Welcome to Pioneer Turntable Hell!
Ok, so its really not that bad. For under $50, it’s as good or better than most TT's you would find for that price. Its direct drive, which tends to let more motor rumble through than belt drive units, but that’s best left for another thread (argument). On the plus side, you won't have to change the belt it doesn't have. And if you decide to sell it, you can probably get most of your money back out of it.
The missing dust cover is no big deal since you should use it with the cover on.
Place it on the HEAVIEST, DENSIST chunk of mass you can find (double your body weight in granite would be nice, but the heaviest piece of furniture you have in the room will do for starters). From there you can experiment with all sorts of isolation. TT work on vibration of the needle and the ONLY thing you want vibrating is the needle (not really possible, but that’s the goal).
It takes a standard cartridge and I say stick with an AT or Ortorfon cartridge, maybe a Shure, but avoid Grado's on Pioneers as they tend to HUMMMMMMMMM (has to do with a lack of shielding and grounding of the motor.) Expect to spend more on the cart than you did on the TT for a good one.
Set up the tracking weight of the arm: turn the counter weight on the back of the arm so that the arm floats in mid air and set the dial to 0. Then adjust the weight until the dial reads between .5 and 1. Play a "junk" LP and keep adjusting (but don't play and adjust at the same time) until the arm doesn't "jump". The higher the number the harder the needle is pressing on the LP and the more wear on the needle and LP.
Set up the anti-skate: playing the junk LP, adjust until the arm's horizontal movement doesn’t skip (skate) forward or back.
Here is the most important things you need to know:
- Clean you records and keep them clean.
- Get the table level.
- Clean you records and keep them clean.
- Replace you needle BEFORE it wears out and damages your records.
- Clean you records and keep them clean.
- Don't expect this to be your last table, so if it's not the ultimate, don't fret.
- Clean you records and keep them clean.
- Keep your room as clean as possible.
- And lastly Clean you records and keep them clean.
Welcome to Vinyl! Have fun
(for perspective, my LP count is around 550 while my CD count is under 300)