First, let me say what a great site this is. I've been on other forums for both audio- and non-audio related topics, and this is by far the most enjoyable and helpful. Of course, that's because of the people that populate this space.
Now to my post: A few weeks back I picked up a Beogram 1800 from a coworker who had it stowed in an attic. It looked in pretty bad shape. However, after a little bit of work (and some help from this site on reassembling the dust cover), I was able to play it tonight. It sounded. . . . really good. . . but not "great." So here are my questions:
1. Is there anything on the 1800 that I can (or should try to) adjust? I'm still a relatively newbie to turntables, but I've heard about tracking force and platter speed being important.The only thing I did was adjust the pulley (the part that the belt loops around from the platter) so that it was no longer rubbing up against the casework when spinning (made an awful noise, so I loosened the one screw and pulled it ever slightly back from the platter before retightening).
2. The cartridge is the MMC5. I have no idea if the "good but not great" sound is due to the age and/or quality of the cartridge, and I have no idea how to find out. Obviously, I don't want to just unecessarily buy another cartridge , but I will be doing some vinyl-to-cd transfers that I want to come out as pristine as possible, so I also don't want to settle. Thoughts?
Fwiw: The rest of my system consists of an old B&K ST120 amp, an Anthem TLP-1 pre-amp tuner, Musical Fidelity V-LPS phono stage, and Dahlquist DQ8 speakers.
Matt