LammLP2 vs. Arc PH_7


Hi gang,
Would any of you who have owned or experienced either of these phono amps care to evaluate them one on one?
My system is s.s. and i'm not looking to start "tube rolling" these products, just want to know if there is a clear winner between them.
Kuzma t.t. and arm and MBL pre and amps...
Thanks
128x128azjake
Jake,

I am puzzled about your latest post. I thought you were moving to a Wilson turntable? It appears that our discussions may have been premature? Please email me to clarify before I put much effort into our prior discussions.

Thank you.
I have limited experience with the Lamm LP2, (a friend owned one) and none with the PH-7. If you choose the Lamm, you should REALLY make sure that your cartridge is set up to work with the Lamm, as the Lamm has only two settings, MC and MM. It does not allow you to adjust gain or loading. (However, if you do get the right cartridge, it will sound very good.)

As you are obviously looking at a top end phono preamp, I would suggest taking a look at the ASR Basis Exclusive. This is a dual battery powered phono preamp that can handle two inputs, so you can run two turntables and/or tonearms. It is fully adjustable, as far as gain and/or loading. It has plenty of gain, so you can easily run very low output MC cartridges. It is dead silent with virtually no background noise. (And being solid state, there no tube noise to worry about, or tube rolling.) It is very musical, and is the best phono preamp I have heard.

My two cents worth.
I heard LP2 many many times.
Magic,black silence and all was so alive...
Need more?
I own a Lamm LP2 Deluxe, but haven't heard the ARC (though I far preferred the Lamm to prior ARC units I had heard, just seemed more like music, the ARCs being more to the analytical side). To my aging ears the Lamm is slightly dark-sounding, excels at layering of images in a soundstage, is tonally correct, has excellent dynamics and, as Damaradona points out, is very quiet. However, part of that quiet is because it only has 57db of gain. Kurt tank is correct, it can be magical with some cartridges, but its limited gain means that it may disappoint with very low-output MCs (I ultimately gave up with my Koetsu RSP, just not enough volume to convey power music or records cut at a low level). And the inability to play with the impedance is also a drawback. I solved those problems to my satisfaction by getting an EMT cartridge with its matched step-up transformer, though there are certainly many cartridges that will work fine with the Lamm by themselves.

Hopefully some PH-7 owners will give their observations for you.
Rcprince, I'm actually in the market for a new cartridge. I have the Lamm LP2-d and started with a Denon 103. It's time for a new cartridge, my initial thought was the Shelter 901. Have you had any experience with this cartridge? Any others with the LP-2?
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