Few things are more frustrating to a vinyl enthusiast than a record that skips. The moment the stylus jumps out of the groove, immersion is broken and concern sets in: is something wrong with the turntable, or is the record itself beyond saving? In the clinic of turntable diagnosis, skipping is one of the most …
Anyone who works with vintage audio restoration recognizes the moment immediately: a sustained piano note wavers, a vocal line seems to “breathe,” and long-held chords refuse to remain stable. What you are hearing is not imagination or nostalgia—it is wow & flutter becoming perceptible. In the turntable clinic, this symptom is one of the most …
Few things are more frustrating for a vinyl enthusiast than placing a record on the platter, lowering the needle, turning the volume knob—and realizing the sound is far too low. The music feels weak, lacking weight and presence, as if the system is holding everything back. In restoration benches and technical diagnostics, this complaint is …
In the restoration workshop, few complaints are as intriguing—and as diagnostically revealing—as this one: “The noise only appears when I touch the tonearm.” At first glance, it sounds like a minor annoyance. In practice, it is one of the clearest signals a turntable can give. This behavior almost always points to grounding faults, oxidation, broken …




