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Re: [ARSCLIST] Little azimuth trick



George Brock-Nannestad wrote:
From: Patent Tactics, George Brock-Nannestad

Hello,

Chris @Eugene wrote


Hi,
  The normal correct procedure, according to service
manuals, is to adjust for maximum signal strength,
before "fine-tuning" with a Lissajous pattern for
phase relationship. It is possible to get the
correct Lissajous pattern at less than maximum
signal strength azimuth adjustment.
  Usually what I do is watch the signal strength
on an audio voltmeter or the o'scilloscope. Adjust
for maximum amplitude, then you can "tweak" it
very, very slightly for the proper Lissajous
pattern.
  Hope this helps.

Chris
@eugene-audio


----- this is what we all do. However, Richard took the signals from the
"edge" tracks (i.e. those almost ½ inch apart), realizing that the 1 kHz
signals (a _low_ frequency) were in phase in all channels, and generated the
Lissajous from these. This is a good (and novel) way to obtain precision. The
need for obtaining a maximum amplitude reading does not arise at this low
frequency - you cannot tilt the head so much that you get an erroneous
"lower" maximum at this frequency, unless it is a monitoring tape at very,
very low speed.

Thank you, Richard, for this neat trick!

Kind regards,


George

Well, you *can* get an amplitude difference, but it is a cosine effect of the misalignment. The Lissajous figure shows phase difference, a sine effect. For any moderate alignment error, the cosine effect is likely to be swamped by even slight amplitude variation where the phase error will be reliable and easily read.

Mike
--
mrichter@xxxxxxx
http://www.mrichter.com/


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