 
adjust them if necessary. “Proper” means snug but not tight. To check clip 
size, hold the cartridge tail-up close to the head wires, grasp a clip firmly right 
behind its tubular part with the tweezers, line it up with the cartridge pin, and 
press. If it does not slide on with moderate force, the clip needs opening-up. If 
it slides on easily but flops around when attached, it needs tightening. Sizing 
is the operation most likely to detach a clip. The trick is to avoid bending 
the wire at its attachment point or putting too much tension on it. To avoid 
either, always hold the clip with its wire slightly slack-looped behind it while 
adjusting. For opening a clip, hold it firmly with the tweezers or needle-noses, 
right behind its tubular section, and press the tip of the jeweller’s screwdriver 
into the open end of its longitudinal slot until you see this widen very slightly. 
(Here’s where you’ll probably need the headband magnifier or reading glasses.) 
You’re dealing with thousandths of an inch here, so a barely visible spreading 
may be all that’s needed. Try it for fit, and repeat until it does. For tightening 
a clip, press a toothpick inside it as far as it will go, then use the needle-nose 
pliers to gently squeeze together the sides of the clip near its free end, while 
watching  the  slot  for  any  change.  (Attempting  to  squeeze  a  clip  without 
the toothpick inside it will flatten its sides.) Try it for size, and re-squeeze if 
necessary until the fit is correct. When it is, close up the middle section of the 
tube to match the end

Cartridge mounting screws (usually 2.5mm Allen bolts) should be tight. Steel 
Allen bolts are the best for mounting hi-fi cartridges - aluminium or brass are 
OK but difficult to tighten up hard (as they should be).

S E T T I N G   U P   H I - F I   C A R T R I D G E S

M O U N T I N G

Mount the hi-fi cartridge in the headshell if this is not done already. This is 
best done with the hi-fi cartridge stylus guard in place but it may be necessary 
to remove it during at least one phase of the installation. If you do, replace it 
as soon as possible. Be especially careful when the stylus guard is off, as many 
MC cartridges have a strong magnetic field at the base of the cantilever. If 
this attracts the tip of a steel-bladed screwdriver, it can destroy the stylus - 
there is no hope of resisting it. The best precaution is to keep the screwdriver 
well away from the cantilever, use a nonferrous screwdriver, or keep the stylus 
guard on when you’re using the screwdriver near it. The other main hazard is 
children so don’t forget to warn prying fingers.

The headshell screws should be finger-tightened just enough that the cartridge 
cannot fall off but still loose enough that the cartridge is easily moved around. 
Work  whenever  possible  with  the  stylus’s  safety  cap  in  place.  Set  tracking 
force at nominal, then carry out the tangency alignment procedures, then the 
azimuth. Do not deviate from this sequence as each step affects the subsequent 
one — change the order and the setup will be wrong.

T R A C K I N G   F O R C E

This adjustment is carried out on the counterbalance weight of the tonearm 
or spring dial if one is in place. At this point, use your tracking force gauge 
and setting tracking force according to your cartridge instructions — final 
adjustment will be done later by ear.

If you do not have a tracking force gauge, but the arm does have a calibrated 
counterweight, defeat the arm’s anti-skate mechanism or set it to zero. Set 
the counterweight so the arm is level and balanced. Be very careful of the 
unprotected stylus — you cannot do this with its safety cap in place. Once the 
arm is balanced, lock it in its cradle and, using the calibrated counterweight, 
set the tracking force according to your cartridge’s recommended weight.

T A N G E N C Y   A L I G N M E N T

(Lateral tracking angle) - Follow the manufacturer’s literature and the dictates 
of your alignment gauge — different gauges use slightly different methods. 
As you square up the hi-fi cartridge body with the gauge’s markings, be sure 
that the cartridge sides are square or your alignment will be wrong. When all 
adjustments are correct, carefully tighten down the hi-fi cartridge mounting 
screws. Keeping a firm grip on hi-fi cartridge and headshell together so nothing 
shifts, delicately tighten each screw down a turn or so, and then repeat until 
tight. Tightening down one screw all the way before tightening the others is 
almost certain to twist the cartridge out of alignment. However careful you’ve 
been, always check the alignment again after tightening.

V E R T I C A L   T R A C K I N G   A N G L E   ( V T A )

Unless  your  tonearm  has  a  special  VTA  adjuster,  adjusting  arm  height  is 
usually carried out with the use of spacing washers (as with Rega arms). In 
arms with a pillar / collar type vta adjuster it helps to put pencil or pen marks 
on the pillar to keep track of various heights. See your tonearm manual for 
its recommendations on adjusting arm pillar height. The best approach is 
to tune-in VTA gradually by listening to music. You know the arm needs 
to be lowered at the arm pillar when the overall sound is hard and bright, 
with thin bass or no deep bass, edgy highs, and harsh midrange (of course, 
this could also be tracking force which is too light). Distortion obscures low 
level details between the musical; notes so dynamic range is reduced. Transient 
attacks may be too sharp. Raise the arm when the sound is dull and damped, 
the highs rolled off, the lows muddy and lacking definition, and transient 
attacks are dull. Mind you, this sounds an awful lot like the effects of changes 
in tracking force (too light is edgy, too heavy is heavy and dull). They are 
different sounding but hard to explain. Start with the arm a little low and 
very gradually raise it, first to where it is parallel to the record, and then so 
the back of the cartridge is tilting up. Keep track of your settings so you can 
return to the one you like best where everything snaps into focus. The range 
of adjustments can be quite broad, as much as 3/4” or even more (at the arm 
pivot). Play with the full range so you know what it sounds like and don’t be 
diffident.

A N T I S K A T E   F O R C E   ( P I V O T I N G   A R M S  
O N L Y )

This applies an opposing, balancing force to the natural inward drag of a 
pivoting  arm  while  playing.  Left  uncontrolled,  the  stylus  would  push  up 
against the inner groove wall, causing distortion both from mistracking and a 
cantilever skewed in relation to the cartridge generator. To set, lower the stylus 
down near the label of a record with a wide run-out to it. Increase anti-skate 
until the arm starts to slowly drift outward, away from the label. Again, this 
should be finalized by ear as you listen to music. If image placement is a little 
off-centre, or if things don’t seem to be locked in solidly, experiment with 
anti-skate. Also, watch the stylus when you set it into a groove. Does it move 
to the right or left relative to the cartridge body? This indicates too much or 
too little antiskating.

Summary of Contents for AURORA GOLD

Page 1: ...L E OWNERS MANUAL Read carefully and do not tighten bolts you may think are loose Latest version of Aurora Gold turntable shown with Origin Live upgrade mat which can be ordered as an optional extra to upgrade the deck Use belt on lower groove of pulley ...

Page 2: ... com under general information then technical support from the drop down list The instructions are written for owners with no previous experience of turntables Some sections may therefore appear lengthy as they need to cater for all potential questions When reading the instructions refer to the various diagrams for part names and clarity The deck can take approximately 15 minutes to set up dependi...

Page 3: ...ists between pod tube and edge of plinth outer ring CURVED DAMPER SUB CHASSIS PLATE BOTTOM SUB CHASSIS PLATE BEARING HOUSE PLINTH OUTER RING PLINTH INNER PLATE NOTES Trouble shooting notes on the sub chassis optional reading 1 The sub chassis is attached to the bottom sub chassis platee by one pivot bolt the two plates should be free to swivel and are loosely restrained by an anti rotate bolt this...

Page 4: ...nd become more level Oil the bearing with the small oil bottle supplied run approx 10 drops of oil into the top of the bearing house Insert the spindle Wipe the platter spindle surface first to ensure that it is absolutely clean and very gently insert it into the bearing house If the oil does not overflow when the spindle touches the bottom then try 2 drops at a time till you achieve overflow wipe aw...

Page 5: ...screws are accessible at the rear of the control box See diagram above To increase speed turn the 25 turn presets clockwise until the speed changes If the screw reaches the end of it s travel you can usually hear a faint clicking You will not damage the preset by over turning it as slippage occurs The pre set screw will not fall out and may need a fair number of turns to set the correct speed so k...

Page 6: ...that absolute speed accuracy is easy to achieve at the expense of sound quality The ac motors common to most decks are not prone to speed drift however they do inject a great deal of vibration This sadly is never measured in technical reviews or people would be a lot wiser The subjective effect of vibration is highly detrimental to sound quality when compared to fractional speed drift For this rea...

Page 7: ...around 2 4 days continuous running They are sometimes a little noisy to start with It is best to run in the motor on full power with the belt off Most importantly you can tune in the motor to give minimum noise by adjusting the tightness of the 3 small Phillips screws next to the motor pulley The best way to set their tension is to tighten the screws until they just nip tight Then back off all 3 s...

Page 8: ...se note that the occasional rewired arm can make a slight rustling noise through the speakers when it is lifted across the record This should not be a cause for concern as it is only caused by microphony of the internal litz cable under normal playing conditions this is inaudible The earth lead should be connected to the earth of your pre amplifier or amplifier This earth lead is best separated slig...

Page 9: ...in nylon filament line through the small gap of the wire eye to allow the ball weight to hang freely The adjustment ball is initially set at just under three quarters of the way out along the silver rod this is approx the correct position for most cartridges If you wish to increase the side bias force then unclamp the ball using a 1 5mm Allen key and the ball further outwards To decrease the side f...

Page 10: ...rd collection You can increase the height of the lift lower arm rest by loosening the small allen screw in the side of the curved arm rest and raising it slightly finish by retightening it in position The sound of new arms and rewires will improve significantly over the first 2 weeks as items bed in and arm wires burn in Fit the cartridge to the arm using an alignment gauge and ensure the headshell w...

Page 11: ...rrectly so that the audio cartridge can do it s job properly For instance a turntable out of level can produce side forces on the pickup cartridge tip that will wear it more on one side than the other as well as have a slightly degrading effect on the wear of your records L E V E L N E S S When a turntable goes out of level the platter bearing performance and the arm s dynamics specifically anti sk...

Page 12: ... the stylus s safety cap in place Set tracking force at nominal then carry out the tangency alignment procedures then the azimuth Donotdeviatefromthissequenceaseachstepaffectsthesubsequent one change the order and the setup will be wrong T R A C K I N G F O R C E This adjustment is carried out on the counterbalance weight of the tonearm or spring dial if one is in place At this point use your trac...

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