Upgrade cartridge or turntable?


I have a Rega Planar 3 turntable with an Ortofon Blue cartridge which has served me well. I’ve had them both now for two years and am around the 1000 hr mark which in itself draws debate.  I’m looking for opinions on either a cartridge upgrade, or a turntable.  Can go to 2000 for TT, also considering MC cartridge which would involve a new phonostage.  Let’s hear it.
udog

Showing 2 responses by millercarbon

Its really important. Something like say a cartridge, who cares what it looks like? Really? I mean okay maybe for like three seconds. Then reality sets in and what you really care about is can you set it down where you want, like right at the beginning of a track, which comes down to seeing the stylus or some other visual reference, AND in combination with that how the tone arm works- with the cue lever or does it have a finger lift and will you use it?

These are just a few of the practical considerations few people think of until they are living with it, by which time its too late. Most of what's in the higher ranges is awfully good. But there's a whole market segment that seems devoted to filling the needs of audiophiles who to judge by their choices seem more latent masochist than audiophile. Why set yourself up for that? I mean, unless you like that kind of thing. Not that there's anything wrong with that, imagine Seinfeldian eye roll....


Get a new stylus and save more money. Let us know when you get to $5000.


This^
And this:
According to expert advice I ignored in my youth, turntable first, tonearm second, cartridge third. I ignored this advice, to my cost. For one thing, turntables and tonearms don't wear out.

Mike and Terry are right. The challenge is making the leap to buying turntable/arm/cartridge separately, when the combination you might ultimately want adds up to $10k or more. 

The tried and true approach is to find the very best table you can afford, and run it with a budget arm and cartridge, until you can afford to upgrade to a really good arm, and then finally cartridge. 

This way you spend the big money on things that really just do not wear out, so they are keepers and nothing is lost in the resale/upgrade treadmill. 

Another beauty of doing it this way, its almost impossible to find a turntable or arm that expensive that's not really, really good. VPI and Rega can sell based on ads. Nobody bought an Origin Live or Graham arm based on an ad. Their "advertising" is word of mouth. 

Take your time. There's a lot more going on than just sound. Another big factor with turntables is the way they look, feel, and function. Pay attention to all those details, plan out your path, take your time.