





If high frequencies seem ghostly on one channel, azimuth may be off. Use a mono reference tape and oscilloscope or phase meter to maximize correlation. Tiny turns matter; document screw positions. The moment cymbals snap into focus, stereo width blooms, and hiss tucks neatly behind music, rewarding delicacy with astonishing clarity.
Too light a setting mistracks; too heavy shaves life from vinyl. Use a reliable scale, set manufacturer’s force, and verify anti‑skate with blank groove tests and musical passages prone to sibilance. Periodically recheck alignment as suspensions age. The reward is effortless imaging, reduced wear, and evenings where records sound younger than their sleeves suggest.
Old cameras leak light and drift slow. Replace seals with stable foam, test shutter times against a photodiode rig or phone-based meter, and note deviations per speed. Then adjust exposure practice accordingly. The feeling when negatives return clean and consistent cannot be bought; it is earned through careful observation and iterative, compassionate service.
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