I can guarantee that you will never be happy about a system you never set up.
Silly turntable question
(The question, not the TT!)
I'm assembling a turntable setup, slowly over time.
At this point I have an SP-10 with the factory
obsidian plinth/cover. I have a new SME-V for it
that I bought about 6 years ago (I did say slowly). It's
not even set up yet, let alone having been listened to.
Now, I've gotten the idea in my head that I want a 12-inch
arm instead, the SME-312. THAT would mean selling the
obsidian plinth and buying something custom, as well as
buying the new arm.
I'm willing to admit that I must surely have some mental
quirk to want this change, untested.
Even so, I humbly ask you, what could I expect soundwise
if I followed through with this proposed upgrade ?
Subtle improvements ? How subtle ?
Or, should I just be happy with what I have ?
Speakers are DIY custom built, amps are Brystons,
listening room is way too small.
"Do you think I'll be happy ?" What a question.
I'm assembling a turntable setup, slowly over time.
At this point I have an SP-10 with the factory
obsidian plinth/cover. I have a new SME-V for it
that I bought about 6 years ago (I did say slowly). It's
not even set up yet, let alone having been listened to.
Now, I've gotten the idea in my head that I want a 12-inch
arm instead, the SME-312. THAT would mean selling the
obsidian plinth and buying something custom, as well as
buying the new arm.
I'm willing to admit that I must surely have some mental
quirk to want this change, untested.
Even so, I humbly ask you, what could I expect soundwise
if I followed through with this proposed upgrade ?
Subtle improvements ? How subtle ?
Or, should I just be happy with what I have ?
Speakers are DIY custom built, amps are Brystons,
listening room is way too small.
"Do you think I'll be happy ?" What a question.
23 responses Add your response
GrooveMaster We can make your dream turntable which will make you happy :-) However sometimes just completing something makes you feel real happy - I know once this one delivered and set up - ill be very happy. As Always Good Listening Peter |
You might ask Albert Porter here for some thoughts, he has marketed a custom plinth for the SP-10 (I'm not shilling for him, just making it clear that he does business in this space) and has fooled around with a number of different arms, including the longer SME. I have an old SP-10 that is sitting idle, bought it new back in 1974. Unfortunately, it is a mk i, not the better mk ii or iii, so I'm not inclined to sink alot of money into it right now. At some point I may bring it back into play for a vintage system. I will tell you, based on my experience with the older plinths for the SP-10 that the concepts of isolation were not as well advanced or executed as they are today. Mine, which was mounted in a gorgeous Music & Sound wooden plinth, was microphonic as hell. There's also been a fair amount of discussion here about running these naked, with a free standing arm pod, but I gather that's fairly controversial insofar as the SP-10 is concerned- not sure why it wouldn't work if the turntable mounted to something that did a good job on isolation. My current table (a Kuzma) works that way- the arm stands 'free' of the table on its own pod and gives you the flexibility to add several arms. However, that table depends on mass. And it is a motha to isolate properly and get level. Good luck. |
I agree with those who suggest that you simply get started. However, to answer one of your questions: there is quite a difference between the 9" and 12" SME arms. I spent two weeks directly comparing the SME V to the SME V-12 on an SME 30/12 table using the same cartridge and cable. Moving up to the 12" arm was like going from a highly resolving two-way compact speaker to a three-driver, three-way floor standing speaker. Extension and weight improved as expected. But unlike with some such speaker changes, there was absolutely no less coherence or sense of balance. There was just more information presented in a cleaner and clearer way and there seemed to be less distortion. IMO, well worth the cost to upgrade. But changing the plinth and selling your unused SME V just to accommodate a new 12" arm may be more hassle and expense than it's worth right now. Check your priorities, get started, and join the fun. |
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But Whart, Elizabeth merely stated the truth. The OP has in fact been contemplating without implementing for years. I have a new SME-V for it that I bought about 6 years ago...J. R. R. Tolkien wrote a little essay, 'Leaf by Niggle', in which he jauntily thrashed himself for endlessly rewriting favorite tales without ever finishing one. It was his publisher who forced him to complete 'The Lord of the Rings' (more or less). Absent that pressure he never would have. He'd have niggled happily for even more decades amidst his unfinished tales, leaving only fragments that his son eventually assembled into a functioning narrative. The OP has been niggling happily for at least six years and is niggling still. Perhaps, after more decades have passed, he'll leave behind fragments that his heirs will eventually assemble into a functioning vinyl rig. ;-) |
Dear Noslepemus: IMHO you can't help you with this kind of thread when you did not even set up yet the SP10!!!!. Why to worry about the tonearm right now? I agree with Aigenga: " make the TT/tonearm/cartridge set up " and listening to it. Then fine tune what is that set up and listen. After that you could think on some chages down there: from TT plinth, cartridge, tonearm, phono stage and the like. Btw, IMHO the best plinth in any SP10 is NO PLINTH at all. You could make an Agon research about and when you will be ready to take a plinth decision then you can take that " road " or whatever you want, just an opinion. Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
You are absolutely correct, your question is silly. Anything you actually implement would be an improvement over the silence emanating from your current rig. improving the phono stage, cartridge, or your skill setting things up, would probably make more of a difference than going to a longer tonearm. |
First, thank you folks very much for your comments ! I'm the first to laugh at myself about this, I have other unfinished projects at home on par with this. I seem to be pretty good at starting projects but not as good at finishing. I have an old Clearaudio Accurate cart (12g, 15cu) that "should" resonate at 8.06Hz on the 14g SME-312s, and at 8.57Hz on the 11g SME-V. So that would indicate I probably need a new cart too if I bought the 312s. I could of course just try it on the -V and not spend any money. Don't know if this considered a match made in heaven or not. If I did not use the -V, I could probably get a bit more on a sale/trade-in, this is true. Some of you have given me powerful arguements for further thinking...........;) |
Noslepums, My post above was written under the assumption that the 12" SME arm you are contemplating is the SME 312S, though you wrote "312". The 312S is a new generation magnesium arm based on the SME IV. It differs from the V-12 by having a removable headshell (convenient for cartridge swapping and azimuth adj.) and by also having dynamic VTF adjustment. For me, the latter is more important than the former, but for others, maybe not. I'm not familiar with the 312. Albert Porter has the 312S arm and is getting a V-12 for comparison. I've never heard the 312S. I agree with everyone else that the length of your arm should be of a lower priority to others for getting started. Set up what you have and enjoy some records. Then go from there. If you follow Raul's advice for a nude SP10 with an arm on an arm pod, then switching to a 12" arm later should not be an issue besides adjusting for the new alignment. Have some fun. |
Years ago I bought a new Rega P25 from a guy who'd bought it only a few weeks before & never even taken it out of the box. He said he was selling it to buy a way more expensive TT. I never understood that--selling something that nice that he'd never listened to. BTW I loved the P25 & the Benz Glider he included in the sale.....of course I also spent much time finding the right phono stage, buying a record-cleaning machine, etc. |