Specifications trouble checks – Sony PS-LX2 User Manual

Page 8

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SPECIFICATIONS

TROUBLE CHECKS

Turntable

Platter

31 cm (l

2‘/4 in.), aluminum-alloy diecast

Motor

Linear torque BSL (brushless and slotless)
motor

Drive system

Direct drive

Control system Magnedisc servo control system
Speed

33‘/3 rpm, 45 rpm

Starting characteristics Comes to nominal speed within a

half revolution (

33V3 rpm)

Wow and flutter 0.02% (WRMS)* 0.025% (WRMS)
Signal-to-noise ratio 75dB(DlN-B)

Load characteristics 0.05% up to 150 g stylus force (at lead-in

groove of a record)

Tonearm
Type

Statically balanced

Pivot-to-stylus length 216.5 mm

(8V

b

in.)

Overhang

16.5 mm

(“/32 in.)

Stylus force adjustment range 0 - 3 g
Cartridge shell weight

U.S.A. model; 4.7 g
Canadian model : 5.2 g

Cartridge weight range (including supplied shell)

7.5 - 12 g

Cartridge VL-5 (supplied only with the PS-LX2C)
Type
Frequency response
Channel separation
Output voltage
Load impedance
Tracking force
Stylus

Weight

General
Power requirements
Power consumption
Dimensions

Moving magnet type
10 Hz to 20 kHz

20 dB at 1 kHz
3.5 mV at 1 kHz, 5 cm/sec.,45°
47 to 100 kilohms

1.5 to 2.5 g (2 g recommended)

Sony ND-5G
(Conical 0.6 mil diamond)
5.0 g

Weight

Supplied accessories

120 V ac, 60 Hz

8W
Approx. 430 X 105 X 355 mm (w/h/d)

(17 X

4V4 X 14 in.)

including projecting parts and controls
Approx. 5.8 kg (12 lbs 13 oz), net
Approx. 7.1 kg (15 lbs 10 oz), in shipping
carton

45-rpm adaptor (1)
Cartridge shell (

1)

Disc centering guides (2)
Cartridge VL-5 (only with the PS-LX2C) (1)

The following trouble checks will help you correct most common
problems encountered with a turntable system. Should any pro­
blem persist after you have made these checks, consult your

nearest Sony service facility.
Before proceeding with these trouble checks, first refer to the con­
nections and the operating procedures on page 6.

Impaired tone quality
• Improper tracking force. See “Tonearm adjustment” on page 4.
• Dusty stylus.
• The turntable is not placed on a level surface.
• The turntable is incorrectly placed on or too near a speaker.
• Worn stylus or defective record. (The stylus life is approximately
400 hours of playing time.)

• incorrect stylus installation.
• Improper tonearm balance.
• Improper setting of the anti-skating compensator.

No audio from one channel
• Loose attachment of the cartridge shell to the tonearm.
• Poor shell connection. Wipe the connector pins with denatured

alcohol.

• Loose connection of phono connecting cord.
• Low volume level setting for one channel of the amplifier.

Groove skipping, tonearm tends to skate, tonearm does not ad­
vance.

• Improper tracking force. See “Tonearm adjustment” on page

4.

• Improper setting of the anti-skating compensator.
• The turntable is not placed on a level surface.
• Defective record.
• External vibrations.

Steady low-pitched hum

• Loose connection between the cartridge shell and the tonearm.
• Loose connection of phono cord.

Loud rumble or low-frequency howl *
• The turntable is affected by external vibration.
• The turntable is too near a speaker.

*This is called “acoustic feedback" and is caused when vibrations from the

speakers are transmitted through the air or via solid objects (such as the
shelves, the cabinet, the floor, etc.) to the turntable, where it is picked up by
the stylus, amplified and reproduced through the speakers once again.

Design and specifications subject to change without notice.

♦ This new measuring method concerns only the turntable assembly, in­

cluding the platter. It excludes wow and flutter caused by the tonearm, the
cartridge, or the record. Measured by obtaining signal from magnetic pick­
up head.

Sony Corporation Printed in Japan

3-783-557-22 (1)

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