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A headshell is a head piece designed to be attached to the end of a turntable's or record player's tonearm, which holds the cartridge. [1] Standard catridges are secured to the headshell by a couple of 2.5 mm bolts spaced 1/2" apart. Older, non-metric cartridges used #2 (3/32") bolts. [2]
The Series II [10] arm was SME's first arm. It came in two variants the 3009 and 3012 (9" and 12" respectively) tone arms which were widely adopted for audiophile and broadcast use during the 1960s and 1970s, at the higher end of the market.
First LP-platform marker with the traditional LCD interface. Also introduced vernier trigger adjustment wheels. Angel 4 Fly: Switched from the COPS/Sensi piezoelectric sensor with break-beam anti-chop eyes Angel Speed 2005 "5PEED" First model to use a 9V battery. Uses a new LPR/Volumiser system as well as a new bolt, ram and frame design. Angel G7
A paint roller is a paint application tool used for painting large flat surfaces rapidly and efficiently. The paint roller typically consists of two parts: a "roller frame," and a "roller cover." The roller cover absorbs the paint and transfers it to the painted surface, the roller frame attaches to the roller cover. A painter holds the roller ...
A tonearm with the dial for anti-skating adjustment.. Turntable anti-skating is a feature used in phonograph turntables to prevent skating of the tonearm.. Due to the offset between the cartridge's axis (which is approximately tangential to the disc) and the tonearm's pivot, the force applied (through friction) by the rotating disc to the cartridge tends to draw the tonearm toward the center ...
Close-up shot of a diamond-pattern knurling on a cylindrical work piece. Knurling method: left/right with tips raised, spiral angle: 30°, pitch: 1 mm, profile angle: 90° Knurling is a manufacturing process, typically conducted on a lathe, whereby a pattern of straight, angled or crossed lines is rolled into the material. Knurling can also ...