Howard, were you originally using a copper or silver phono cable prior to the re-wire? I am a bit hesitant to go full silver, since I have seemed to like copper interconnects and phonocable in my system.
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Hi, yes I was using a Vertex AQ Hi Rez phono cable., who just has silver wire. In fact I still am - I had a weird set up involving a modified phono cable with capacitance matched to my London Reference (Decca) cartridge - which is still being used - I plug the “new” captive cable into one of the isolation boxes on the Vertex cable. I’m probably bonkers but it sounds great to me ! If you are having an FR66 rewired then won’t that already have silver wire - at least from the cartridge to the DIN socket ? |
@chak, congrats on the 66FX and be sure to tell us the sonic difference with the 64FX. While I own both 64S and 64FX, I can’t help being interested in the 66S and 66FX, despite their insane market prices. There MUST (or should, if we leave out collector’s value) be a huge sonic benefit to justify the price differential. Is there? After a long conversation with Nikola (Nandric) about parts and repair I’ve come to conclusion that very little information available online about this particular tonearm (the FR-66fx). I am happy that my used FR-66fx has arrived with dried up glue and ,as a result, with a fell off side panel (round panel with tonearm model number), so it was super easy to clean the rest of the old grease using a special cleaning spray (contained gasoline). Then new grease was added around each spiral of the VTA spring and the side panel was simply glued back (with new soft glue). The new grease I used for my FR-66fx is from WURTH (Brake Cylinder Paste). It’s synthetic paste suitable for lubricating hydraulic cylinder slideways and pistons in hydraulic brake system. It gives brake cylinders an extended service life. But after my private investigation I realized that my particular sample was rewired in Japan by well known vendor (Otomon Labo) before it was sold to me. This is disassembled FR-66fx in parts, I hope it will help others, because this is the only picture of disassembled FR-66fx in the whole internet at the moment! This is what Ken (Otomon Labo) posted on his site about FR-66fx: "The most famous tonearm that Ikeda-san made is FR-66S but the best one is FR-66FX. I’m not sure about everything he said, but the most interesting part of his message above is GUNMETAL, and it’s true that I can see yellow-ish metal under the black paint only on FR-66fx sample (the FR-64fx is different, it’s black anodized aluminum). I see the color of bronze, copper, gunmetal, but not the aluminum! So it can be true that super rare 66fx (or some parts of this arm) made from gunmetal, not aluminum like cheaper and shorter 64fx. Sonically the 66fx is completely different from my 64fx, the difference is HUGE especially in low register, this is the deepest bass I ever heard from my FR-7f cartridge. The cartridge is also interesting, it’s silver color with two digits serial number (early production), but it’s "F" (they are normally black, but mine is silver). I put my 66fx with N60 stabilizer on the left side on my Lyxman PD-444 instead of 64fx (with big W250 counterweight and N60 stabilizer) using same zu audio phono cable and ZYX CPP-1 headamp (and JLTi phono stage). My preamp is passive First Watt B1 (I just put it back) and my power amp is Yamamoto A-08S with National Union 45s from the 1940s. The speakers are big Tannoy System 15 DMT II professional mail studio monitors (101 db). The arm (66fx) is giant killer over the 64fx (which is a great tonearm too). I think the higher mass 66fx is just better match for my low compliance FR-7f cartridge. My 2nd arm on the same turntable is 64s with B60 VTA base, but I will compare 66fx to 64s later. I want to admit that battery powered ZYX CPP-1 headamp is perfect for FR-7f series of cartridges. |
BTW disassembled 64 is here and disassembled 64s is here And a post from unlucky guy who did not finish with his 64fx here |
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