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Setup depends on which record player you have. All-in-one record players (like the Arkrocket Huygens) are essentially plug-and-play — unbox, place on a stable surface, connect power, and play. Component record players with adjustable tonearms require additional steps: balancing the tonearm, setting tracking force, and adjusting anti-skate. This lesson covers both, with the tonearm setup explained step by step for those who need it.
Setting up a record player for the first time feels more intimidating than it is. The tonearm setup that trips up most beginners takes about five minutes once you understand what each adjustment does and why. After the first time, it becomes second nature.
Part 1 — All-in-One Setup (Plug and Play)
If your record player has built-in speakers and a fixed or pre-set tonearm (Arkrocket Huygens, Curiosity III, Coryphaeus, Discovery II), setup is straightforward. The tonearm comes factory-set from the manufacturer.
Important
Easy
For Bluetooth connection: put your speakers in pairing mode, then activate Bluetooth on the record player per the manual. Most Arkrocket models pair in under 30 seconds.
Be careful
Easy
The two most common issues with a new record player:
Very quiet or tonally wrong sound — check the Phono/Line switch is set to Line, and that you’re connected to the correct input on your speaker or amplifier.
Skipping on the record — check the surface is level, and that the tonearm isn’t being disturbed by vibration from nearby speakers. On a factory-set record player, the tracking force is already calibrated — do not add weight to the tonearm.
Part 2 — Tonearm Setup (Adjustable Turntables)
If your record player has an adjustable counterweight at the back of the tonearm, you need to complete three calibration steps before playing your first record: tonearm balance → tracking force → anti-skate. These steps take about five minutes and should be repeated any time you change the cartridge or move the record player.
First
Most modern record players come with the cartridge pre-installed. If you are installing a new cartridge, align it with the headshell screws and connect the four color-coded wires (white = left channel, red = right channel, green = left ground, blue = right ground). Tighten lightly — do not overtorque.
Critical step
Set anti-skate to 0 first — this prevents the tonearm from swinging while you balance it.
Remove the stylus protector if present.
Unlock the tonearm from its rest. Hold the headshell gently and release the lock clip.
Move the counterweight (the round weight at the back of the tonearm) forward or backward until the tonearm floats perfectly horizontal — not rising or sinking. The arm should balance like a seesaw with equal weight on both ends.
Once balanced, rotate only the numbered dial ring on the counterweight to align the zero mark with the center reference line on the tonearm — without moving the counterweight itself. This marks your balance point as zero.
Critical step
From the zero position you just set, rotate the entire counterweight assembly (both dial and weight together) counterclockwise.
Stop when the dial reads your target tracking force. For example: if the cartridge specifies 1.8–2.2g, set to 2.0g — the midpoint of the recommended range.
For maximum accuracy, use a digital tracking force gauge ($15–25) placed on the platter. Lower the stylus onto the gauge platform and read the measurement. Adjust the counterweight until the gauge matches your target.
Final step
Set the anti-skate dial to match your tracking force. If tracking force is 2.0g, set anti-skate to 2. This is the standard starting point recommended by most cartridge manufacturers. Fine-tune by ear if needed: if the sound is brighter in the left channel than the right, increase anti-skate slightly; if brighter on the right, decrease it.
1.0g
1.5g
2.0g
2.5g
3.0g+
This surprises most beginners. When tracking force is too light, the stylus cannot stay seated in the groove — it bounces and skates across the groove walls, causing random scratching. Too heavy causes gradual groove wear over many plays. If you’re unsure, err toward the middle-to-upper end of your cartridge’s recommended range rather than the low end.
First-Play Troubleshooting — Common Issues and Fixes
Many turntables include a thin wire with a fork or spade connector at the end. This is the ground wire. Connect it to the screw terminal labeled “GND” on your phono preamp or amplifier. Without this connection, a mains frequency hum (50Hz or 60Hz depending on your country) will be audible in the background. It is a one-second connection that eliminates a persistent and annoying problem.
Setting up a record player correctly the first time protects both your records and your equipment, and ensures you hear what the format is actually capable of. For all-in-one record players: the factory setup is done for you — unbox, place, connect, play. For component turntables with adjustable tonearms: five minutes of careful calibration — balance, tracking force, anti-skate — is all that stands between you and your first record. Do it once properly and you won’t need to repeat it until you change the cartridge.
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