As a total novice, I realize I still need to spend a lot of time experimenting with my cutting weight, stylus rotation, angle, etc, however there is an issue that seems to be unrelated to any mechanical adjustments or EQ & compression tweaks I could make, which is that, with even the slightest increase in the signal to the cutterhead (with my compressor output limited to 0dB just before the Rek-O-Kut amp), the screw which holds the stylus in place buzzes like crazy (sounds like a cracked bassoon reed or something), which obviously creates a god-awful noise on the embossed vinyl (more like jackhammered vinyl, in these instances). I have to keep the ROK input volume at or below a 2, and, as a result, the test cuts I’m producing so far are barely audible beneath the surface noise (which, as far as I can tell, isn’t exceptional, as surface noise goes).
Anyway, it seems to me that if this vibration wasn't happening, I could be cutting *much* louder records right off the bat, surface noise notwithstanding. I’ve found that if I grip the stylus screw head really tightly, the buzzing (which is intense!) will stop, and the direct sound of music from the stylus becomes crystal clear. I should note, I don’t feel *anything* on the outer casing of the cutterhead itself when this is happening; it’s solid as a rock. It’s just the screw and stylus buzzing, and it’s tightened as much as I’m comfortable tightening it (it’s a 70-year old screw that’s kind of bent and I don’t want to break it… yet).
So, could there be some internal mechanical issue with the cutterhead, or am I just sending too much signal to it? I want to keep working on other adjustments and properly learn the craft, but I also don’t want to waste time (and blanks) on a cutterhead that’s defective or damaged.
Any advice you can offer--including correcting my terminology where it may be incorrect-- will be greatly appreciated!
Thanks in advance,
George
