@richardbrand I would try B&H in New York City for new or KEH in Georgia for used. Sorry for misspelling loupe.
What devices have you found useful when inspecting your stylii for cleanliness?
Please do not describe how you clean your stylii once you have discovered they are dirty. Make that another topic!
I am interested in what you have found useful during your inspection. My Audio Technica microline stylus is so small I can hardly see it at the best of times. To make things worse for me, I need reading glasses and my current tone arm is a fixed head-shell design so I cannot easily get a good viewing angle - the arm does not tilt much! Also the background, mainly a black mat, does not offer a good contrast.
Suggestions please ....
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@goofyfoot Spelling forgiven! I am sure it was your spell-checker :-) I have been getting offers from B&H every week! Took me a while to realise they were once Bell and Howell of movie equipment fame. It also took me a while to realise that most loupes are used for jewelry or inspecting creepy-crawlies. Australia is not short of jem-stones, or nasty biters. It seemed silly to order from New York so I searched locally. Because I could not source BelOMO loupes, I have gone upmarket and ordered a Zeiss Optics D4 10X loupe. I could get one in town (Sydney) for a tad over A$340, which is about what my stylus is worth, but I found one on-line for well under half that from China, including our 10% gst. Hope it is the real thing! This is a nostalgia trip for me, as I am restoring my Dad’s Garrard 301. He lent me the first camera I ever used, which was a Leica film camera with a fixed 50-mm Zeiss lens. He took award winning black and white photos on it, but I could never remember to set all the eight manual controls needed for proper photography. Nothing digital about it, or even electrical. Bit like vinyl, really. |
@richardbrand Yes, hopefully that Zeiss Loupe from China is either real or a really good fake. I have a T* Zeiss monocular and it’s as clear as you could ever hope for. Personally, I gave up 35mm a long time ago. I now use a Toyo 45 A 4X5 field camera that is of course totally manual. I have Schneider lenses and for the exposure reading, I use a Pentax Zone 5 spot meter. I’ve gone to shooting Fujichrome transparency and then I send it to CRC in New York for processing and high resolution scanning. I believe some of those Leica digital cameras cost about what a Hasselblad digital back would cost. Anyway, I think we got off the topic of audio but if that Leica loupe isn’t helpful, you could spend even more money on a large format camera and use it against the glass view finder.
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There's a Leica shop in Sydney full of very exxe film cameras. A mate of mine was trained as a police forensic photographer and he was often asked what is the best camera? "Mate, it is the one you have in your hand when you want to take a photo"! These days it is usually my phone ...which I suppose is like ear buds versus HiFi |
@goofyfoot My Zeiss D40 loupe arrived from China. I thought the package was empty, because the loupe is so small and light! Might have to buy a bigger loupe in case I mislay the Zeis and need to find it! It would have to be the highest dollars-per-gram lens purchase I have ever made, but it is seriously good, especially when used as directed in a 30-mm gap between the eye and the object. Works almost as well when it is close to the object and the eye is almost at infinity. I see you also have big Quad electrostatics! |
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