Audio Technica stylus upgrade


Hi all,

I have the Marantz TT-15S Turntable (which I love) with the factory Clearaudio cartridge. I upgraded the stylus way back with the AT-VM95 microline stylus with amazing results. Do I go the next step with the Shibata or am I wasting my money on diminishing returns? I'd play with carts but since this table does not have a removable headshell I'm not really interested. I'm kind of at my happy place with my current system so of course I can't leave well enough alone.

Merry Christmas all! 

Ed

edbay

Showing 3 responses by elliottbnewcombjr

Happy Holidays,

You have a body that accepts a variety of stylus, and that means you do not need to re-align the cartridge body, a terrific advantage, if you do or especially if you do not have the skills or tools needed.

Amazing Results means the body is properly aligned, great news.

You may have worn your ML stylus out, so:

replace ML, try Shibata, or new cartridge needing alignment?

I doubt there will be much/any generally audible differences between new ML or New Shibata. Expected stylus life is slightly different, so cost difference tends to even out over time.

Going from Aluminum to Boron Cantilever should tighten things up, most evident to me in the low bass, stiffer cantilever’s progress in both ability and price.

After shattering a Shure Beryllium Cantilever, I stop at Boron. 

 

 

Well, it’s the cartridges innards, and cantilever's suspension

Ortofon talks about upgrades to Sapphire, then Boron being slightly better than Sapphire

here’s a Boron upgrade

Nude Shibata diamond on a boron cantilever

Stylus

The 2M Black LVB 250 upgrades the great build of the 2M Black with a Nude Shibata diamond on a boron cantilever. The use of an extremely stiff and lightweight Boron cantilever adds remarkable transparency, speed, and responsiveness.

The Nude Shibata stylus’ slim, highly polished profile allows an exceedingly wide contact area to the groove walls and ensures notably detailed reproduction throughout the spectrum, including even the highest frequencies.

.............................

chakster was still around in this discussion of your mc2000

https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/classic-ortofon-cartridges-the-mc2000-mk-ii-or-the-mc3000-mk-ii

New Cartridge? Mount and Align It? That’s Intimidating, BUT, u can do it!

Rather than replace your stylus, knotscott’s suggestion of AT’s MM VM540ML is an excellent one, and a true upgrade. I recommend that cartridge all the time. I have one, some of my friends have taken my advice, all quite happy.

VM540ml’s wider channel separation and tight channel balance are important factors for imaging, that’s the large upgrade. Many, many very expensive cartridge’s separation and tight center abilities are not as good, thus imaging are less than the VM540ML.

Sound characteristics of a cartridge, subjective, is a separate factor, the VM540ml sounds great in my and many opinions. Think ’preferred’, not necessarily ’better’.

(After a darn good MM, and saving some more money, it’s time to move into the MC Moving Coil world).

Cartridge Alignment is tricky, but well worth learning how, having the skills for the rest of your life, for you and your friends.

You may have a friend, or live near one of us to get help the 1st time. (I’m NJ near NYC 07062).

All that is needed to install a new cartridge is a few inexpensive tools and steady enough hands to attach 4 wires and tighten two screws.

The alignment is easy enough to understand, and you have the advantage of an old cartridge to practice with.

MM Moving Magnet Cartridges also have the advantage that you can remove the stylus for some adjustments, thus avoid breaking it. Stylus back in for final alignments, then adjust the tracking weight and lastly the anti-skate.

Your TT has a rare magnetic anti-skate mechanism, that’s both easy and excellent. One of my arms has both magnetic tracking weight and magnetic anti-skate, great features.

Somewhere here I made a list of the tools needed, I could find it if you decide to go for a new cartridge.