When to change a cartridge?


I currently own an EMT HD006 cartridge that cost about $1900. That's as much as I've ever paid for a cartridge. Previously I was in thousand-dollar territory. I can't imagine spending $5K for something that's assured to wear out. I play my turntable (VPI Prime Signature 21) every day for at least a few hourse. I guage that I put about a thousand hours a year on my cartridge, which is now at about 1500 hours.

I have read forums in which people talk about putting their cartridge under a microscope every few months. I don't own a microscope and I wouldn't know what to look for if I did. After reading forums in which people talk about cartridges wearing out before the manufacturer's recommended hours, I began to hear my cartridge slowly declining. I thought perhaps the attacks weren't as crisp.

I called my online dealer to discuss replacing mine, telling him that I thought I heard deterioration in the cartridge's sound. He said it doesn't work that way. I will know when my cartridge is ready to be changed. It will not be subtle. Often the suspension collapses. 

My reaction was that a dealer wouldn't talk me out of spending about $2K unless that expense was foolish. So, I am still playing my EMT HD006 and not worrying about subtle changes as it wears down. The dealer said it might be fine for up to 3,000 hours.

I'm curious to know what other people do about their cartridges. Wait for the suspension to collapse and the thing sounds terrible, or monitor it more closely and perhaps even change the cartridge before the manufacturer's recommendation?

audio-b-dog

Showing 6 responses by inna

I am ignorant, so don't listen to me.

Question is if you don't hear the difference can you still be damaging your records ? Of course, you damage the records each and every time you play them ! This is not a very sophisticated system. It's a matter of degree. Do you hear more noise?

Having said that, I would think that 1500 hours is about time to change the stylus. I would.

Bill, what cartridge do you currently have ?

I usually need three/five recordings, one minute of listening for each to evaluate my system. And do it closer to midnight on weekdays when the wall current is okay.

Bill, that's quite a set up that you have. What would it take to go even higher ?

Bill, of course it makes sense. What is your musical instrument ?

Your system is so good that, yes, there is absolutely no need to think about upgrades unless perhaps it is relatively minor, just some fine tuning - tube here, cable there.

I keep hearing about how good digital has become. For me too analogue is a tradition and history so I will never abandon it. But I listen to cds where the recording was digital, so perhaps I should consider starting streaming instead of it.

Bill, you are a serious musician.

I wanted to ask you about Lamm amps. Did you compare them with other top tube amps ? VAC, CAT, some Japanese perhaps ? In any case, there must be something very special about Lamm. But you don't use Lamm preamp or phono stage. Not as good as power amps?

Bill,

I see. I think, most Lamm owners keep them forever unless they upgrade to even better Lamm.