I am considering the Grado Statement cartridge


I am considering buying a Grado Statement cartridge (top model). I am trying to get feedback as to how it performs. I currently have a Koetsu Rosewood which I will keep and use.

I have at VPI TNT 5 and with a 12.5 tonearm. I will get an additional tone arm wand for the Grado. When the Koetsu wears out I can get it rebuilt as a Rosewood signature.

I am trying to to extend the life of the Koetsu by using two cartridges but I want to have the same quality of sound. To upgrade beyond the Rosewood is very expensive and there are not too many places for me to audition them. I was thinking that the Grado is a safe choice in that it has a smooth sound vs the HF boost of other MC's. I have a Borbely Jfet low noise MC preamp feeding a DEQX digital speaker correction/room correction preamp using digita crossovers to feed my bi-amp speakers. Reading all I can on this forum it seems that most prefer low output MC's. I know the Grado is a moving Iron at about .5mv output vs the .4mv output of the Koetsu. I also know that there are a lot of Koetsu grey market knockoffs out there and buyer beware on the used market. Let me know what you think? If I could afford it I would get a Urushi. I might even try the top Dynavectors but they are way beyond my budget.
daly2k

Showing 2 responses by dlcockrum

I would make sure that the Grado sound is what I am looking for before buying a Statement. I found over the years that moving up in the Grado line buys more refinement and better detail, but the basic sound stays the same. I never owned the Statement, but had a The Reference low output on my TNT with JMW 12 arm for many years and finally moved on to a Van den Hul and am much happier.

I would buy a Lyra Helikon or Scala for my TNT rig instead of the Statement for around the same money.
Dave,

I have the Van den Hul MC Two which is the middle of the line for VdH. It is relatively high output for a MC (2.25mV), so it is an easy input for my Ayre K-1xe phono stage/preamp. Sounds great, but the Lyras are considerably better.

Call Mike at VPI and ask him about the relative sound of the Grados and the Lyras, both of which he recommends highly for the JMW 12 arm.

Merry Christmas!

Dave