Dunlavy Audio Laboratories SC-IV loudspeaker Follow-Up, March 1995
<I>"DAL firmly believes that a full set of credible measurements, made by qualified engineering staff using state-of-the-art equipment and facilities, can reliably predict the potential of a loudspeaker to accurately reproduce the complex sounds of music."</I>—Dunlavy Audio Labs
<I>"DAL firmly believes that a full set of credible measurements, made by qualified engineering staff using state-of-the-art equipment and facilities, can reliably predict the potential of a loudspeaker to accurately reproduce the complex sounds of music."</I>—Dunlavy Audio Labs
<I>"DAL firmly believes that a full set of credible measurements, made by qualified engineering staff using state-of-the-art equipment and facilities, can reliably predict the potential of a loudspeaker to accurately reproduce the complex sounds of music."</I>—Dunlavy Audio Labs
<I>"DAL firmly believes that a full set of credible measurements, made by qualified engineering staff using state-of-the-art equipment and facilities, can reliably predict the potential of a loudspeaker to accurately reproduce the complex sounds of music."</I>—Dunlavy Audio Labs
Dunlavy Audio Laboratories SC-IV loudspeaker System
<I>"DAL firmly believes that a full set of credible measurements, made by qualified engineering staff using state-of-the-art equipment and facilities, can reliably predict the potential of a loudspeaker to accurately reproduce the complex sounds of music."</I>—Dunlavy Audio Labs
<I>"DAL firmly believes that a full set of credible measurements, made by qualified engineering staff using state-of-the-art equipment and facilities, can reliably predict the potential of a loudspeaker to accurately reproduce the complex sounds of music."</I>—Dunlavy Audio Labs
<I>"DAL firmly believes that a full set of credible measurements, made by qualified engineering staff using state-of-the-art equipment and facilities, can reliably predict the potential of a loudspeaker to accurately reproduce the complex sounds of music."</I>—Dunlavy Audio Labs
Hola,
Question: In a unipivot tonearm, what do you call the deviation from the "vertical plane" that can occur with cartridge motion?
Is it 'rotational azimuth?'
'Vertical azimuth?'
This seems to be a phenomenon much at the heart of unipivot performance, but I'm blocking on vocabulary.
Did that even make sense?
I'm trying to put a name on the ability of the cartridge to rotate around an axis 'described' by the tonearm itself.
The reason I ask is that I was just playing with a Well Tempered arm, and it does this like crazy!