ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022READ ONLY FORUM
This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022
Hello!
i have the following question: a friend of mine tried my beogram 1600 last night and accidently started playing without a disc on the turntable so the needle (MMC10E) dragged a couple of seconds over the slipmat...
Do you guys think, the needle/cantilever took any damage? I tried some discs after this happened and i couldnt hear any difference to before.
Thanks in advance for any answers!
Kindest regards
Philipp
Okok! Good to know! I asked in a record store and they told me i should at least use a very thin one, its like a millimeter thin. But you would still recommend not using one?
I agree with the above.There is absolutely no need for "slipmats" or "antistatic mats" on Beograms.In fact, there are many reasons NOT to use one:
Platters with radial streaks are designed to build a bit of vacuum under the record, - ruined by the mat.Platters have antistatic coating, - put out of function by the mat.The 15deg tracking angle of the cartridge will be wrong, - ruined by the mat.Without readjusting, some decks will not lift the needle high enough at run-out to clear the record - when on a mat.Most Beograms autosense records by weight or looks to avoid lowering the needle onto no record - ruined by the mat.
DON'T USE MATS ON BEOGRAMS. PERIOD!
Martin
Got it!
Slipmat is removed!
The discs dont get any damage from playing without?
TISE: Got it! Slipmat is removed! The discs dont get any damage from playing without?
Of course not!Record players were not designed to damage records.
Okok! Sorry for asking not-so-clever questions but i never got in touch vinyl...
So thank you very much for answering everything! :)
There are no stupid questions, only stupid people who doesn't want to answer them
Collecting Vintage B&O is not a hobby, its a lifestyle.