Kiseki Agate Ruby: Thoughts Opinions Or Observations?


When I was in college the holy grail cartridges of vinyl playback were the Ortofon MC2000, Koetsu Rosewood, and the Kiseki cartridges. I was a poor college student and all I could afford was an Audioquest Talisman IIIS. 

I happen to have the opportunity to acquire the Kiseki Agate Ruby at this time, it had been serviced by Garrott Brothers. I am thinking it would be an interesting cartridge to own in terms of personal history and wants. 

But I wonder if nostalgia is really taking over. I found I do not care for a Koetsu Urushi that much, but I do adore the Ortofon MC2000. I also own a Transfiguration Audio Proteus and ZYX 4D, so I have some decent cartridges on hand. 

Do you suppose the Kiseki is legendary as the tales from yore tell us it is? Or an I buying a pretty cartridge and a piece of history? 

The cartridge looks in excellent shape, the stone body is perfect, and the cartridge is well cared for. Waiting for a picture of the cantilever before I send payment, but I am emotionally on board with this purchase. 

Any thoughts, experiences, or observations?

neonknight

Showing 1 response by edgewear

@neonknight I can relate to your position. I also own and adore MC2000 and Transfiguration Proteus and was rather underwhelmed by the Koetsu Rosewood and Urushi. So what about the Kiseki? I owned the Agate for a while but its suspension was not up to spec and it needed a retip. I still liked the sound, which was sweet and slightly fat in the lower registers. A lovely sound, but definitely not neutral. As if I accidentally left the loudness switch on, if there still was such a switch!

But it had ‘something’ very alluring, so I was considering to have it refurbished when I was offered a Lapis Lazuli that had already been restored by vdHul with boron cantilever and new dampers. It did require a ‘small’ fortune, but I could not resist even if the original diamond cantilever was no longer there, essentially turning it into a Blackheart in a very fancy dress! Glad I didn’t. This Kiseki has a much more balanced sound (the imaginary loudness switch is off) but has this special flavour in spades. I believe some reviewers would call this a ‘wet sound’. Not as neutral and detailed as something like the Proteus, but very musical. I believe the Agate had a different motor than the Lapis (and Blackheart), but I have no doubt a restored sample will bring you much musical joy. While sonically superior to the Koetsu’s I’ve heard, it does share its liking of heavy tonearms, like the FR-64S.