thanks @oddiofyl hopefully something from those 10K components trickled down....
Musical Surroundings Phonomena II+ -OR- Moon 110lp v2 -OR- Parasound ZPhono XRM Phono
I have a Rega P3, which one would be my best bet? Does anyone know the differences and weather the Musical Surroundings is nearly twice as good as the Parasound, as the price suggest?
What I am lacking from my setup is detail. The more complex the music is, the blurrier it gets
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I never tried the Parasound but the Rega mm mk5 the winner is the Moon. The Musical Surroundings was nice but a little flat, the Moon did it right, detail, depth, sweet and rich sound. The Rega was bad, I will be kind and not elaborate on how bad. I guess they know how to make good turntables. Customer support from Musical Surroundings was almost non-existent. Rega's was OK. Simaudio's was the best.
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@audphile1 the MkII is already a bit over my budget. I am not sure this where I need to push my limit, I need a better amp, and a sub, all that would improve the sound of my speakers. I would benefit the most from cleaning my LPs |
I had the Vibe MkII. Upgraded to 20/20. A nice step up from the Vibe. Same smooth and natural presentation but more detailed, quieter and more engaging. If you can find a used 20/20 and can swing it, you won’t regret it. FWIW, I was using a low output MC cartridge with the Vibe and it kept the noise floor low enough. Both phono amps offer flexibility to dial in pretty much any cartridge. For your set up, a phono amp on the level of 20/20 is more appropriate. |
thanks @audphile1 I see that that’s what you have (besides other models). I will look into it |
it is more accurate too. There are sounds that are simply not "read" by the MF. High frequencies mostly. After my 2 months long testing 4 subwoofers and 1 phono stage, and my limited budget, I need to decide which one I need more. Given that I never really enjoyed any of the subs, maybe should test other phono stages. This one seems a bit harsh.
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@dekay @boothroyd @tablejockey and all I have been using the Musical Surroundings Phonomena II+ for a week now and the difference is significant, detail, tone is much improved, layered. It confirmed that (in my current chain) the weak link was my phono stage in my integrated amp. Now I just have to find the best phono stage in my price range |
what are you, a magician? Everything you said is spot on. I did lower he slider away 1.75 and it did improve the higher frequencies a lot. I did level the turntable, and always check that first. I need to learn more about gain and loading to be able to ask informed stupid questions :) Man this is hard. And fun. |
I wouldn’t worry about your Rega alignment - Roy Gandy doesn’t believe in such nonsense 😉 as long as the 3 cartridge mount screws are in place & your Elys 2 is tracking @ 1.75 grams. The anti-skating slider behind the tonearm rest can be set slightly under 1.75 for optimal results if the turntable is level. I would though, try listening for minute differences in tracking force +/- .02 grams to see if it has a preference over the recommended 1.75 grams. Tracking force is like a one-knob tone control where you tweak for optimal tonal balance. Too high VTF equates to bass heavy & vice versa. With the Musical Surroundings phono, the pair of 4 dip switches are only for gain or volume. The pair of 8 dip switches are for loading. Since the Elys 2 has a lot of output, 40 dB (all 4 off) will most likely be your best setting. The next level to add volume is 44dB (only 4 of 4 on). From memory, only position 1 of 8 (capacitance of 200/300 or 100/200 pF) and 8 of 8 (resistance of 47/100 kOhms) is relevant to your Elys 2. More capacitance and less resistance will soften the tone & vice versa. FWIW, realize that 47kOhms is the Elys 2 standard for positions 8. Positions 2 ~7 off. That’s all you’ve got. Hope this helps! |
@grislybutter sounds like a set up issue. Did you use a good protractor to check your cartridge alignment? Overhang, zenith and VTF are pretty much the only settings you can change with the Rega P3 if I’m not mistaking. Make sure your overhang is correct. It impacts the sound quiet a bit. |
@pkatsuleas I love the sound, especially the vintage sound, that CDs can't recreate. All the imperfections, background noises, everything that brings it alive.
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I am a relative newb to vinyl and still learning about load, gain, different carts, etc. But I don't think there is much more you can do except put the gain on the lowest setting and play around with the loading. I bought the PH ll+ because of it's flexibility and MC cart capability. I am considering trying the Ania MC cart sometime in the future. But, I may have to look for a phonostage that's a little more tame! Still experimenting and listening. I will say that keeping your vinyl as clean as possible will definitely help reduce noise. I've become somewhat obsessed with dust, humidity, etc. |
@grislybutter I just picked up the same Phonomena ll+ used from a local guy. Definitely check the settings and make sure the gain is at it's lowest setting - all dip switches down I believe. I have a Rega p6 with Exact 2 cart with similar high output to the Elys 2. The Phonomena ll + is quite dynamic, maybe too much so for the Rega carts. I do like what I am hearing for the most part but I seem to be getting more noise (clicks and pops) even in the lowest gain setting. Loading is best at 47K for me so far. |
Double check to make certain that you have connected the new phono preamp to the "line" inputs on your amplifier and not to the "phono" inputs. Set the gain to the lowest option and set the loading to 47K, or whatever is closest to that, and run it for a few days. Keeping the gain setting low (your cartridge has extremely high output specs) try the loading options just below and just above 47K to see if either sounds better.
DeKay |
Yes, that is it (ones sans any added cleaning agents). My original pack of them has a finer grain than later one's, but no-one has complained about the later variation(s). I stick a slice of it down to a small piece of thick paper, but have a tonearm up/down control like the one in the following video. I would not trust my doing it solely by hand @ this point in time, but I'm 68. Lot's of info here in the forums on the best way to use it.
DeKay |
DK: you mean this?
I have the Elys 2 MM. with maybe 300 hours on it. I thought my Rega feet had a spring but it's just a piece of plastic. Short term I couldn't squeeze in another piece of furniture, so I am thinking I could put rubber under it or isolation feet. like something under $35 and see if it makes a difference. I did listen again to Dylan, ELO and Van Morrison with 3 seconds delay on CD and vinyl and found the vinyl to lack some detail. I cleaned the stylus and.... I'd be wary of aligning it, just yet, I would need to learn how.
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Jerry: I'll add keeping the stylus clean to your list. I've been using the original Magic Eraser for years now, but my arm has an up/down lever (don't think I would try it manually). Before that I was using a travel sized ultrasonic toothbrush with replaceable batteries (just touched the stylus with it) and a stylus brush - the Magic Eraser works just as well. A dirty stylus and/or groove wear on LP's is a common cause of what the OP describes.
Grisly: What cartridge do you have (see a few options supplied by Rega with the deck)? The light/rigid approach is geared towards draining vibration off/away from the Rega (not isolating it). This approach also works with my sprung/suspended TT as well as the CD deck. Instead of buying one of the expensive recommended light/rigid racks I purchased a bolt together steel rack and mig-welded it into a one piece "rigid" unit. I also ended up with zero fill in the hollow legs after experimenting, but the rack is located outside of the living/listening room.
DeKay |
Not certain. Many Rega TT posts mention the use of light/rigid wall shelves or light rigid racks. As the Rega wall shelves have hiked quite a bit in price and I'm not certain if the less expensive Project wall shelf (said to be good) is still produced I figured that a Lak table would be a good/cheap light/rigid experiment. The side tables sell for $15 here (coffee table $40). I made 2 Lak's (one TT platform spiked - one rack using brass cones) when I had 2nd full systems in the spare bedroom and liked them. I used to find the end tables discarded on the street in my neighborhood (just checked and I still have 3 left in storage). You could even try something like this (instead of spikes). DeKay
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Check out the following thread with attention to the posts by caterham1700 regarding a DIY Ikea Lak Rack. Without all the fuss (also the way the legs are constructed has changed over the years making the build much more complicated) I suspect that a stock Lak coffee table may work well with your Rega. You could also just try the Lak side table if you won't use the extra shelf space (of the coffee table) for other gear. Drilling the legs and installing adjustable spikes should add some benefit, but you would have to reinforce the holes with 2-part wood filler or something similar (I'd just try it stock to begin with). Caterhan (Ken Lions) designed and manufactured the custom shelves I use for my TT/CD decks. Ken always supported the use of light and rigid support for unsuspended decks like the your Rega. Others are correct in that a better phono preamp should sound, well better, but I prefer to get the most out of what I'm using before moving on.
DeKay |
Mr @dekay I tested 2 different albums, very different quality. The vinyl is way more laid back, deeper bass, less treble, more airy with a bigger soundstage The CD is full of highs, screechy but musical, forward - and tiring. I definitely felt there was something lacking with the turntable. The vocals are pulled back too much. I have no idea if the phono stage will fix it, but when I switched, the volume of the analog source was half of what the CD’s, same amplifier but the phono preamp of it, which should/could be quieter |
@tablejockey you mean the P3's age? It's one year old. I want a lot of things and I am in no danger of getting them :) |
"My current phono stage is in my Musical Fidelity A3.2" The phono stage in your amp will be "bettered" with a stand alone unit. How much will only be found out by hearing all 3 at once in your setup. With your existing table, I wouldn't go beyond the Moon, based on it's age. The latter Rega designs are improved and noticeably "better". If it were me, I go with the Parasound, since It essentially will do everything the MS will. Get a $500 new flavor cart at some point and be done with it. Any curiosity after that is a step up to a new table and next level phonostage-more wallet opening. By then, you'll want an amp and new speakers too.
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Do you have a source aside from vinyl? If the sound of it gets confused with more complex music then it could be the amp/speakers. If this only happens with vinyl playback then something is amiss with the analog gear. A P3 with a decent cartridge mated to an MF A3.2 should sound quite good with all types of music.
DeKay |