Who needs a MM cartridge type when we have MC?


Dear friends: who really needs an MM type phono cartridge?, well I will try to share/explain with you what are my experiences about and I hope too that many of you could enrich the topic/subject with your own experiences.

For some years ( in this forum ) and time to time I posted that the MM type cartridge quality sound is better than we know or that we think and like four months ago I start a thread about: http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1173550723&openusid&zzRauliruegas&4&5#Rauliruegas where we analyse some MM type cartridges.

Well, in the last 10-12 months I buy something like 30+ different MM type phono cartridges ( you can read in my virtual system which ones. ) and I’m still doing it. The purpose of this fact ( “ buy it “ ) is for one way to confirm or not if really those MM type cartridges are good for us ( music lovers ) and at the same time learn about MM vs MC cartridges, as a fact I learn many things other than MM/MC cartridge subject.

If we take a look to the Agon analog members at least 90% of them use ( only ) MC phono cartridges, if we take a look to the “ professional reviewers “ ( TAS, Stereophile, Positive Feedback, Enjoy the Music, etc, etc, ) 95% ( at least ) of them use only MC cartridges ( well I know that for example: REG and NG of TAS and RJR of Stereophile use only MM type cartridges!!!!!!!! ) , if we take a look to the phono cartridge manufacturers more than 90% of them build/design for MC cartridges and if you speak with audio dealers almost all will tell you that the MC cartridges is the way to go.

So, who are wrong/right, the few ( like me ) that speak that the MM type is a very good alternative or the “ whole “ cartridge industry that think and support the MC cartridge only valid alternative?

IMHO I think that both groups are not totally wrong/right and that the subject is not who is wrong/right but that the subject is : KNOW-HOW or NON KNOW-HOW about.

Many years ago when I was introduced to the “ high end “ the cartridges were almost MM type ones: Shure, Stanton, Pickering, Empire, etc, etc. In those time I remember that one dealer told me that if I really want to be nearest to the music I have to buy the Empire 4000 D ( they say for 4-channel reproduction as well. ) and this was truly my first encounter with a “ high end cartridge “, I buy the 4000D I for 70.00 dls ( I can’t pay 150.00 for the D III. ), btw the specs of these Empire cartridges were impressive even today, look: frequency response: 5-50,000Hz, channel separation: 35db, tracking force range: 0.25grs to 1.25grs!!!!!!!!, just impressive, but there are some cartridges which frequency response goes to 100,000Hz!!!!!!!!!!

I start to learn about and I follow to buying other MM type cartridges ( in those times I never imagine nothing about MC cartridges: I don’t imagine of its existence!!!. ) like AKG, Micro Acoustics, ADC, B&O, Audio Technica, Sonus, etc, etc.

Years latter the same dealer told me about the MC marvelous cartridges and he introduce me to the Denon-103 following with the 103-D and the Fulton High performance, so I start to buy and hear MC cartridges. I start to read audio magazines about either cartridge type: MM and Mc ones.

I have to make changes in my audio system ( because of the low output of the MC cartridges and because I was learning how to improve the performance of my audio system ) and I follow what the reviewers/audio dealers “ speak “ about, I was un-experienced !!!!!!!, I was learning ( well I’m yet. ).

I can tell you many good/bad histories about but I don’t want that the thread was/is boring for you, so please let me tell you what I learn and where I’m standing today about:

over the years I invested thousands of dollars on several top “ high end “ MC cartridges, from the Sumiko Celebration passing for Lyras, Koetsu, Van denHul, to Allaerts ones ( just name it and I can tell that I own or owned. ), what I already invest on MC cartridges represent almost 70-80% price of my audio system.

Suddenly I stop buying MC cartridges and decide to start again with some of the MM type cartridges that I already own and what I heard motivate me to start the search for more of those “ hidden jewels “ that are ( here and now ) the MM phono cartridges and learn why are so good and how to obtain its best quality sound reproduction ( as a fact I learn many things other than MM cartridge about. ).

I don’t start this “ finding “ like a contest between MC and MM type cartridges.
The MC cartridges are as good as we already know and this is not the subject here, the subject is about MM type quality performance and how achieve the best with those cartridges.

First than all I try to identify and understand the most important characteristics ( and what they “ means “. ) of the MM type cartridges ( something that in part I already have it because our phonolinepreamp design needs. ) and its differences with the MC ones.

Well, first than all is that are high output cartridges, very high compliance ones ( 50cu is not rare. ), low or very low tracking force ones, likes 47kOhms and up, susceptible to some capacitance changes, user stylus replacement, sometimes we can use a different replacement stylus making an improvement with out the necessity to buy the next top model in the cartridge line , low and very low weight cartridges, almost all of them are build of plastic material with aluminum cantilever and with eliptical or “ old “ line contact stylus ( shibata ) ( here we don’t find: Jade/Coral/Titanium/etc, bodies or sophisticated build material cantilevers and sophisticated stylus shape. ), very very… what I say? Extremely low prices from 40.00 to 300.00 dls!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!, well one of my cartridges I buy it for 8.99 dls ( one month ago ): WOW!!!!!!, so any one of you can/could have/buy ten to twenty MM cartridges for the price of one of the MC cartridge you own today and the good notice is that is a chance that those 10-20 MM type cartridges even the quality performance of your MC cartridge or beat it.

Other characteristics is that the builders show how proud they were/are on its MM type cartridges design, almost all those cartridges comes with a first rate box, comes with charts/diagrams of its frequency response and cartridge channel separation ( where they tell us which test recording use it, with which VTF, at which temperature, etc, etc. ), comes with a very wide explanation of the why’s and how’s of its design and the usual explanation to mount the cartridge along with a very wide list of specifications ( that were the envy of any of today MC ones where sometimes we really don’t know nothing about. ), comes with a set of screws/nuts, comes with a stylus brush and even with stylus cleaning fluid!!!!!!!!!, my GOD. Well, there are cartridges like the Supex SM 100MK2 that comes with two different stylus!!!! One with spherical and one with elliptical/shibata shape and dear friends all those in the same low low price!!!!!!!!!!!

Almost all the cartridges I own you can find it through Ebay and Agon and through cartridge dealers and don’t worry if you loose/broke the stylus cartridge or you find the cartridge but with out stylus, you always can/could find the stylus replacement, no problem about there are some stylus and cartridge sources.

When I’m talking about MM type cartridges I’m refer to different types: moving magnet, moving iron, moving flux, electret, variable reluctance, induced magnet, etc, etc. ( here is not the place to explain the differences on all those MM type cartridges. Maybe on other future thread. ).

I made all my very long ( time consuming ) cartridge tests using four different TT’s: Acoustic Signature Analog One MK2, Micro Seiki RX-5000, Luxman PD 310 and Technics SP-10 MK2, I use only removable headshell S and J shape tonearms with 15mm on overhang, I use different material build/ shape design /weight headshells. I test each cartridge in at least three different tonearms and some times in 3-4 different headshells till I find the “ right “ match where the cartridge perform the best, no I’m not saying that I already finish or that I already find the “ perfect “ match: cartridge/headshell/tonearm but I think I’m near that ideal target.

Through my testing experience I learn/ confirm that trying to find the right tonearm/headshell for any cartridge is well worth the effort and more important that be changing the TT. When I switch from a TT to another different one the changes on the quality cartridge performance were/are minimal in comparison to a change in the tonearm/headshell, this fact was consistent with any of those cartridges including MC ones.

So after the Phonolinepreamplifier IMHO the tonearm/headshell match for any cartridge is the more important subject, it is so important and complex that in the same tonearm ( with the same headshell wires ) but with different headshell ( even when the headshell weight were the same ) shape or build material headshell the quality cartridge performance can/could be way different.

All those experiences told me that chances are that the cartridge that you own ( MC or MM ) is not performing at its best because chances are that the tonearm you own is not the best match for that cartridge!!!!!!, so imagine what do you can/could hear when your cartridge is or will be on the right tonearm???!!!!!!!!, IMHO there are ( till today ) no single ( any type at any price ) perfect universal tonearm. IMHO there is no “ the best tonearm “, what exist or could exist is a “ best tonearm match for “ that “ cartridge “, but that’s all. Of course that are “ lucky “ tonearms that are very good match for more than one cartridge but don’t for every single cartridge.

I posted several times that I’m not a tonearm collector, that I own all those tonearms to have alternatives for my cartridges and with removable headshells my 15 tonearms are really like 100+ tonearms : a very wide options/alternatives for almost any cartridge!!!!!!

You can find several of these MM type cartridges new brand or NOS like: Ortofon, Nagaoka, Audio Technica, Astatic, B&O, Rega, Empire, Sonus Reson,Goldring,Clearaudio, Grado, Shelter, Garrot, etc. and all of them second hand in very good operational condition. As a fact I buy two and even three cartridges of the same model in some of the cartridges ( so right now I have some samples that I think I don’t use any more. ) to prevent that one of them arrive in non operational condition but I’m glad to say that all them arrive in very fine conditions. I buy one or two of the cartridges with no stylus or with the stylus out of work but I don’t have any trouble because I could find the stylus replacement on different sources and in some case the original new replacement.

All these buy/find cartridges was very time consuming and we have to have a lot of patience and a little lucky to obtain what we are looking for but I can asure you that is worth of it.

Ok, I think it is time to share my performance cartridge findings:

first we have to have a Phonolinepreamplifier with a very good MM phono stage ( at least at the same level that the MC stage. ). I’m lucky because my Phonolinepreamplifier has two independent phono stages, one for the MM and one for MC: both were designed for the specifics needs of each cartridge type, MM or MC that have different needs.

we need a decent TT and decent tonearm.

we have to load the MM cartridges not at 47K but at 100K ( at least 75K not less. ).

I find that using 47K ( a standard manufacture recommendation ) prevent to obtain the best quality performance, 100K make the difference. I try this with all those MM type cartridges and in all of them I achieve the best performance with 100K load impedance.

I find too that using the manufacturer capacitance advise not always is for the better, till “ the end of the day “ I find that between 100-150pf ( total capacitance including cable capacitance. ) all the cartridges performs at its best.

I start to change the load impedance on MM cartridges like a synonymous that what many of us made with MC cartridges where we try with different load impedance values, latter I read on the Empire 4000 DIII that the precise load impedance must be 100kOhms and in a white paper of some Grace F9 tests the used impedance value was 100kOhms, the same that I read on other operational MM cartridge manual and my ears tell/told me that 100kOhms is “ the value “.

Before I go on I want to remember you that several of those MM type cartridges ( almost all ) were build more than 30+ years ago!!!!!!!! and today performs at the same top quality level than today MC/MM top quality cartridges!!!!!, any brand at any price and in some ways beat it.

I use 4-5 recordings that I know very well and that give me the right answers to know that any cartridge is performing at its best or near it. Many times what I heard through those recordings were fine: everything were on target however the music don’t come “ alive “ don’t “ tell me “ nothing, I was not feeling the emotion that the music can communicate. In those cartridge cases I have to try it in other tonearm and/or with a different headshell till the “ feelings comes “ and only when this was achieved I then was satisfied.

All the tests were made with a volume level ( SPL ) where the recording “ shines “ and comes alive like in a live event. Sometimes changing the volume level by 1-1.5 db fixed everything.

Of course that the people that in a regular manner attend to hear/heard live music it will be more easy to know when something is right or wrong.

Well, Raul go on!!: one characteristic on the MM cartridges set-up was that almost all them likes to ride with a positive ( little/small ) VTA only the Grace Ruby and F9E and Sonus Gold Blue likes a negative VTA , on the other hand with the Nagaoka MP 50 Super and the Ortofon’s I use a flat VTA.

Regarding the VTF I use the manufacturer advise and sometimes 0.1+grs.
Of course that I made fine tuning through moderate changes in the Azymuth and for anti-skate I use between half/third VTF value.

I use different material build headshells: aluminum, composite aluminum, magnesium, composite magnesium, ceramic, wood and non magnetic stainless steel, these cartridges comes from Audio Technica, Denon, SAEC, Technics, Fidelity Research, Belldream, Grace, Nagaoka, Koetsu, Dynavector and Audiocraft.
All of them but the wood made ( the wood does not likes to any cartridge. ) very good job . It is here where a cartridge could seems good or very good depending of the headshell where is mounted and the tonearm.
Example, I have hard time with some of those cartridge like the Audio Technica AT 20SS where its performance was on the bright sound that sometimes was harsh till I find that the ceramic headshell was/is the right match now this cartridge perform beautiful, something similar happen with the Nagaoka ( Jeweltone in Japan ), Shelter , Grace, Garrot , AKG and B&O but when were mounted in the right headshell/tonearm all them performs great.

Other things that you have to know: I use two different cooper headshell wires, both very neutral and with similar “ sound “ and I use three different phono cables, all three very neutral too with some differences on the sound performance but nothing that “ makes the difference “ on the quality sound of any of my cartridges, either MM or MC, btw I know extremely well those phono cables: Analysis Plus, Harmonic Technologies and Kimber Kable ( all three the silver models. ), finally and don’t less important is that those phono cables were wired in balanced way to take advantage of my Phonolinepreamp fully balanced design.

What do you note the first time you put your MM cartridge on the record?, well a total absence of noise/hum or the like that you have through your MC cartridges ( and that is not a cartridge problem but a Phonolinepreamp problem due to the low output of the MC cartridges. ), a dead silent black ( beautiful ) soundstage where appear the MUSIC performance, this experience alone is worth it.

The second and maybe the most important MM cartridge characteristic is that you hear/heard the MUSIC flow/run extremely “ easy “ with no distracting sound distortions/artifacts ( I can’t explain exactly this very important subject but it is wonderful ) even you can hear/heard “ sounds/notes “ that you never before heard it and you even don’t know exist on the recording: what a experience!!!!!!!!!!!

IMHO I think that the MUSIC run so easily through a MM cartridge due ( between other facts ) to its very high compliance characteristic on almost any MM cartridge.

This very high compliance permit ( between other things like be less sensitive to out-center hole records. ) to these cartridges stay always in contact with the groove and never loose that groove contact not even on the grooves that were recorded at very high velocity, something that a low/medium cartridge compliance can’t achieve, due to this low/medium compliance characteristic the MC cartridges loose ( time to time and depending of the recorded velocity ) groove contact ( minute extremely minute loose contact, but exist. ) and the quality sound performance suffer about and we can hear it, the same pass with the MC cartridges when are playing the inner grooves on a record instead the very high compliance MM cartridges because has better tracking drive perform better than the MC ones at inner record grooves and here too we can hear it.

Btw, some Agoners ask very worried ( on more than one Agon thread ) that its cartridge can’t track ( clean ) the cannons on the 1812 Telarc recording and usually the answers that different people posted were something like this: “””” don’t worry about other than that Telarc recording no other commercial recording comes recorded at that so high velocity, if you don’t have trouble with other of your LP’s then stay calm. “””””

Well, this standard answer have some “ sense “ but the people ( like me ) that already has/have the experience to hear/heard a MM or MC ( like the Ortofon MC 2000 or the Denon DS1, high compliance Mc cartridges. ) cartridge that pass easily the 1812 Telarc test can tell us that those cartridges make a huge difference in the quality sound reproduction of any “ normal “ recording, so it is more important that what we think to have a better cartridge tracking groove drive!!!!

There are many facts around the MM cartridge subject but till we try it in the right set-up it will be ( for some people ) difficult to understand “ those beauties “. Something that I admire on the MM cartridges is how ( almost all of them ) they handle the frequency extremes: the low bass with the right pitch/heft/tight/vivid with no colorations of the kind “ organic !!” that many non know-how people speak about, the highs neutral/open/transparent/airy believable like the live music, these frequency extremes handle make that the MUSIC flow in our minds to wake up our feelings/emotions that at “ the end of the day “ is all what a music lover is looking for.
These not means that these cartridges don’t shine on the midrange because they do too and they have very good soundstage but here is more system/room dependent.

Well we have a very good alternative on the ( very low price ) MM type cartridges to achieve that music target and I’m not saying that you change your MC cartridge for a MM one: NO, what I’m trying to tell you is that it is worth to have ( as many you can buy/find ) the MM type cartridges along your MC ones

I want to tell you that I can live happy with any of those MM cartridges and I’m not saying with this that all of them perform at the same quality level NO!! what I’m saying is that all of them are very good performers, all of them approach you nearest to the music.

If you ask me which one is the best I can tell you that this will be a very hard “ call “ an almost impossible to decide, I think that I can make a difference between the very good ones and the stellar ones where IMHO the next cartridges belongs to this group:

Audio Technica ATML 170 and 180 OCC, Grado The Amber Tribute, Grace Ruby, Garrot P77, Nagaoka MP-50 Super, B&O MMC2 and MMC20CL, AKG P8ES SuperNova, Reson Reca ,Astatic MF-100 and Stanton LZS 981.

There are other ones that are really near this group: ADC Astrion, Supex MF-100 MK2, Micro Acoustics MA630/830, Empire 750 LTD and 600LAC, Sonus Dimension 5, Astatic MF-200 and 300 and the Acutex 320III.

The other ones are very good too but less refined ones.
I try too ( owned or borrowed for a friend ) the Shure IV and VMR, Music maker 2-3 and Clearaudio Virtuoso/Maestro, from these I could recommended only the Clearaudios the Shure’s and Music Maker are almost mediocre ones performers.
I forgot I try to the B&O Soundsmith versions, well this cartridges are good but are different from the original B&O ( that I prefer. ) due that the Sounsmith ones use ruby cantilevers instead the original B&O sapphire ones that for what I tested sounds more natural and less hi-fi like the ruby ones.

What I learn other that the importance on the quality sound reproduction through MM type cartridges?, well that unfortunately the advance in the design looking for a better quality cartridge performers advance almost nothing either on MM and MC cartridges.

Yes, today we have different/advanced body cartridge materials, different cantilever build materials, different stylus shape/profile, different, different,,,,different, but the quality sound reproduction is almost the same with cartridges build 30+ years ago and this is a fact. The same occur with TT’s and tonearms. Is sad to speak in this way but it is what we have today. Please, I’m not saying that some cartridges designs don’t grow up because they did it, example: Koetsu they today Koetsu’s are better performers that the old ones but against other cartridges the Koetsu ones don’t advance and many old and today cartridges MM/MC beat them easily.

Where I think the audio industry grow-up for the better are in electronic audio items ( like the Phonolinepreamps ), speakers and room treatment, but this is only my HO.

I know that there are many things that I forgot and many other things that we have to think about but what you can read here is IMHO a good point to start.

Regards and enjoy the music.
Raul.
Ag insider logo xs@2xrauliruegas

Showing 50 responses by lewm

Raul, I commend you for the guts it takes to say that when you are a manufacturer of a high end product that has as one of its principle selling points a sterling MC phono section. I know the Phonolinepreamp also has a superb and totally independent MM section, but still it takes cojones to come out and write what you have written on this subject. However, we each have to reach a decision for ourselves between our fave LOMCs and MMs, because of the wide diversity of downstream equipment (preamp, amp, speakers) among those of us who are following this thread. I don't know if anyone else is using Tannoy speakers, for one example.
Axel, In order to audition my "collection" of MMs, I actually bought a used Ayre p5Xe, which as you know is a good solid state unit with adjustable gain down to 50db in balanced mode. My main phono stage is a tube-based, balanced Atma-sphere MP1 phonolinepreamp (I love that word; thanks, Raul), which I had just finished engineering for MORE gain and lower noise than standard, so it is not a convenient item for auditioning MMs. (It could be done in ways that would compromise performance.) Soon I will be able to audition MMs with SS phono and compare to my LOMCs playing thru a tubed unit. All that remains is for me to make a balanced IC to go between the Ayre and the Atma, this weekend. (I never buy ICs; I make them myself.) I guess I will be comparing apples and oranges, in a way, but it's a start.

Dgob, I remember when I was a kid audiophile back in the 70s. I had to go to England to attend a scientific meeting, and I arranged with an English audio dealer to bring him a bunch of ADC XLM cartridges, which were not readily available in Europe. (I can't recall how we communicated; there was no e-mail of course.) Before departure, I went to a local discount house and bought 8 or 10 of them for about $60 each. Then I sold them to the dealer in London for about $90 each. He re-sold them for about $120 each. I felt like a real entrepreneur. Sadly, I remained a medical scientist.
This must have been in the early 70s, so whatever was available at that time (version I, II, or III) would have been the one I "exported" to London. (The business was Audio T; does it still exist?) Owner was a nice guy and very pleased to get the product for re-sale. I remember that I personally was not a big fan of that cartridge; it's likely I was into Decca's in that phase of my audio career. The ADC did not have the big romantic sound or the verisimilitude that I have always admired and sought.
Dgob et al, Please, please let us not let this thread degenerate into a tubes vs solid state argument. Your statement to the effect that tubes "focus" on third order harmonic distortion is, to be polite, inaccurate on all levels. But I defend and respect your preference for solid state devices. Here I think we are looking for magical combinations of cartridge/tonearm/turntable/phono stage, with cartridge as the variable under discussion. FWIW, as I noted above, I bought a solid state phono stage to audition my MM cartridges; it will be driving an all tube linestage and amplifiers downstream.
Raul, $2800 for the Amber. Need I say more, even if it IS Australian dollars? I will look for a used one. How do you rank the Amber at this point in your odyssey, compared to cartridges you've heard since your original posting that founded this thread?
Raul, two posts up from this one, you do say that you swapped the cartridges between the two tonearms with no significant change in your results. Correct?
Dgob, If you go on eBay and search on the topic "P mount adapter" or "P mount cartridge adapter", you will likely find an adapter for ca $10 to $15. I bought a pretty nice one for use with the Andante P76 in that fashion. The one I got has gold-plated pins, nicely made. I've got an NOS B&O MMC1 that came with its original adapter, made by B&O. It does not look to be as nice as the one I got from eBay. Or, I think SoundSmith will sell you an adapter for $50.
Raul, If you go to the LPGear website, in the first sentence of their ad for the ATN20SS stylus assembly they do assert that the one they are selling is "genuine" and "original" AT product. That's why I bought one, although I still have not been able to find an AT20 cartridge to put it on.
Violin, As Axel and maybe others implied, don't confuse yourself with that mathematical formula for cartridge resonance. There are so many variables to the compliance parameter that the best one should try to do is to get things generally mated to start with (e.g., low compliance cartridge with a tonearm that has an effective mass in the proper ballpark, etc). Don't take my word for it. Do a search on Vinyl Asylum and you will find corroboration for what I say. Moreover, I don't think a difference of "3.5", assuming you are using "cu", is really very significant. I would recommend you try it out; even if there is a problem attributable to tonearm/cartridge mismatch, you can usually do something to fix that. Just my $.02.
Hi Raul, I am referring to the first two words at the URL you posted, "Genuine original..." When a business makes a statement like that in the US and then sells product through the mail, they assume a legal obligation to be telling the truth. I think they could be charged with Mail Fraud, if they are deliberately falsifying that information. I gather that what you are saying is that you felt the particular sample that you bought from them did not perform as well as you expected. Did you see any physical differences between the stylus you got from LPGear vs the other one you bought elsewhere for more money? Your experience could just be due to sample to sample variation, if there is no structural difference between the two samples. I hope that's the case.
Raul, For this one time, your reference comes to late for me to act on it. That AT15Sa cartridge sold on October 18. I have been searching eBay periodically for either an AT15 or AT20 of any types, in order to mount my ATN20SS stylus.

But I have to say this, guys, if any of these MMs turn out to sound as good as or better than my Colibri, I will be shocked and amazed. The Colibri is amazing me.
Raul, Regardless of the missed opportunity in this one case, I do appreciate your kindness in helping me and others to find what we need. It's odd that I completely missed seeing that auction, since I have been searching eBay about twice a week for an AT15 or AT20. As you might have guessed from my remark about the Colibri, I have yet to start auditioning my MM and MI collection. Having made a slate plinth for my Lenco, mounting a DV tonearm on it, making interconnects to go between my "MM phono stage" (Ayre P5Xe in low gain mode), and adding to my equipment rack so I can fit the Lenco into my system, I now only have to make the DIN to XLR cable for the DV tonearm, which I can get done tonight, I think. Man, this DIY stuff is tiring and time consuming.
Raul, What do you mean by the term "out of specs"? Did you measure voltage output, frequency response, channel separation, etc, using calibrated instruments? I think you really mean that you did not like the sound, but the term you've used to communicate that fact is misleading.
Downunder, Believe it or not, my post above was in defense of LP Gear. I was trying to say that it is highly UNlikely that they would prevaricate when using the terms I quoted in describing what they are selling. I was doubting the doubters.
Raul, How about the AT150MLX, which is available new and looks to be much like the 160ML in terms of specs, stylus, cantilever, etc? Cost is similar to NOS Nagaoka MP50.
Rayr, Too bad I cannot just mount the ATN20SS stylus assembly and listen to it with no cartridge. C'est la vie.

Raul, I had already decided the MP50 would be nice to have, but I am going to wait until I addition my present "collection" before buying any more MMs or MIs, unless an AT15 or AT20 comes up. As you know, I have about 5 cartridges that I have not yet auditioned. By the way, what's with the MP500? By description it is identical to the MP50, only slightly more expensive.
I kind of agree with Dgob. There is a kind of "flavor of the week" quality to this thread, if you read it at one sitting. Two or three weeks ago the Andante P76 was all the rage, and already Raul has found something better. I do appreciate Raul's unending sense of adventure and his enthusiasm, and I would not want to inhibit him from continuing to inform us of his discoveries, but this is one reason why I am sitting on the sidelines re new purchases, until I have had a chance to audition what I already own. If something exciting comes up that is really inexpensive (e.g., less than $100), I guess I might pounce on it, but something like the MP50 costs "real money". BTW, there's a rave review of the MP30 over on VA today.
Dear Raul, When I made that "flavor of the week" comment, I by no means was thinking only of your posts. You were actually more laid back than many in describing the Andante P76, for one example. You are clearly the leader here, but sometimes there is bit of a group frenzy over one particular model of MM that lasts for a week or so then subsides, as one might expect. It takes two to tango, as we say here in the states. By the way, in reference to some statements above, if anyone has an extra Audio Technica AT15 or AT20 that they wish to sell, you can contact me privately.
Dear Raul, All I can find on eBay is an AT15 stylus assembly, not a complete cartridge. Am I missing something?
Raul, Yes, I think you have aptly described the process. Just like me with the Colibri. It is now my "flavor of the week", except that since I don't get to listen as much as you do, my favorite flavors last longer. I was just down at the Kennedy Center in DC to listen to a very fine jazz singer from NYC, Giacomo Gates. If you like vocalise, I highly recommend his music and sound. Unfortunately, I don't think he has any work out on LP. I bought two of his CDs tonight. Tomorrow he is giving a jazz vocal workshop which I may attend, in keeping with my other obsession - singing.
Ray, Please forgive me. You've got me completely wrong. I am not, was not sniping at you in any way. I appreciate your contributions and your presence here. All I was saying was what I said, and nothing more. If you will re-read my post, you will see that I also did ask you to relay any info you get from VE on VTF and loading of the TLZ. Sometimes one's style of writing conveys a feeling that is not really intended.
At long last, thanks to a rainy Saturday here, I finally got my MM system up and running. As previously mentioned, I am using a Lenco/PTP3 mounted in slate with a Dynavector DV505 tonearm running into an Ayre P5Xe phono stage set for low gain, then into my Atma MP1 linestage. I am now auditioning my Grado TLZ, which was the last non-MC cartridge prior to my adopting MCs in the late 80s/early 90s. I always felt in the back of my mind that the TLZ was superior to any of the HOMCs I played with for many years. I guess this is one reason why I never sold the TLZ and always took good care of it. But I had assumed that the expensive LOMCs that I had been listening to for the last 8-10 years were in another (higher) league. Now I am not so sure, but I have more listening to do. I warmed up the Grado by running thru bands 2a, b, and c of the Cardas test LP twice. Then I could wait no longer and I began listening with a Cassandra Wilson LP that I just bought and had been listening to with my Colibri. On the first cut, the sound was very underwhelming, but it got better and better from first track to last, and the gain increased, too. It was like waking up sleeping beauty, altho I am no prince. I went from Cassandra to a Johnny Hartman LP that is one of my own standard test LPs, because there is a piano accompaniment that is difficult to track and which sounds like an electric piano on most of the LOMCs I had tried, altho the Colibri had shown that the instrument was more likely to be acoustic type. With the Grado, there was no mistaking the piano for anything but the latter. The midrange of this thing is beautiful, open, clean. I am a bit staggered. I have many new variables to account for; I had never used a Dynavector tonearm, and the Ayre is new to me as well. But for now I am quite happy I embarked on this trip. BTW, the Grado is not a MM cartridge, really. It is sometimes called an MI type, but in fact it is an "induced magnet" type, if you read Grado's tech comments. I cannot find anywhere the recommended VTF for this thing. 1.5gm was clearly too little. 2.0gm tracks better, but I wonder if it can go even higher. If anyone knows the recommended spec, please tell me. Also, it was with the TLZ, way back in the early 80s that I first independently and serendipitously observed that 100K was a better sounding load than 47K, so I expect the sound to go up another notch when and if I modify the Ayre in that direction. (I want to get Charles Hansen's permission to do that.) If you can find a TLZ or an XTZ, I say try it.
Raul and Dave, Thank you for the information. My TLZ, after only a few hours post it's resurrection, is definitely not happy tracking at 1.5gm. (And now that I think of it, that was the VTF I used to use with it back in the 80s.) Perhaps this is because the suspension is still stiff after 20 odd years on the shelf. Right now it tracks much better at 2.0gm. Interestingly, Needle Doctor has NOS styli for the TLZ. If I decide I am really in love, I may buy one.
Raul, I had noticed your mention of the Amber Tribute back in your original post that started this thread. On a few occasions I have done a search for that model and found none for sale anywhere. Nor did I find any info on the cartridge itself;it's good to know that it is a linear descendant of the TLZ. Do you mean to say that the Amber is for sale in Australia, NOS? The current "Statement" line of Grado cartridges would seem to be similar in concept to the TLZ and Amber, with only 0.5mV output and a very low output impedance (3 ohms, I think). That also is enticing, but the price is "serious money" again.
Thanks, Ray. It's good to have independent confirmation of my preliminary impressions. I always did like the TLZ and only went to an HOMC in order to be "in fashion", I guess. I do remember auditioning the next lower priced Grado model at that time, the MCZ. It was not nearly as good as the TLZ in terms of bass and treble extension, though it had a similar midrange. Choosing the TLZ over the MCZ was easy. Beyond that, quien sabe?

Raul, Good point about the cost of the Amber vs the TLZ corrected for inflation. During the time between the two cartridges, we not only had monetary inflation but also an inflation in the price of audio components that went beyond the dictates of the economy per se. I think there is a little of both factors in determining the cost of the Amber Tribute.
Ray, If you haven't read this whole long thread, I wrote at least 3 times that many years ago when the TLZ was my regular cartridge, I accidentally loaded it at 100K ohms (or more likely at 94K ohms with two 47K resistors). During my next listening session I was bowled over by the way the TLZ was sounding. Highs especially seemed to extend for miles. It was then that I checked out my preamp and found that I had inadvertently doubled the load R. So by accident I performed Raul's expt with the TLZ. Right now I am listening at 47K, because I was a bit hesitant to chop parts out of my Ayre phono stage before I knew that I was going to go further with this MM experiment. Now I know I am into it, so I will mod the Ayre to 100K. After all, the difference between 47K and 100K is only a factor of two. No different from going from 100R to 200R with an MC (but the consequences are different of course due to the electrical differences between the two types). I don't see how the guys at VE could say it was "wrong". Besides, nothing is "wrong" when it is done between an adult and his consenting audio equipment. (a small joke)
Ray, I don't really care what someone else says about this, as there really is no right or wrong. I am telling you that with the TLZ, I found much to enjoy when I switched to 100K load. Since this cannot cause anything to blow up or even to work hard under stress, there can be no right or wrong about it. Having said that, I would certainly like to know what any Grado guru has to say on the subject.
Raul, It sounds great. Is it the best cartridge in my collection? I have no way of even guessing yet. I could use the 250 toward a Nagaoka MP50 instead of a new TLZ stylus assembly, which anyway may also be old and stiff (kind of like me), even if NOS. It may well be that the TLZ is now ready to go back to 1.5gm VTF, after the brief break-in. I will have to try dialing it back from 2.0. It sounded so nice the other night that I did not wish to fuss with it.
Ray, Raul is always going to tell it like it is.
I've been running my TLZ in a Dynavector DV505. This arm is a chameleon in that it has very high mass in the lateral plane and the effective mass in the vertical plane is largely a function of what headshell one uses. I am using the stock headshell, which weighs 11.7gm, according to my digital scale. The TLZ and screws add about 7.5gm of mass at the headshell. The vertical arm is very short in length. I haven't bothered to search out the equation(s) for tonearm effective mass, but I wonder whether your VE guru has made mention of using Dynavector tonearms with Grado TLZ.
Raul, If the load R goes up, what should happen to C (up or down), for optimum results? It's hard to find any such analysis on the web for MM cartridges. Do R and C act as a simple hi-pass filter here, or is the inter-relationship more complex? As far as I can tell, both components would be in parallel with the signal voltage.
Last night I let the TLZ play one side of an LP about 10 times, without turning on the rest of the system, in order to "break-in" the 20-year-old suspension. Then I settled in to listen to it again. The exercise did it a lot of good. There was much less edginess, better bass, and less mistracking (the cause of the edginess). Also, the sound "opened up" a bit. I have the tonearm parallel to the LP and VTF = 2gm, still running into the 47K load of the Ayre. I played a big band jazz LP (Tad Dameron conducting). It sounded wonderful, rich and warm and detailed. There are two vocal cuts on this LP. Both came off well. Tonight I will listen to the same LP using my Colibri to see where I am at. Raul, I know someone asked you this recently, when you say "positive VTA", do you mean that the tonearm is UP at the pivot point. Since this works well with your Amber, I will try it also with the TLZ.
It's probably a matter of tonearms rather than cartridges, but Raul, I find that with the Dynavector/TLZ, I need some AS to center the image. Otherwise the center of the stage is over to the right speaker, although there is no real distortion. But when I dialed in a little more AS (still less than what DV would recommend for the VTF), the center of the stage was right between my speakers and there was much better ambience, depth, etc. Along with everything else, I am rapidly growing very fond of the DV505 tonearm. I had never heard one until now. At 11.7 gm, the DV headshell weighs about the same as yours, but the effective mass of the DV will be much different due to the very short tonearm.
Dave, Thanks for the URL, but nowhere do they tell you how much AVM you get for $95. It looks to be a very small bottle. I have never heard of this product before and would have dismissed it as snake oil, were it not for your recommendation.
Pryso, In my lifetime I have owned about 25 different old Porsches, pre-1965 bathtubs. As you may know, Porsche consulted with Chevrolet at least on the Corvair motor, if not also on other aspects of the Corvair. Maybe that's why I like my Grado TLZ. But I must say that I did not much like any of the other Grados I auditioned back in the day. The TLZ seemed pretty unique to me. Have you ever owned or heard one? I am not saying that the TLZ is better than the Orto M20FL Super or anything else; I own one of the former too, but I have yet to audition it.
Pryso, The TLZ was the top of their line for a while. The next one down was the MCZ, as I recall. That one was related to the 8MC (or something like that), which may be the one to which you refer. I heard both the MCZ and the TLZ, and there really was no comparison, because the TLZ had better bass and treble and overall clarity. The MCZ was very euphonic. Later, they put a different stylus assembly on the TLZ body and called it the XTZ or XTC, I think. The price went from $500 to around $700 with that change. That was a lot of dough for a cartridge back in the late 80s or thereabouts. I am not sure, but I think my stylus broke and I replaced it with a XTZ one, but there is no label on mine to tell me if this is true. Anyway, I now will start listening to the other MMs and MIs I acquired, uisng the TLZ as a benchmark.
Sorry to interrupt the discussion of loading. I just inserted the Ortofon M20FL Super into my system, riding in a Dynavector headshell on a DV505 tonearm on my Lenco/PTP/slate plinth tt. It is feeding an Ayre P5Xe set for low gain (47K load), so all is in balanced mode thru to my speakers. (Atma-sphere preamp and amplifiers). I have listened for only one hour after waking the Orto up with the Cardas test LP. I can only say "wow". I have been around a bit in audio, and this is a first rank cartridge by any standard I know of. Huge image, beautiful silky highs, lovely midrange. It beats my TLZ, BUT, when I removed the TLZ from the DV505 I found that its stylus assembly was not properly seated into the cartridge body. So I need to audition that again, after several more days with the Ortofon. What did we pay Thakker for this cartridge? Something like $175? It's ridiculous high value for money. Can the Andante P76 be any better than this? Not to mention Grace Ruby, Garrott P77, etc. Raul, you are like a great explorer.
I listened for several more hours yesterday. The M20FL Super never disappointed me; it retained its sonic character on all kinds of LPs, good and bad. At the end of the evening, I compared it to its younger and more expensive brother, the Ortofon MC7500 LOMC riding in an RS-A1 tonearm and feeding the phono section of the MP1 directly. It is quite amazing how similar is the sound from these two cartridges that use such different technology but were made by the same company. However, with the MC7500, the sound was definitely "thinner". I used the Ella Fitzgerald LP, Clap Hands... This is just Ella and pianist. With the MC7500, not only is Ella's voice thinner and a tad less "beautiful", but also the piano seems to be way in the background, like they are playing in a large empty warehouse and the pianist is in the rear corner, several yards behind Ella. With the M20FL, the pianist is still behind Ella but much closer to her, which is probably a better reflection of the actual event. I am not saying the MC7500 did not sound good; it sounded excellent in fact. Possibly the fuller sound from the M20FL is due to harmonic distortion, but if so it is second order stuff and very pleasant. The important thing is that with this simple material, there is no evident lack of detail with the M20 vs the MC7500. I will have to try more complex material. Later.
If it persists even with the cartridge off the platter, then it must reside in your phono stage. Are you using the exact same inputs for both cartridges? Does your phono stage have a built-in SUT in order to obtain enough gain for a LOMC cartridge? (So as a result you would be using different sets of inputs for the two cartridges. Is the preamp tube or transistor? No, your problem is not an artifact of MM cartridge design. Blackgate caps probably have nothing to do with it. If this is really hiss (mid-treble whistle), then it is not likely to be a grounding problem, either. If it's hum (60 or 120Hz tone), then it could indeed be due to lack of a ground or a poor ground connection. Try a higher gain setting; even though you will have too much gain, it might point to the source of the problem.
Dear Derekmur,
Re what I wrote above. If to obtain higher gain for LOMC, your phono stage uses an in-built SUT, then do not bother to do the experiment I suggested, i.e., don't plug the Nagaoka into the SUT input. It will sound terrible for many reasons. Sorry for the bad advice.
Derek, Lets apply some logic. If you have hiss even when the cartridge is up in the air, not playing an LP, then how could this have anything to do with break-in of the cartridge? I cannot imagine a mechanism. I have to disagree with Raul, if he is saying you may have a problem with grounding. Bad grounds will give you hum, i.e., a low frequency buzz usually at 60 or 120Hz. Hiss usually comes from the electronics and could be due to inadequate RF shielding, as Raul does suggest also. But try the other gain settings with your cartridge, in view of the fact you say it does not use a SUT input for high gain. Is the hiss volume-dependent? When you turn down the volume, does it go away? Do you have another MM cartridge to try? That might be a worthwhile experiment. If no hiss with a different cartridge, perhaps there is something going on with the Nagaoka.
Dear Raul, I yield to your superior level of experience. I wonder what causes that phenomenon. Probably the lack of grounding does make the cartridge susceptible to RF or something like that. When you touch it, your whole body acts as an antenna. Sorry to have doubted you.

What do you know about the M20E Super? I would guess it has an elliptical stylus. I am curious about a comparison between the Nagaoka MP50 and the M20FL Super. Of course, I would have to buy a Nagaoka to do it.
Dean, I am going to listen to the Andante P76 next, so by early next week perhaps I will have another shoot-from-the-hip opinion of the Andante as compared to the M20FL. I think Axel also likes the M20FL, but I don't know what he has compared it to. He has been absent from this thread for a while.

Raul, it is very interesting to note the big difference in compliance between the M20E and the M20FL. Doesn't that suggest that there are more structural differences between them than just the nature of the stylus tip? The M20FL is actually moving iron (MI) according to the Thakker website. That low-ish compliance may be why M20FL is working so nicely in my Dynavector headshell.
Axel, "Slow" is not an adjective I would ever use with respect to the M20FL Super, and I have compared it to a VdH Colibri, perhaps the fastest of the fast. I would say it does have a lot of harmonic bloom that could be heard as "slow"ness, but underneath the bloom it picks up lots of detail, which I think we equate with "speed". What is your playback rig? Perhaps therein lies our slightly different perceptions.

You probably made the more interesting choice in buying the Nagaoka vs the 2M Black. The former will not always be available, but the latter one will be for quite some time. However, listening to both my MC7500 and the M20FL Super, I have come to appreciate that Ortofon has been making good cartridges for a very long time. I never owned any of their products before these two.
Back in the days of yore when I briefly owned a Shure V15 Type ??, I did not like it at all. It sounded "gray" and dull to me compared to whatever I compared it to. I am willing to believe that with these different styli it must sound completely different. I should try one. I think I overstated the facts when I said that the M20FL could keep up with the Colibri. Perhaps it is not as fast as that. My point is and was that when I listen to it the question of its speed (again, what is that?) does not arise. It does not seem slow, bloated, bombastic, whatever the adjective you may want to use. I just like the total package of what it does. One factor: I use ESLs which are not supposed to excel in portraying dynamics, although I would defend the big Sound Labs as being less guilty of this fault than any other ESL I have owned, and I have owned many. Anyway, if the M20FL is lacking in dynamics, perhaps I would not notice.
Siniy123, What tonearm are you using with the M0FL Super? FWIW, the cartridge is "compatible" with my PTP/Lenco, too.
Axel and Downunder, I have been doing an analogous comparison to Axel's, listening to the Ortofon MC7500 and the Ortofon M20FL Super. The MC7500 was in effect replaced by the Per Windfield but is different in construction. The comparison is confounded by the fact that they are on two different tts (Technics SP10 Mk2 vs Lenco/slate, respectively) and in two different tonearms (Dynavector DV505 vs RS-A1, respectively). I am using an Ayre P5Xe for an MM phono stage, and straight into my full-function MP1 for MC. Yet I think I can listen through to the differences between the two cartridges. The M20FL throws a bigger image, which I love, but I think this has a lot to do with the DV505 and the Lenco. Image size (big) is a particular forte of the Lenco. The M20FL gives a more "real" or more pleasing piano tone. I think that is actually due to the cartridge itself, probably it is tracking better in the Dyna than is the MC7500 in the RS-A1. The M20FL makes known good LPs sound fantastic, more vivid than I have ever heard them sound. Yet I cannot fault the calmer and very accurate presentation of the MC7500. Obviously, I need to find a way to eliminate the variables in order to draw truly valid conclusions...
Siniy123, What is the "signature" of the alloy cantilever? Can you put it into words for me? I don't even know what metal or metals are used in the cantilver; a search for the information on Google turns up nothing. Apparently Ortofon stopped making the FL stylus assembly some many years ago. The replacement assembly they now recommend is the one for the E version. Just wondering.
Siniy123 and Axel, You guys have opened another whole can of worms - the effect of cantilever construction on sonics. Downunder (or Phaser?) and several others here and elsewhere seem quite taken with the new Ortofon MC A90. Even Raul mentioned that he likes it, if I am not mistaken. Yet the A90 has a boron cantilever. Have you guys heard the A90? Maybe mounting and damping of the cantilever have as much effect on sonics as does the choice of material.

It would seem to me that to make a judgement on the "sound" of the cantilever, one would need to audition a bunch of cartridges that are constructed identically in every way save for the material used to make the cantilever. This is a luxury available only to a manufacturer (like Ortofon, for example). Alternatively, it might be possible to listen to several different cartridges in groups based on the cantilever construction and draw some generalizations from that. Siniy123, is that what you have done? It was interesting to me that Raul ascribed differences between the original B&O cartridges and the current SoundSmith equivalents to the fact that the former had sapphire cantilevers, the latter ruby. Raul favors the originals. On the other hand, Raul likes the Grace Ruby cartridge (ruby cantilever) very much.
Downunder and Rayr2, Who put the burr under your saddles? If you are disgusted with this thread, just go away. Raul inspired the rest of us to experience some new and fresh sounds from old vinyl with MM and MI cartridges, and for that I, for one, am grateful. As I have indicated several times, I am not yet prepared to dump my wonderful sounding MC cartridges (one of which I bought from Raul) as a result, nor do I know yet whether I agree with Raul's global conclusions on this subject, but I have experienced a new higher level of excitement with vinyl reproduction. I would never have even thought of "the MM alternative" without Raul's bringing these cartridges to my attention.

By the way, the repeated assertions that Raul ever categorically recommended 100K loading for all of these cartridges in all systems, and that he ever said 100K was the only way to go, is just plain wrong and unfair. In fact, he made a valuable contribution by in essence noting that there is no gospel truth associated with the 47K load. Go enjoy your LOMC cartridges. Peace. Out.
Robert (Gaugin). I had another thought which almost got me up at 1:30 AM to post this, but I waited til morning. You don't specify which Lyra cartridge you own, but if it is an MC cartridge, your phono stage may be set up with a low load resistance. (Typically MC cartridges, especially LOMC types, are loaded at 100 to 1000 ohms.) If you load an MI or MM cartridge with such values, you would get the exact phenomenon you describe, loss of gain, dull sonics, possibly also the hum you are hearing. Check the load resistor on your Dynavector phono stage. You need 47K ohms for the Ortofon, or variations around that value as discussed here, but to start with, 47K would work fine.
Also, Robert, you remark that your other cartridge sounds fine in the same tonearm and with the same phono stage. Is this correct? If so, check to see whether somehow the stylus assembly in the Ortofon was jarred loose in shipping. If that's not the problem, and if you can verify that you are following the color code in hookup, as per Raul's suggestion, AND if you can see that the connections are all firm with no broken wires, etc, try adding another ground to the system, e.g., if the tonearm body is not now grounded to the phono stage, try adding a wire between a screw on the tonearm to the chassis of the phono stage. I don't poor grounding can account for the remarkable lack of gain that you report but it would be of interest to know whether it affects the hum level. I suppose it is possible that you received a defective sample, but if so it would be the first (or maybe the second based on jaspert's post) among contributors to this thread. One hopes that Thakker would replace it for you in that case. Whether or not you prefer an MC ultimately, the M20FL Super is a great performer for very little money. You did not make a mistake in purchasing it. And I own three highly regarded and expensive MC cartridges to which I can compare the M20FL.
Ray, If you read thru this thread, you will see that Raul has been "challenged" over and over again by me and by many others as well. In some cases he has conceded points; in many other cases, not. But he has always been gracious and kind, even when delivering one of his withering diatribes. You raise an interesting question as to where to fit HOMC cartridges in the pantheon of choices. I myself have owned a Sumiko Blue Point Special (a few decades ago), a Benz Glider, and a Transfiguration Esprit, in that chronological order. I thought the Transfig was by far the best, but none of them come close to either the Ortofon MC20FL Super (MI) or the best of my LOMCs. I consider now that I wasted my time with them. How do you rate the HOMCs you've experienced as compared to the best of your MMs? As my two sons say, it's all good.