Gonna have to ditch the Soundsmith Carmen II


I've given this cart the benefit of the doubt and then some, but it's going to have to go. 

the sibilance on s's is just to much. The sound isn't distorted, just way louder than the rest of the vocals. This happens to one degree or the other on all records with vocals. Sometimes it's barely noticeable sometimes it hard to bare. other than the sibilance I love the sound, I love the live nature of the music.  so I hate getting rid of it. 

So so the things I've done and made sure are dead on:

alighnment - that means SRA, VTA, TF, Azimuth, anti skate (per,SS), platter level, checked mounting hardware, checked tunntable . . .etc

my Denon 2x20L doesn't do this.

it may be there is a bad combo with some piece of equipment or loudspeaker and it just doesn't jive with the rest of the rig. 

My system:

VPI prime
Parasound JC3+ Phono pre
PAD phono cables
Decware integrated SET tube amp
Zu Omen Def MKII with Radian tweeter upgrade. 

So the question is what cart, around $1k will give that live dynamic sound, tracks well, but does emphasize the S's?

ones I'im interested in but have no way of hearing:

Ortofon Quintet Black
Audio Technica ART 9
???


last_lemming

Showing 1 response by russmaleartist

Mr. Peter Ledermann is a gracious man, as I found out after purchasing an Aida Soundsmith Cartridge a few years ago. The preciseness of the diamond on these fine line cartridges do require precise alignment and a bit of tinkering to get tonearm and cartridge working together as a unit. Even with the majority of recordings sounding very musical, there seems that even with direct to disc master recordings, the sibilance is sometimes hot and these revealing cartridges are going to show up imperfections and also the recording techniques of the manufacturer, which is not the fault of the cartridge. Such detail and musicality are what we buy these cartridges for in the first place. 

If the sibilance is consistent on all recordings, I would say there is a problem in faulty alignment or a defect as mentioned in aforementioned posts. Regardless of the cartridge and associated equipment . . . this is still the reproduction of the real thing; however, some other specifications in other cartridges may be better suited to your sensitivities of sibilance and a compromise may have to be met. To another person, it may be another issue . . . hence, the reason there are so many products on the market with so many opposing points of view and always healthy discussions trying to prove that one person's opinion is much more valuable than another. But the bottom line is what you like and can live with as opposed to what the “experts” tell you that you SHOULD be listening to and what you should be hearing -- it doesn't work that way. Critiques and opinions are only guidelines as to what you personally can tolerate and what you actually enjoy. After all, you are the one paying for it -- you might as well be satisfied with what you live with despite how may “experts” you tick off. The hobby is a progression and a never-ending conquest to achieve, which is for some, more satisfying than the music they sit and sometimes listen to rather than the equipment.

This hobby should not be a war game nor a stress producer . . . rather, it should be fun, relaxing, enjoyable, and socially bonding -- not alienating. Have differences of opinion, of course . . . this is part of the human psyche, but do so in a respectful and good nature of learning, teaching, and sharing the music and the fun.