Getting into vinyl for the first time


Hey guys, I just am now getting into vinyl and I am really enjoying it. My wife got my a Audio-Technica turntable (LPW40WN) for christmas a few years ago and initially tested it with a cheapo emotiva integrated amp that had a built-in phono preamp. I was less than impressed and didn't really use the turntable much after that.

However, I recently felt I wanted to make more use of it so I went to a local audiophile shop (Just Audio in Middle River, MD; and a big thanks to Tom for helping me out) and inquired about getting a basic phono preamp.

I walked out with a Parasound Zphono and a new audio-technica cartridge (VM540ML). I know these are the basic of upgrades, but I didn't want to spend too much if did like the end result.

Since I never really look into vinyl music, I only had to albums: Metallica - Metallica and Imagine Dragons - Mercury pt 1. 

I have to say I really liked what I heard. The sound was...meatier than what I am use to hearing from streaming. Played at the same setting, the sound was louder and much fuller too compared to Tidal streaming. My wife who isnt really into the audiophile scene could easily tell there was a notable difference between streaming and the vinyl version. She liked the vinyl sound too.

I have ordered a few more vinyl albums and can't wait to hear them.

As a rookie when it comes to vinyl, what are somethings I should know about as I am very clueless. I am considering on bringing the Zphono back and see if they will let me upgrade to something better without any restocking penalty. What phono preamp should I consider for under $1000? Is the cartridge I have good enough? Thanks for any and all information!!

bomt697

Showing 1 response by hifiguy42

Welcome to the vinyl club!  It is a thoroughly rewarding pursuit. Ignore the haters and have fun.  That is a great cartridge and phono pre pairing, and replacement styli are inexpensive and easy to replace.  That particular cartridge allows the listener to replace the microline stylus (the ML in the model) with a Shibata or Special Line Contact for a few more clams.  I've found that I prefer the SLC for classical listening and ML for rock/jazz. 

My one recommendation is to ignore anyone who says that there is ONLY ONE WAY to listen (analog v digital, tubes v SS, dynamic v planar/electrostats, etc). You know which beer/car/ice cream/genre you prefer and someone else telling you that you're "wrong" for liking them has issues that run much deeper than audiophilia.

Enjoy!