Regards, Inna. Thought I'd throw this one out, just so others don't think you killed the thread:
It's downright comical, my mid-fifty's friend, doing the air guitar thing while listening to the most lifeless, screeching, undynamic and tuneless mid 80's Brit New Wave lp's imaginable. He owns hundreds. An I.T. geek with a near-by university, he's ditched his TT and gone 100% digital so occasionally he'll ask for a copy to CD, rendered on my fairly decent Sony CDR. In the audio console, just below the Sony is a Pioneer CT-F1000, a one production-year casette recorder. Designed for the Pio. Spec series, it'll do a good job with the media, metal tapes are practically indistinguishable from the source, accurate to 18k Hz.
Anyway, at the bottom of the stack of audio gear is a Pio. SG-9500 EQ, another of the Spec related components, the sliders modestly arranged in the classic smiley-face configuration, +4 dbl. at the extremes. It's switched into the audio chain perhaps once a month, for rare low volume background music and when recording the scraping noises my friend mistakes for music.
CD's seem uninvolving, an allusion to the actual performance but I understand there's hope for digital playback. CD's still don't connect with the primeval urge to merge with the music, the juxtaposition of the MM's warmth on one side, digital winter's cold on the other, a barricade to the rhythms and harmonic inflections penetrating the soul. MC's are needlessly complicated and any superiority is debatable. Period. This leaves MM cartridges and tape, which misses with the hisses. Output impedance is a fair candidate in considering a MM/(not so much)MI's (etc.) character. The higher the impedance, the more apparent it's analytical qualities or brightness. Those above 1200 and approaching 3200-3600 ohms are progressively more so, add a nude ME/ML stylus on a micro-mass cantilever and those who value low-level detail will rejoice. Others may observe edgyness, a glassy presentation or brittleness. Impedance values between 500 and 1200 ohms produce a more resonant midrange and bass, or warmth. It then becomes the responsibility of stylus and cantilever to navigate the groove modulations to render hf response, this assembly must possess the agility to adequately relay speed and accuracy in transition and detail. Consider the figures for cartridges generally described as "refined". Almost always 550 ohms or less, 3.0mv output or less and typically equipped with a stylus profile containing the description "micro" or "minature". Several in this category require additional gain for adequate input at the power amp, hello Lewm, Frogman. For sheer excitment, a Shure M44E: 9.7mv, 630 ohm impedance, .4 x .7 elliptical on a pencil thick alu. cantilever, 1.75-4.0gm VTF, cap. 400-500pF. This is a bass monster, enjoyed by those for whom subtle detail is not a concern. A happy medium is 550ohm impedance, 3.5-5.0mv output, .15mm LC or long Shibata stylus, nude mounted on a berillium cantilever at 47k and (nom.) 150pF. Select other values to suit your taste or system. EQ'ing is a "band-aid", choosing a cartridge for it's unique qualities and in reflecting one's preferences and system needs obviates these concerns and makes connectivity with the music inevitable.
As to C. & R., wether or not this is a form of EQ'ing is a matter for another discussion. Exchange a different stylus profile in the same cartridge, conical for ML as an extreme example, FR is impacted and I believe an experienced listener capable of deliberated adjustment will think it justifiable.
In the new and following years, may you all "live long and prosper".
Peace, |
Regards, Lew: That wasn't a long post, just a preview of the first chapter of my new book. (-; Acutex got it right with the LPM 320. Have you tried the 315 stylus yet? A source of a different color, don't be quick to judge. I remember Raul commenting on taking two weeks of listening before coming to a conclusion, the 315 has qualities not ordinarially encountered. 100k res. if you can.
Peace, |
Hubris is a really good word. Going walleye fishing/hiking for several days, water still too cold to chance kayaking. All appropriate disclaimers, IMHO and gear dependent, but cold it definitely is. And wet. Just to a walleye's taste, and they, roasted over an open flame, to mine.
"Go placidly amid the noise and the haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence." Max Ehrmann.
Keep it in the groove, |
Regards, Raul, Halcro: Ran the TK9. The unmarked stylus I think all concluded was an ATN22. Initially mounted on an ADC LMG 6.5gm headshell, the performance was overly polite, absolutely uninspiring. Tepid. Boring. Travbrow suggested 1.3gm VTF, an improvment. The cartridge bloomed when mounted on a Lustre 12gm mag. shell. Silver leads exchanged for thick Ohno PC-OFC copper, the total ran 5gm past Techniques' reco, EPA-250 arm required the aux. weight to achieve correct downforce. Further improvment but still an imbalance and hesitant bluring in initial attack. Examined, the cantilever block was off to one side. The cantilever was catawampus, did not hold to the center of the body/coils. Gently wedged the cantilever block into alignment, snugged the screw, little things matter. 200pF shunt, (OEM IC's are 47pF) and 100k res, VTF at 1.4gm. Takes a while to warm up, then it's sublime.
Henry, you may be ruined by the TK3/155LC. Neither the Sig. TK9 or sibling AT22 have the hf crispness, midrange clarity and bass drive of the TK3 or 5"LC". The TK9 and AT22 integrate the performance, a Bently Arnage, not the Murcielago you've been enjoying. Please experiment with the TK10, give it five hours at 1.5?gm with your prized Barry Manilow collection to wake it up. What this cartridge series lacks in excitement it makes up for in composure. Very importantly, calibrate your catawampasity.
BTW, a TK7e/Akai rebranded 180SS stylus is working nicely. Sharing many of the qualities of the TK9e or AT22, VTF and headshell needed to be fine tuned before coming to conclusions. Thanks for reinforcing this, Raul.
Peace, |
Regards, Halcro: Did someone call my name? IIRC, beryllium, boron and titanium (in that order) offer the greatest strength-to-mass ratio of materials frequently used in cantilever construction. Boron, beryllium and then titanium for damping qualities. For a pipe of similar dimensions, titanium, beryllium and then boron are of increasing mass. Because of the difficulties encountered in production, beryllium and boron are typically fabricated as rods rather than tubes, it was the vapor deposited beryllium tubes that presented the notorius health risks. Aluminum and it's alloys, even with a tube that appears bulky can be deceptively light and rigid.
The concern with cantilever resonance is the resonance of the moving mass and it's tortional modulus (spring). Boing!. Beryllium's rigidity compares with phosphor bronze but it has a much higher Rockwell hardness, this metal is tough without being brittle. Since resonances tend to extend beyond the duration of the signal, a reasonable means of dealing with this is to reduce mass with nude diamonds (boundary resonances can occur with bonded diamonds, differences in mass may be insignificant) and lighter and more rigid materials in the cantilever. This will move cantilever resonance to a higher frequency and make it easier to deal with. Compliance, inductance and impedance in cartridges with response above 40k must be carefully considered, I can't recall off-hand one with output above 3mV. Real or imagined, none of this deals with resonant feedback or harmonic influence from a cantilever tie wire. ADC's Peter Prichard thought it a factor.
Resonance frequency is not one for compliance, one for cantilever and one for arm unless considered separately. Resonance frequency is the product of tonearm effective mass, cartridge compliance and, for the purposes of this discussion, cantilever design. This seems to confirm Rauls' advice: "What you see is what you get". Maybe it was Flip Wilson who said that?
Peace, |
Regards, Halcro, Dlaloum: "so David is onto something here?". Great posts Dlaloum.
An experienced "I fixed it until it broke" fumbler's firm impression of the subject:
Absolutely, maybe, in an apple-oranges way. Isolated parts performance and integrated parts performance are not always the same. It's the old parts/sum-chicken/egg thing.
An abreviated parable, the scorpion and the fox: Ol' Scorp asked Fox "carry me across the stream on your back". "But you'll sting me", sez Fox. "Promise, I won't", said Scorpy. Fox agreed, but halfway across it's: "You've stung me, now I'll die and you'll drown, why?". Scorpy: "Because it's my nature".
A cantilever is the vehicle carrying the stylus. The nature of both must be considered in getting to where you want to be.
---------------------------------------"Distorterata"----------------------------------- If you compare cantilevers with others, you may become vain or bitter; for always there will be greater and lesser performers than yours. Enjoy your stylus as well as your cantilever. Believe in your own ears, however the tinitus; it is a real possession in the changing favorites of the audio rags. Apologies, Max Ehrmann.
Subjective existentialism bs aside, take every factor into account and above all, don't get stung.
Peace, |
Regards, Lew(m): Please re-read, titanium has the lowest weight by mass as compared to either berillium or boron. It's rigidity exceeds that of alu. and it effectively damps resonances. I do hear, as you note, a discernable difference in the way the various materials influence the sound of the cartridge. A rough estimation might be that the stylus determines the character and the cantilever the quality. Other opinions are, as always, welcome.
It's apparent the Acutex LPM 320 continues to please, I'm still waiting for any comments when you compare the 315 stylus. When you do, suggest you advance VTF one or two tenths gm and increase cap. & res., compliance is slightly lower than for the 320 stylus. BTW, how goes it with the Parasound?
Hxt1: You mentioned Signet cartridges. Although parts for these were supplied by Audio Technica, the TK1ea/3ea/5ea coils are wound differently, are of a lower output impedance and consequently don't have the AT "house sound" of forward midrange and hf's. You might try one with either an LC or Shibata stylus (and on a good cantilever, of course) before you give up on MM cartridges. I also wonder, as you had a good report for the Shure V15 which does well at 400-500pF capacitance, are you able to adjust capacitance or loading? Also, the Azden YMP-50c has a conical stylus and is said to be not quite the performer the well regarded YMP-50VL (vital line contact) is. Same body, different stylus.
Peace, |
Regards, Lew(m), Halcro: A three dog night, inside and out. An Esquimo term, the colder, the more canines piled on the pallet. Inside the domicile, the three dogs were three styli tried in rotation with a Signet TK3ea and 5ea cartridge. Cartridge output voltage 5.0mV, inductance 550 ohm.
Coil windings for the TK5ea cartridge are 6N's pure hand wound copper, transients are noticably cleaner than with the 5N pure production level coils in the TK3ea cartridge. This was evident with all three styli. The nude 0.3 X 0.7 TKn5ME stylus was faster in following groove modulations than the 140LC. The 140 stylus sounded slightly warmer but overhang was noticably greater. As might be expected, the very fine 155LC/beryl. cantilever excelled in retrieval of low level detail and in attack and duration of transients. Bass bloom was not evident, clarity throughout the audible range was more than just good.
This is, however, about Lew's seduction by the Acutex LPM 320-111STR. I'll try to avoid superlatives but this will be difficult. This Acutex was made available in 1980 for a suggested $200, over $500 in today's dollars. An IM design with a two coil tri-pole generator, the third pole is just ahead of the pivot block and acts as a neutral to eliminate excess current, thereby reducing crosstalk between channels. Clever and it works. The "STR" stylus is modified tri-radial Shibata from Ogura Jewel Ind., Japan. Acutex states it's design enables secondary harmonics or overtones to 45k, tip mass of the nude 0.3 X 1.6 X 0.5mil stylus on it's titanium cantilever is 0.5 mg. Output voltage is 3.5mv, inductance, 1200 ohm. Fr. resp. is an astonishing .75 db.
Three LP's were cycled, once for each of the styli used with the Signet carts. Side A for the TK3ea, side B for the TK5ea. And again, both sides with the Acutex. These are original releases, Ricky Lee Jones for the very hot female voice, Alan Parson's "Tales of Mystery and Imagination" for the quality of Parson's engineering and R. Sterling's mastering, these are 100% analogue recordings. Manheim Steamroller's Fresh Aire V1 (Orpheus) is digital, the London Symphony is carefully miked and electronics are tastefully integrated. Cello solos were delightfully woody, the rasp of the bow was cleanly rendered and centered in the soundstage, so realistic one could imagine the aroma of warm wood and rosin. Nine part female harmonys laid over three part male vocals were almost ethereal, the introduction of whirling tubes, harp and dolphins was enchanting. Orpheus' near seduction by the Sirens becomes a virtual experience. Lew mentioned piano. The effect of hammers on the higher strings was heard, sostenuto of the lower notes preserved. Timbre and harmonics: secondary harmonics and overtones, an important component of the cartridges' character, are positively charismatic.
Relax, Lew, the end is in sight. In an overall comparison both the TK5'155LC and Acutex 320 are superior. The Acutex excelled in harmonics and it's ability to sustain resonant interaction in vocals and insturmentation. Consequently there is a hint of bloom, a faint suggestion of overhang in the bass. Malleted, strung, brass and woodwind insturments glissened. Hf's detailed, no edges.
The TK5/155LC offered impact and light-speed attack in all ranges, soundstage is immersive. There is a clarity and accuracy offered unmatched by any of the cartridges in my collection of near fourty. Soundstage and imageing are spot on.
Major differences can be attributed to the deliberate enhancment of harmonics by Acutex through the tri-magnet system, the slight softening of the signal by the titanium cantilever, the modest 3.5mv output and the balancing of these factors through running impedance up to 1200 ohms for additional emphasis in the mids through lower hf's, upper hf's need no electrical assistance.
Accuracy and technical acheivment are the TK5/155LC's forte, the fine nude LC stylus, beryllium cantilever and 550ohm inductance are supported by the muscular 5.0mv output and four coil engine. There are differences between the two cartridges but it is not in a negative ratio, one could easily choose either and get off the cartridge-go-round without regret.
Thanks, Lew, and:
Peace |
Regards, Lew: "So I took a small elastic band". Suggest an upgrade to audiophile grade duct tape.
Peace, |
Regards, Lew(m): Thanks for the comments, you're being gracious again. A model of modesty, too.
I'll see your bid and raise you one Voltaire. The French wit mentioned an individual who "demonstrates his ignorance" by having an answer for everything (c'est moi, c'est moi, I blush to disclose, I'm far to noble to lie, that man in whom these qualities bloom, c'est moi, c'est moi, it's I).
My creed: "All undeserved honors and unwanted currency accepted, no questions asked".
Peace, |
Regards, Headsnapin: Have little input for the Signet MR 5.0. Haven't found a body yet, do have styli for the Basic, 5.0e and 5.0me carts.
From memory, the 5.0 has a fairly high output impedance, 3200 Ohm and coil inductance of 490 mh @ 1k Hz, values shared by the AT120, 130, 140 and 440MLa. Styli for any of these should be perfectly appropriate with the 440 stylus being nearest the original MR 5.0me, an AT120e (0.4 x 0.7 nude on alu) for the Basic. If you search TTNeedles for AT styli with the "208" prefix, any of these will work. Double check, of course.
Maybe Ackman3 will log in. IIRC, Danny tried a generic replacement stylus, a NOS stylus, a 440MLa stylus as well as a 155LC stylus with his MR 5.0. Good luck and of course,
Peace, |
Regards, Halcro: A horror story, recalled in conversation with a former U.S. representative for AT. At dinner following a meeting with AT execs. from Japan, their discussion turned to the dispositon of the Signet assembly facilities in Stow, Ohio. The building was purchased by a corporation which then proceeded to remove the entire contents. Lock, stock and microscope barrel, everything was thrown into dumpsters and removed to a landfill. The meeting was held (in his recollection) around '98 or '99, the gentleman estimated the actual transfer of property was in '95. Related to me by another and henceforth "hearsay". Just thought I'd pass this one on, "Signuts", sleep well.
Output for the TK10 is hovering around 2.2mV, cartridge imped./1khz=550 Ohm. Induct. 85mh!, D.C. res. 240 Ohm. I'd wager your impression of the TK10 is it has a "whispy" character, all the components of outstanding performance are in place but seem somewhat distant. Turn the volume up and listen exclusively to the TK10 for about a week, you may find it a very refined pickup which needs a certian degree of aclimatization before it's qualities can be appreciated. The same may be said (IMHO) of the earlier TKe/SU/LC series, 2.7mV output, again, very refined, a subtle approach without the "wow factor" found in carts with higher output. On my ancient gear I find this point is crossed somewhere in the neighborhood of 3.5mV output. Poet Rob't Browning wrote "less is more", this may be true of the arts, not sure if so with carts. YMMV.
Peace, |
Regards, Headsnappin: The given induct./res./imped. for the TK7ea is the same as for the TK5ea, the reference for the variation in coil wiring is lost but IIRC, the windings are of Ohno continuous casting, a reheating of the wire as it is formed resulting in copper "grains" of up to seven hundred feet, as compared to LC-OFC windings (6N's pure) found in the TK5ea. After your previous post, I'm now apprehensive as to just exactly what the "examined under a microscope, absolutely perfect" TK7LCa will do. Anticipated delivery today, unless UPS "soccered" it, tonight should make for interesting listening.
Peace, |
Regards, Raul: Really enjoy your terminology. Just to clarify: I'm reluctant to recommend any piece of audio equipment. However, from time to time something comes to my attention that seems worth suggesting to others. There were more than twenty Signet styli included in a lot of styli purchased last summer, and two Signet cartridges, an ("analog master") AM-20 and a TK9LCa (as well as B&O, Micro-Acoustics, AT, yada-yada). All those styli and so few cartridges! The AM-20 caught my attention and as prices for these underappreciated cartridges were reasonable, several were collected for cheap. As there had been little mention of Signets, the suggestion was made that there might be others who would enjoy sampling the premier line from AT. It now seems so.
The TK1ea, 3ea and 5ea are progressively more articulate, it's a coil thing. Consequently each has slightly less presence. There are other listeners who may prefer a different presentation, such as those who focus on midrange, bass or hf detail. Nicely voiced, the 3ea offers vibrant mids and easy bass without sacrificing hf extension, makes "big" sound with a 140LC stylus. The 5ea/155LC faster, precise and revealing and consequenty, slightly less involving. Halcor's recipe, the 3ea/155LC is probably the most pleasing.
Anyway, there are many other wonderful pickups from the "golden age" of analog available, such as the Acutex LPM 315-111STR now offered on that acution site with two(!) styli. Just as with the Signets, there is a specific voicing with the 315STR stylus, those who might be interested in this cartridge should be mindful that there is significant difference in the performance of the 315 stylus with it's marvelous presence as compared to the more resolving 320, this is the one that has won a certian A'goner over. Perhaps with enough pressure, he'll tear himself away from the 320 long enough to give the 315 stylus a spin and post an impression.
Best wishes should you wish to experiment with Signet carts., Halcro (Henry has ears, H'snappin too) has it right in his assesment of the difference heard between the TK3ea and 5ea. Had I the fantastic selection of AT cartridges in your posession, I wouldn't be able to resist sampling some of the earlier Signets such as the boxy TK7e, 7SU or 7LC. 2.7mv output and very refined (a little to much for my plebian taste, YMMV). These will accept styli with the round post such as your AT20SS, which like the AT160 or AT180, is at the top of my wish list. "One of these days, Alice!"
Is it time for a new COTM? Again, regards, respect and of course,
Peace, |
Regards, Dlaloum: Rumours are that the 6006 (and it's brothers) were a Japan only cartridge. Information about these is harder to recover than the already elusive figures for the more common Signets and the veracity of "Japan only" should be taken with a grain of salt. Looking at the test figures you relate, it seems the 6006(p) is associated with the TK5(x)a. The only other P-mount from Signet I'm certain of was in the AM series, 780 Ohms output imped. The mid-level "Hi Tech" may have offered another P-mount option. Considering your 6006 a "6" and others offered were a "2", "4" and "8", associative reasoning would SEEM to support it's similarity to the TK5(x)a. Can't be of much help, someone hauled everything to the landfill. BTW, phasing/linearity: Transducers at the other end of the signal evidence nulls, comb filters and constructive/destructive resonances, are you proposing the same is true of cartridges? In simple English please?
Peace, |
Is the TK7LCa too much of a good thing? |
Regards, Nandric: "Certianty": There are those who contend that in order to adequately describe events one must take into consideration the context of the social conditions at the time of the occurance. This seems to be a matter of convenience rather than consistency. Another free-thinker, Thomas Jefferson, also experienced the confusions of contradictory moral dilemas.
Dgob: "Ay, there's the rub". Thank you for your generous restraint. The consequences of "cherry picking" the thoughts of great men can be used to justify such as the Commitee of Public Safety, Robespierre and a certain Austrian painter. Having committed the same offence, I hope to not suffer their (or Hamlet's) fate at the hands of yourself and Nandric the Terrible. The question was put forth by another, I've still not been able to determine the extent of Kant's influence on Ricky Nelson and the author of that post isn't elaborating. To do so would probably require considerable effort for little purpose. None the less, of the two quotations offered, the implications of one I find frightening, the other absurd. Your responses and positions have been immaculate and precisely to the point. Please consider anything I've written as intentionally controversal. Bad dog!
Raul, regards: I've tried both ways (with/without o-ring), you've described it perfectly. I see (Halcro) Henry has opened a thread on the subject of headshells, this should be informative.
While still on the subject of headshells, I have a vauge rememberence of an article from the mid '70's, a comparison of straight vs. "J" or "S" shaped arms. I wish I could retrieve it but (IIRC) the conclusion was that although there might be a negative consequence from the added connection with a detachable headshell, the curved tonearms were offered after research showed such a shape resulted in lowered distortion across the recording. Would you or any other mathmatically gifted person have any information/opinion about this?
From the few stolden glimpses of your tonearm, it appears to be a thing of beauty.
Peace, |
Regards, Dlaloum: "Fixed coil cartridges exibit phase shift because of electical resonances (at frequencies typically in the audible band) due to the 2,000 to 3,500 turns of wire in the coils...usual method to damp down these resonances is to load down output with capacitance...adding to phase shift, just as mech. damping does". One of the clearest descriptions of the value of matching capacitance to cartridge I've read.
Good reference for this thread, not a far reach to extrapolate an explanation for the ability of lower-output MM's to generate a more "refined" signal but with (IMHO) a reduction of texture. If this "texture" is percieved as distortion, let's not overlook that by modulating the frequency of the resonance waveform, the timbre changes. By adding and subtracting harmonics by design, a controlled enhancement or cancellation is possible. Thanks for the link.
Have you tried other styli with your TK6 (not AT's 6006, my bad)?
Peace,
|
Regards, Dlaloum: "In most cases the resonant peaks seem to be a design choice linked to Frequency Linearity at the expense of phase". Exactly.
"If a particular range is dissimilar to others, there is then a lack of continuity. This phenomena can be described as an anomally. It makes no difference how it's achieved, elimination of these anomallies is the imperative. Once effected, the outcome is a correctly balanced configuration. A...(cartridge)... capable of tonal accuracy and realistic harmonic blending is said to be correctly voiced." Tools and technology are in place, how well done is another matter.
Lew: Your 980LZS is legendary. Lucky you, you braggart!
In retrospect, this must have had the appearance of the dreaded blanket statement. Mea maxima culpa. I understand the 980LZS is a privileged experience but does (looking for some wiggle room here) require additional gain from somewhere. Please excuse the oversight.
Regarding texture/color/accuracy, compare a Shure M44e (9.5mv) or one of the high output Empires (108 @ 8mV, the 2000E, 9.3mV), perhaps one of the contemporary Orto. "Club" carts, up to 11mV, to nearly any of less than 3.5mV. I think you get the drift.
Peace, |
Regards, Raul: Perhaps not all roads lead Rome but many do. Others may prefer alternative routes, the Appian Way is not the only approach to the great city nor is it a one-way street. "Opinion has caused more trouble on this little earth than plagues or earthquakes." Voltaire.
Dlaloum: "Stroke/compliance/output" was offered, the better phrase might have been "influence on cartridge response consequent to duration of stroke". Inductance and impedance are invariables. Duration and amplitude?
"The ear is the avenue to the heart". Again, that rapscallion, Voltaire.
Peace, |
Regards, Raul: Very well considered post, perhaps the most significant statement: "I made comparison against the Acutex because you ( Timeltel ) posted ( correct me if not. ) that the freak was at the same Acutex level performance ( maybe the audio system limitation factor level preclude that the Acutex can't shows its complete grandiosity." The following is offered as neither applogy or argument, you hear what you hear and having followed this thread since it's inception, I respect your opinion.
In reviewing the given fr for the Acutex LPM 315-111STR, there is a 2-3 dbl drop between 20-30hz and again from 3 to 10k. This, the tri-magnet design, the particular stylus and titanium cantilever would largely account for the marvelous sense of presence found in the 315. With the 320 stylus, response is nearly ruler flat, other than a corresponding (2db.) drop between 3 & 10k. Perhaps it is a phenomena related to system performance but I hear a very slight muddiness in the bass with the 315, very well compensated for by the previously mentioned presence. I think these are the qualities you found objectionable in your audition of the FR carts, the same ones another found enjoyable.
This is where this sort of comparison becomes difficult, and the reason for my hesitance to recommend ANY audio related component. Specifications for my antique gear, a thing frequently refered to:
At 270 watts RMS, THD no more than 0.03%, at 135 watts, -0.02%. IMD at 135 watts RMS, -0.01%, at one watt, -0.006%. Freq. Resp 5-100k, +0, -1db. Noise (short-circuited), -120db. Turntable is another "oldie", as is the tonearm, a Techniques SP-15 with a EPA-250 TA. Speakers are four Paradigm Signature S4's, beryllium tweeters, fr (+- 2 dbl) from 35-45k, each on Atacama stands filled with a mix of lead shot and kitty litter. A correctly voiced (and integrated at 60hz) DSP active sub at the foot of each. Altogether, a fairly accurate and distortion-free outfit, just at the edge of clinical. With fourty-five years of involvment in audio, I'm fairly certain deviation from the signal is slight.
OK, in visiting your "virtual system" and through following the comments made in this and other threads, it is evident much care has been taken with performance and you are certainly entitled to a great degree of pride in this. I am, however, somewhat reminded of a friends' rig, $150,000 in Mac monoblocks, ClearAudio TT, Wilson/Puppy speakers, etc. If tubed IC's were available, he'd have them too. The outcome is bloated bass, garbled mids and hf's lacking definition. This is of course, my opinion, he thinks it's all good. None-the-less, he is welcome to his opinion "just listen to the power of that bass!" In this sense, your comment "the Acutex can't shows its complete grandiosity" possibly does reflect system differences but under no circumstances would I trade system performance (with my friend).
Please be mindful the above "over the top" rig is another's, but serves as a reminder that what appeals to one, another may find questionable. Just as with the Signet cartridges. If ten individuals find a thing pleasing and agree as to reason why, but another finds objection then does it stand to reason that the ten are trodgdolytes, we can't all be true sommeliers of sonics.
By the way, I do find the TK5/155lc superior to the Acutex 315 in accuracy, soundstaging, hf extension, retrieval of low level detail and particularlly in the ability to bring distinction to bass transients and decay. The Acutex 320 shares these characteristics with the TK5/155cl as compared to the 315 stylus. My comment was that the TK5/155lc and Acutex 320 were comparable, different voices but each has it's own merits. The Acutex 315-111STR continues to stand above all in terms of presence, "grandiosity". I personally prefer the 320.
I'm enjoying a TK7lca currently, there is an ambient air about it neither the TK5/155lc or the Acutex 315 exibit. IMHO it is the equal of and possibly (depending on all the above) the superior of the Acutex LPM 320-111STR.
All appropriate honor, Raul, as the originator and guardian of this thread, now into it's third year. Happy anniversary, 01-15-08. Your labor and skills are great, please accept that the exchange of opinion, experience and knowledge are some of the most valuable assets to this thread and it's understandable that from time to time, these may differ. Overall, I agree. It's a system thing.
Peace, |
Regards, All: First things first, there is no doubt in my mind that our thread father's phono pre is absolutely TOTL, there are times when a "sense of humor" do not transcribe well on the 'net, none the less, there is a real consideration with cartridge output matching the sensitivity of "phono in".
From a post, 1-20-11:
Consider the figures for cartridges generally described as "refined". Almost always 550 ohms or less, 3.0mv output or less and typically equipped with a stylus profile containing the description "micro" or "minature". Several in this category require additional gain for adequate input at the power amp.
Under these conditions, it is likely that one who enjoys the weight and body of a higher output cartridge would not find one with lesser output as satisfactory, or reflecting the most recent examples, the Signet TK10/2.2mv as compared to the TK5ea. As such, different listeners, dependent on the gear, might compare the TK7LCa to the TK7e (4.7mv vs. 2.7mv) and have entirely different opinions, one finding the lower output TK7"e" superb and the 7"ea" congested. Or, the next, again dependent on the gear, the lower output "e" lacking depth whereas the "ea" exibits greater vitality. Fill in all the "Audiophile" terms as you wish.
Raul, you constantly refer to the condition of "system dependent", in this you are totally correct and is a frequently underappreciated factor when making these comparisons.
Again, appreciation expressed for your energy and determination in puruit of excellence but I'm reminded of the admonition "The nice thing about standards is there are so many of them".
Peace, |
Regards, Raul: Your comments concerning the AT20ss- just out of curiosity, I checked the VE cart. database, output is 2.7mv. As is the AT15. Also recently mentioned was the TK10ML-111, 2.2mv.
Now I'm curious.
The Empire 4000D-111, 3.0mv. Grace F9-E, 3.5mv. Acutex 315-111STR, 3.5mv. Grado Amber Tribute, 1.5mv. AKG P100LE, 2.75mv. Tech. 100c M4, 1.2mv. 205c-111, 2.0mv.
Hmmm.
FR 5E, 5.0mv. FR6E, 7.0mv. Elac varies, but all are from 5.0-8.0mv. AT150, 4.0mv. Signet TK5e, 4.7mv. Grace F9-L, 5.5mv.
The first group of cartridges, you find pleasing, the other you relegate to cartridge perdition.
Is there is a pattern emerging and has it to do with cartridge output?
Just wondering if you had given this thought. Is there something awry with your phono pre?
Hmmm.
Peace, |
Regards, and a correction, dyslexia and I are old friends. The refered to post should have read 1-02-11, not 1-20-11.
Dlaloum, Lew(m), either of you care to speculate if compliance, or the range of "stroke" of the magnets relative to the coil's poles with alternate styli, effects output?
Frogman, Dlaloum posted a link to an Orto. publication from ?1983? last week, in it you will find more information related to this subject than I can relate in a reasonable usage of band width.
Dgarretson: Good question. In this instance, the reference is to phono section input sensitivity in mv. relating to cartridge output.
Ya'll have fun with this.
Peace,
PS, wireless connection is acting up, if double posted, please excuse. |
Regards, Halcro: "Ramblings", I like that! Rambled three days across the state, now thirty minutes here.
Henry, it's good to hear you've obtained the elusive TK7ea and find it satisfactory. Have you tried one of your LC styli with it yet? I've been blessed to have found a very low mileage TK7LCa with an original Signet beryllium cantilever/natural diamond LC stylus in excellent condition. Having listened to it for perhaps five enchanting minutes, the original was removed for safe-keeping, when in use I'll consider it "a happening". FYI, the ATN155LC stylus is nearly indistinguishable in this application, the (intuitive) impression was that the SN7LCa was slightly more compliant. The limited production TK7(a) as compared to the TK5 does convey additional depth, especially noticable with orchestral works. Idiot? If so, then congratulations on your rare find from this "Signidiot".
Peace, |
Regards, Raul: Just returned from three days in the Daniel Boone National Forest, the Red River Gorge is spectacular, the angling, rewarding without being productive. Early melt-off resulting in excessive current, less than optimal. Like cartridge output. High or low, cart output and phono stage input need to be compatable, best results may not be had from running an HOMC cart into a stage optimized for LOMC, vice versa, and don't expect a limit of brook trout from a farm pond either. Seemed obvious, pardon my poor communication skills.
You wrote: "IMHO the take care on design was left as a second side, all of these audio items were full of ICs ( including your SX and my SA. ), poor layouts, passive and active parts that shows low level quality performance".
Power amp design is time-phase correct through the elimination of NFB circuitry, cascade connected current-mirror-loaded differential DC amp with a three stage Darlington tripple-parallel direct coupled OCL circuit. "Quad star" pure copper wiring connecting rectifiers to output, busses in the ground path are also pure copper to eliminate magnetic flux. In the past decade, unit was twice sent to Michigan for routine service and once to California for an upgrade of caps. & res., recalibrated to exceed spec., bench tested to clipping at 430w/RMS. Phono section is FET followed by cascade-connected SEPP design. IC's (yep, they're in there) are coupled to the speaker protection circuitry.
If one wishes to categorize from generalities, '80's BPC (black plastic crap) is safe and anyone having heard a Garrard DD75 knows about those late 1970's rumbling, cogging, bearing grinder DD TT's like the SP-10 and Kenny L07-D. Anyway it suits me, more than enough said. I suspect others may find this boring. Dr. Freud might, on the other hand, be interested.
Raul, I have two MA's, entry 100e and a better 282e. Capable of good mid-level performance, neither compare to a 630MP a friend owned, as remembered from several decades past. Electret condensers, aren't these unaffected by capacitance? The Shure ML140HE- found an NOS 140 stylus, then a 120, two years ago. Took another year to find the 140 cart, then was (understandably) distracted by the Acutex. Haven't listened to the ML140HE for a year now with either the 120HE stylus or the MASCAR hand polished 140HE, neither had enough use to settle in. What I heard was free of distortion and uncolored.
Looking forward to your report.
Peace, |
Regards, Lew(m): The Shure V15-111 is the only cartridge (in my posession) with a reco. cap. of 400-500 pF, at 100k it can sound somewhat glassy with a SAS stylus, 47k tames it. This is not so pronounced with an "e" or "he" profile.
At the other end, many of the AT's gain the edgy "house sound" some find objectionable with cap. above 200pF. Many others, such as your Azden YM-P50VL or Acutex 315-111 would do well at 100k/300 pF total.
If exclusive to MM cartridges and presented with six options, 33/100, 47/100, 47/200, 68/100, 68/200 and 100/200 might be some combinations worth your consideration, there are of course others. Presuming a nominal 75 pF for tonearm and IC's, the option of higher cap. connectors would aid in "filling in the blanks" for cartridges with output impedances requiring higher pF's. 47/100, 47/200 and 100/300 are the settings I most frequently visit and of course multiple IMHO's apply.
Sounds like you've given this a lot of thought. Have you read through the lengthy but quite informative "Near-zero capacitance effect for phono cables - method" thread at VE?.
Peace, |
Regards, Raul: It was a dark and stormy night-.
N120HE: Nude Hyperelliptical .0002 x .0015", alu. telescoped shank cantilever. N140HE: Nude HE .0002 x .0015 microwall/Be cantilever. Tracking, 1.00gm optimal, 1.25 max. Add .5gm if stabilizer brush is down. Shure didn't do Shibata, they called it "HE" instead.
The 140 stylus was found eighteen or so months ago, the cartridge about a year ago. The 120 stylus several months later. Distracted by the Acutex then an exploration of the Signet carts, the ML140HE rested in a headshell until your mention several weeks ago.
It was a dark/stormy night, so out came the 140, with the N120 stylus still mounted. Hey, this sounds much better than I remembered. Two sides later the N140 stylus was installed.
Rivets sizzling in the cymbols, check. Tambourine, the percussive impact and initial clatter of the zils, check. Violin, strings have that woody resonance, the rasp of the bow, check. Woodwinds reedy, flutes overblown, check. Brass, electronica, keyboards yep, they're all there and well behaved, no pushing/shoving/confusion/crowding, check.
Bass? Resolved and defined, initial attack to the point of atmospheric concussion, then lingering with the note as it modifies/moderates, convincingly aggressive without distraction. And tonality, neutral without loosing immediacy, voice is natural, did I mention the quality of the bass?
It was a dark and stormy night but as you promised a review of the cartridge, I thought to, rather than take the wind from your sails to just trim the rigging in advance.
The only question I have about the Shure is will you choose to report or find it meritorious of a "formal" review.
On the application of capacitance you wrote: "I'm using the cartridge capacitive load as a critical and very important way for a cartridge " final fine tunning ", said " final " means that we have to take care in deep on these capacitance load changes: not so easy as it " sounds " but when you made the " right " capacitance load cartridge set up you know immediately that that load is " right " against other values." Totally agree. Some might say the same for varying resistance.
Peace, |
Regards, Lew(m): Scientist! Anyway and again, but since it's you: 100% SS, I happen to prefer neutrality to "romantic". Overly analytical or bloated don't turn my crank either. YMMV.
Phono stage is FET followed by RIAA eq. to within 0.02dB, arrayed in a cascade-connected three stage direct coupled complementary SEPP design. THD is -0.03%. Short circuited, hum and noise is 87dB. I hope this is O.K. with you?
Lew, my element of surprise is in the other direction, in that from the nature of your post the apperance is that you consider typical working cap. to be less than 200pF?
Reco. cap. for the Azden YM-P50VL, 100-300 pF. ADC XLM-11 is 275 pF, the AKG p8E, 400. Empire 200Z: 300. Ortofon VMS20: 400. And, of course, the Shure V15-111, 400-500, as are many other Shure Cartridges. These are mfg. figures, documented and available with a minimum of research.
Cruise through the listed recommendations given in VE's cartridge databank for cartridges with output in the 1.5 - 3.5mV range. When given, capacitance loading will be anywhere from 100 - 500 pF. For those above 3.5mV output, it's much the same. In the higher output group, the general tendency is for AT associated cartridges at a recommended 100 - 200 pF, Ortofon and Shures from 300 to 500.
Stanton and Pickering apparently decided on a compromise, settling on a nearly universal 275 pF a typical capacitance for consumer grade decks in the '70's. This is why many had soldered-in connectors (and p-mount tonearms), it detered the average homeowner/listener from making uninformed modifications.
If you find reason to vary from well established loadings be my guest. I'd not presume to critique from a "remote listening" to your system and you have no one to suit but yourself. If, on the other hand, it should give you something to consider then I'm pleased to have shared the information.
Peace, |
Regards, Lew(m), and an addendum. There was something about your post that kept nipping at my attention. I finally realized it was your reference to the Miller effect, which would indeed explain why you might find a lower shunted capacitance preferable to mfr. (or typical) applications. Such considerations are just one more factor to take into account when communicating, sometimes it seems if one asks a question of two audiophiles, expect three answers.
I'm confident that after the prerequisite agonizations and sufficient propitiation to the deities of the electron, you'll resolve this to your satisfaction.
Peace, |
Hey, Lew: Most sincere apologies if anything written offered offense, your post was (obviously) wholly in the information seeking mode. My "last sentence" was just a reflection that without being able to become personally acquainted with your outfit, there was no way in which I could give meaningful input.
The figures relating to "recommended" capacitance only a matter for reflection. Hell, I fiddle with cap./res. to my own satisfaction, I'm entirely convinced there's so much going on in mechanical influences relating to harmonics that adhereing with exactitude to the Nth pF can be counterproductive, shutting off one's ears to spite one's own pFace, so to speak.
No argument here with tubes/SS either. "No one to please but yourself". To paraphrase a much more knowledgable recent contributor, character is flexible in either arena. It would be either chauvenisticaly unmannerly or a demonstration of ignorance to suggest otherwise. I'll confess to an abundance of breaches of both.
Most sincerely, Peace. |
Lew(m): Good ol' Rick. "You see, you can't please everyone, so you got to please yourself". I think you've got this out of context. When this was written Nelson was somewhat bitter regarding the reception given his new work when presented in concert at Madison Square Garden. The audience in attendance had expected his teen idol hits, Nelson was booed because he didn't accede. The song "Garden Party" was his response, it was intended as a condemnation of his audience's failure to progress with his artistic maturation. This went over the heads of most, millions bought the very record that castigated them for their own anachronisms.
"If you gotta' play at garden parties, I wish you a'lot of luck, but if memories were all I sang, I'd rather drive a truck".
Catagorical imperative: "Act only according to that maxim whereby you can, at the same time, will that it should become a universal law." Totalitarianism is just not my cup o' tea. I also seem to be somewhat allergic to universalities or absolutes as universal claims can never be verified. Absolute imperatives are a different concern. Otherwise, Kant is not currently fashionable.
The rougish Voltaire is my man: "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it". Hence, in extrapolation and in support of the archaic notion that a rational (important qualifier) man has the right to surround himself with articles of his own choosing and according to his own taste, I'll repeat: YMMV.
Thanks for providing an opportunity to improve the quality of discourse.
Peace. |
Regards, Raul: Thank you for the follow-up. Your previous "depends" statement still stands but in my experience (ancient rig/ears etc.) response without the o-ring seems to gain a glassy quality. Psychoacoustic? I really don't think so. Headshell dependent? Perhaps Henry would be so obliging as to comment on differences when tried both ways with his Yama. wooden shell.
Perhaps Will Rogers' observation applies: "There are three kinds of men. The one who learns by reading, the few who learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence for themselves". In this instance it may be best to suggest the experiment. Removing the o-ring, that is.
Peace, |
Regards, Raul: The most effective means of reducing boundary resonances were determined to be fibered materials arranged in non-parallel biases.
Perhaps OT but relevent to the subject of resonance, for an isolation platform I find merit in laminated bamboo supported by sorbothane pucks. The material fits the above description and is extremely rigid while remaining relatively acoustically inert. Most cabinetry shops will be able to provide and cut to size, constrained layer or mass loaded/spiked designs might also be given some consideration.
Anyway, back to MM carts. I'm finding much to appreciate with the Shure ML 140HE, might you find time to comment?
Peace, |
Hi, Halcro: Glad you got it ironed out, don't fail to revisit the LPM 315. If your experience mirrored mine, the bass performance just took a step forward, midrange harmonics clarified.
Now, 'bout that protractor---
Peace, |
Regards, Henry: Consider mechanically induced harmonics. These can be constructive or destructive. Raul's identification of a damping factor has the right "ring" to it, without the needed equipment for lab testing I think he's on to something. Boundary resonances are an influence not to be dismissed, cartridge isolation devices might also be productive in addressing this in a case by case manner. I've played with a few "home brew" applications to good effect in several instances. Years ago, Grado offered an aluminum plate with three raised dimples, essentially "tip-toes" for your cartridge. This was in the late '70's, there were many positive comments about it, and some negatives from the "purist" faction. Coloration, they said. The most sensible was to the effect that it did make a discernable difference, "use it if you like it".
Jcarr: always a treat to read your comments. An aquaintence of mine, a watchmaker by trade, recommends a pencil eraser for removing contaminates from soft metals. I'm sure you're already aware of this. The next time I visit my friend, I'll ask for a length of small dia. silver solder for a headshell join, thanks for the insight.
Peace, |
Regards, Halcro (& Raul): Henry, you may find this interesting: "boundary resonance --- is of the same nature as a resonance in a system without damping: an increase is observed in the amplitudes of the characteristics of the wave --- unlike the conventional form of a resonance with finite amplitudes". Journal of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics, Volume 55, Issue 6, 1991.
Peace, |
Regards, Lew(m): Quite a quandry, isn't it. Apparently your previous post and mine were on the moderators' desk simultaneously. Your points precisely illustrate the source of my curiosity. Please try the comparison, you're an experienced listener and your input would be appreciated. I do entertain the concept that with various materials (or the absence of) interfacing the collet one might "fine tune" the headshell/cart to the tonearm.
Again, agree with Raul, it dosn't take long to decide. I too prefer the gasket in place. Will have the silver solder and wire this wknd, what an interesting investigation.
Grinned at your depiction of Sorbo. Squooshy it definitely is but it does do a good job of raising my isolation "device".
How goes your preamp rebuild?
Peace, |
Regards, Halcro: O-ring "Nuded" headshells:
1: EPA-250 TA, magnesium headshell, yes. 1: three unidentified arms/headshells, no. 1: A strong first impression but more information needed. 1: In theory---. 1: Alternatives.
Situational or universal improvment, looks like a definite maybe.
Peace, |
Regards, Dgarretson: Shirley you're not serious? Good luck with your phono stage.
Peace, |
Regards, Lewm: Great title, eh? Not a great fan of Rumsfeld either, please don't kill the messenger. "Rummy" seemed to be the "yes man" for two administrations (Ford & Bush), "Needless to say, the President is correct. Whatever it was he said." Current policy seems to be testing selective isolationism, experience with removing the headshell o-ring seems to be in the direction of cartridge/headshell integration with the tonearm with synergisim within a complex system the objective, over/under damping and resonance the usual suspects. Is this relevent? "The low-level chaos of energy stored over whole bands of frequencies, not attached to discrete resonances, is heard as fuzz or lack of clarity---"for clean, pure, uncolored sustained tone, a (transducer) needs to have truly clean transient behavior in a much stronger sense. Listen to a boy soprano, and the resonances will stick out like sore thumbs." [REG, TAS issue 111 September/October 1997].
My Grace F9-L on a (2mm thick)7.5gm ADC mag. headshell is greatly influenced with the washer removed, clarity and definition at the extremes (as Raul notes) is improved, seperation and soundstage also. A TK7LCa on a vintage Nagoaka 8.5gm headshell (2.5mm, alu.) drifts towards the analytic. A TK9LCa (9.5 gm Lustre, mag.) is on the EPA-250 now. At the extreme reco. for total mass, haven't found any significant difference. The Lustre is 4mm thick above the cartridge and 5.75mm at the fitting, the TA's counterweight is at the extreme of adjustability.
It seems (IMHO) that with different headshells there would be varying amplitude of resonance in the sum and difference frequencies (re. REG's stored energy), this is a usable description of IMD and am still thinking it's situational. Lew, any meaningful input would be appreciated. Rumsfeld excluded.
D. R.: "The way to do well is to do well". Do be do be do. Well.
Peace, |
Regards, Halcro: OK "Devil" Henry, you threw out the ball, I'll take a swing at it. The Shibata stylus is a very particular beast, alignment and VTA are demanding. A cousin of the line contact profile, there is an extended contact with the groove walls, more so than the typical ellipticals. Fine ellipticals .2 x .7 or .2 x .6 (shank dimensions), and from their lesser engagement (mid range is 40um for the E, 75um for Shibata) tend to track deeper into the groove resulting in the distal point of the stylus *proportionately* more in contact with the groove modulations than a stylus with a longer contact patch, relating to the perception that the sharper the tip the more apparent the hf's (think conical). The better LC styli are .15 x .7 (70um/2.5um minor), resulting in a fast response while maintaining a larger major radius to tip mass ratio. There is no reduction in hf response, the longer contact patch is simply "reading" more of the groove. This evolution continues through Stereohedron (70um), VdH (70um), Gyger (80um), and the Ortofon Replicant (100um). Surprisingly, ML's maintain good contact, the major radius for ML and SAS is equivilent to Shibata at 75um, the ridge secondary cut allows for a well configured minor radius (2.5um), fast without endangering your vinyl.
Henry, as a result of your thought provoking post on "nude" headshells all mounted cartridges are going through a re-evaluation. A TK7e is on the TA now, an ATN14S on it (differs from the SU only in compliance), it's a wonderful pickup for jazz and easy listening, very similar to the later (rare, from it's eighth/last year of production, my example is stamped #209) TK7LCa. The 7SU performs in an almost imperceptably more relaxed manner, as though the maestro held the baton in velvet gloves.
The point you wish I'd finally make is: From a technical description, reliable accounts and observation, with the TK7SU, add a dash of output impedance (500 ohm, IIRC), extra Shibata freq. resp. (5-45k) and an healthy portion of compliance (30 x 10-6 dyn.) add a dollop of output at 2.7mV, it's a recipe for a cartridge for those with a taste for refinement. One should expect rich but not overly seasoned bass, warm mids and crisp hf's without leaving a sharp taste, mid-range texture ameliorated by the micro mass tapered alu. pipe and low impedance. The 7e stylus with it's lesser vertical contact with the groove walls, hf's are theoretically more forward and the mids less resonant resulting in a brighter quality with slightly more "punch". I would not care to argue your proposition of implementing various styli as a means of seasoning a cartridge to meet table or taste preferences. As to soundstage, double check azimuth or buy wider speakers ;-). Have I mentioned my accumulating pile of orphaned o-rings?
Now a plug for the AT155LC, AT170ML or Signet TK7LCa:
From our sometime (always welcome) visitor, Jcarr: "I prefer line-contact styli that combine a vertically long contact patch with the LP groove with a horizontally short contact patch. A vertically long contact patch gives greater groove contact for better tracking and better immunity to localized groove damage, and a horizontally short contact patch give better high-frequency performance and less time-smear. This leads to line-contact styli with a fairly large major radius and a small minor radius, but in practice neither radius can be too extreme. Too large of a major radius makes azimuth adjustment more critical than most users (and many tonearms) want to deal with, and too small of a minor radius tends to create edges on the stylus that are sharp enough to chew up the groove. Based on my own experiences and observations, I like the maximum major radius to be in the 70~80um range, and the minor radius to be in the 2.5~3um range." Audiogon, 11-21-09, search "New Lyra Delos Cartridge".
Peace, |
Regards, Halcro/Ackman3: Henry, the TK7e is 2.7mV output, the later 7LCa at 5.0mV. Output impedance is similar, the TK7LCa at 580 Ohm, requiring exceedingly clean windings to get 5mV at that impedance, PCOCC, 8n's pure. With the ATN20SS, you should find a different quality in detail common to going from alu. to berillium cantilever. Regarding loading, the Shibata stylus likes 100k, to bring the mids a little more forward, cap. at 200pF. Eavesdropping on your post to Ackman3, there's nothing humble about a nude square shank .2 x .7 elliptical on a tapered micro mass alu. alloy cantilever. It's a description of one of the best.
If asked (I think you are) about the difference between the 7e/SU and the 7LCa, it's one of involvment or musicality, the distinction is to the nth degree. Personal opinion is that if one can find either, jump on it like a duck on a Junebug.
Danny: The Signet MR 5.0me is adequately defending it's "Maximum Resolution (MR)" title, very confident and detailed. About four hours into it now, not yet enough time on the nude sq. shank .2 x .7 minature elliptical "me" stylus/thin wall alu. cantilever for break in. (Did you get that, humble Henry?). I like what I hear though, to paraphrase Will Rogers: I never met a Signet I didn't like. Thanks for sending the upgrade "me" version. IIRC, you have the AT140LC and 155LC styli, have you tested these in the 5.0 cart yet?
Peace, |
Regards, Acman3: I was wondering if it was just me - the MR 5.0 is pretty "hot" on my EPA-250. Thanks for the reply.
TK7SU/ATN20SS, "Where man has never gone before", you'll share your impression?
Peace, |
Regards, Raul: With the o-rings removed, the low mass ADC mag. headshells have responded in a positive manner. An Acutex LPM 315/320-111STR on a vintage 9.5gm Lustre mag. headshell, very thick @4mm, no difference (to my ears). The TK7SU, a different story. Mounted on a Technics alu headshell, there is a definite ringing with the o-ring removed. A Shure ML140HE, also on a Tech. headshell, preferred with the o-ring off. The TK7LCa is on a Nagoaka/Jeweltone 8.5gm mag. headshell, with the o-ring off it gains a distant character. So far, five are off, two reinstalled and one no diff. A current "pet" theory is this is due to stored energy, how it relates to headshell/cartridge/TA mass or build materials, damped if I know.
My TK7e (or with the Shibata SU stylus) offers first a strong bass signature with easy mids and hf's that manage extension in an undistracting manner, the Shibata more refined than the elliptical stylus. The TK7LCa, agile response, smearing is not observable. The mids are at the front, texture, harmonics and resonance a delight. Bass foundations are good, hf detail and clarity is excellent. Overall, the 7SU/e is more relaxed with abundant bass, the 7LCa more resolving with the mids featured. Both are top end, my experience is that the 7SU/E is musical in the "romantic" sense, the 7LCa involving. I'm very curious about the 7SU with the AT20SS/Sa stylus, whichever has the berillium cantilever.
Some elaboration is needed. The TK7e and SU differ only in the stylus, the elliptical that came with mine is used, how much is unknown but I'm certain it's past it's prime. The "SU" Shibata stylus has less than twenty hours on it, it is unlikely it is broken in yet. The later TK7LCa's still pristine original is put aside until a genuine replacement can be found. An ATN155LC stylus is on the cartridge now, nicely run in at about one hundred hours.
Peace, |
Regards, Raul: "While ringing artifacts are generally considered undesirable, the initial overshoot (haloing) at transitions increases acutance (apparent sharpness) by increasing the derivative across the transition, and thus can be considered as an enhancement". Mitchell, Don P.; Netravali, Arun N. (August 1988).
Ringing in the time domain is an oscillating impulse response that if uncontrolled eventually assumes negative values. It would seem then that mechanical ringing is closely related to overshoot, which occurs when cartridge response takes on values higher than the signal's input value resulting in accentuated transitions. Essentially, cumulative resonance results in cartridge response influenced by factors other than the input signal. There are some who, perhaps in an effort to free their tonearms from plinth/platter/drive resonances, remove their tonearms entirely from the deck. These "Pod People" (you know who you are), are they onto something?
From a 1976 description of the Infinity Black Widow: "As the stylus on the tonearm is excited to produce an array of frequencies, most tonearms feel an overwhelming urge (great description) to add vibration and resonances of their own. Where the circumference of the Black Widow tonearm changes, a transmition line effect is created; that is, resonances are neither passed along or reflected back to the stylus, but are instead attenuated at that point." (The original model had a stepped aircraft alu. wand, sleeved near the middle of the armtube).
Geoch's reference to the Zonotone headshell, a delightful description found at "joynet cafe": "ZSHELL10 adopts a combination of prismatic and circle shape which is the most unlikely resonant against vibration. Press into pure titanium at point of center of a cartridge movement for suppressing vibration of conductor wall. Light weight, but high rigid and anti-vibrated ideal 4.2mm thickness A-6063S aluminum alloy is supplied" has revived consideration of the earlier headshell o-ring discussion.
It was noted earlier that a vintage mag. Sumiko/Lustre headshell was immune to effect of o-ring removal. Relevent to the description of the Zonotone, thickness of the Lustre headshell at the cartridge mount is 4mm (nominal). It seems likely there are some real considerations here, optimal thickness, the association of different materials (alu. & ti.) and variable geometry. It was also observed that cartridges installed on ADC mag. headshells, 6.5-9.5gm w/o leads, were influenced by the removal of the o-ring but that they assumed a slight edgy ("overshoot, apparent sharpness"?) quality. The Tech. 7.5gm alu. headshell demonstrated unacceptable glare with the o-ring removed. Further examination has involved cartridge isolation applications to which the o-ring bare ADC shells respond to particularly well, especially with any all metal bodied cartridges. Cartridge isolation appears to be a viable solution to line/boundary resonances as well as mechanically ringing headshell influences on cartridge performance.
Offered for consideration, IMHO applies.
Geoch, congradulations on your acquiring the Grace F9, a classic.
Peace, |
Regards, Neobop: I find it easier to set both VTA and capacitance by starting low and then increasing. Especially VTA as it is (for me) a more subtle influence.
Peace, |
Regards, Raul: Thanks for taking the time to respond. I'm minded of the conception of "house sound" associated with various gear, thankfully there are no legislations requiring one to appreciate a particular element in audio.
As you obviously hold the high-end AT carts in esteem, I'm somewhat surprised at your general assesment of the Signet line, the premier offerings from AT.
I might also reflect that it sometimes happens that our values change, a comment you made previously: "What I miss from the AT155 LC is that the Signet freak (TK5ea/155lc stylus) does not shows the same layering definition level and the LOWER BASS COLORATION that the 155LC has."
De gustibus non disputandum est.
Peace, |
Regards, Raul: Still no citing of your reference? Sun-tzu: "--Knowledge cannot be gained from ghosts and spirits, inferred from phenomena of projected from the measures of Heaven but must be gained from---knowledge of the---true situation".
Also, as I have not (but would wish to have) the AT14/15 or 20 SS or Sa, any references to these must have originated with your posts. Does this help clarify your confusion?
Peace, |
Regards, Raul: "Different kinds of fun" come with the Empire 8000X/VE, grand bass, never a sibilant in the mids. The hf's are there but somewhat reticent in presentation, like a beautiful but bashful child. With the 2000E (red) stylus it'll not impress one intent on critical listening but the potential is there, enough so to consider upgrading the stylus and fabricating a wood body to replace the extremely microphonic clip-on mount. Looking forward to your next revelation and somehow not surprised to hear it too is an Empire.
Dlaloum: Hi, David. Your posts have made interesting reading in the past week or so, may I add some thoughts? It seems one way to identify cantilever resonance would involve testing one assembly and then comparing a different cantilever material in the same cartridge, the variance between the two would then be significant. I cannot but think what is being measured is not exclusive to cantilever resonance. In a similar matter, I would be extremely interested in a comparison between headshells of varying construction and as you would be doing all the tedious setup I would find it even more rewarding. Please recieve my comments as those of an uninvited "back-seat driver"!
By the way, the Technics EPC-U25 mentioned to you earlier remains an uninspired performer. In spite of (of perhaps because of) the new replacement stylus that came with it. Inspection confirms it as a nude elliptical, however the diamond is very dark and unpolished. One of three cartridges picked up recently for the headshells they were mounted on. The third is an ADC PSX-40, a very slender sleeved cantilever and fine, clear diamond of unknown hours. The ADC shows promise enough to have ordered a new OEM replacement stylus but not sufficently impressive to request a spare, yet.
Peace, |