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 chakster

@bill_k 

The following video interview with Ortofon's Leif Johannsen covers the design of the new Century cartridges, including the new Concorde Century starting at the 25:10 mark. He goes into some detail of its design and explains that it uses much of the technology from their 2M Bronze cartridge. Thought you'd be interested...  https://youtu.be/sOw6n2OZiQ4 

Mr. Johannsen also explained that he'e been using a SUT with his Century cartridge! This is controversal to Raul's theory, but it was the Raul who said this: 

Ortofon is a total/100% of knowledge and skills at every single " sigth " surrounded its designs for it can works always in favor of MUSIC.

And Ortofon cartridge designed has been using a SUT

@nandric 

Well the difference between Glanz 71 and 31 as well between Astatic 100 and 200 is only the compliance: 50x10 versus 45x10.  The ''usual'' or the most tonearms are not suitable for such high compliance.


You're mixed up STATIC compliance and DYNAMIC compliance. 
The dynamic compliance of those cartridges is not high, BUT A MEDIUM
For example the Azzurra made by Glanz has 35cu static compliance, but the dynamic compliance at 100 Hz is only 8 cu and if we will convert it to 10Hz it will be not much than 14 cu. The models you have mentioned have a bit higher dynamic compliance, but not even double compared to Azzurra, i believe under 20cu @ 10Hz This is medium compliance. No problem with tonearms for Astatic/Glanz cartridges. It is lower compliance than Grado 
The more audiophile knowledge ( vintage audiophiles. ) goes with two of the best Pritchard ever designs that I own too; ADC Astrion and the Sonus Dimension 5.

ADC Astrion is not a Pritchard’s design, this cartridge was made after Pritchard left the company. Nothing special in my opinion, it has sapphire cantilever, but the sound is nothing special. Bought my NOS unit from KAB (he had many for $150), this is a mediorce cartridge, compared to many other killer vintage MM (especially the Japanese).

Sonus Dimension 5 is a very rare model, Sonus Gold and Sonus Blue are often available for sale, but the Dimension 5 rarely turns up for sale. Very High compliance cartridge for SUPER LIGHTWEIGHT TONEARMS ONLY!

The best Stanton is definitely Collector’s Series 100, signature model of Walter O. Stanton (CS 100), belong to the best MM ever. One of the most involving sounding cartridge for everyday use! It has Stereohedron II stylus and Sapphire-coated cantilever which looks like Ruby (It’s Red). Here is the picture of my manual for this beauty: https://scontent-arn2-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/38476991_2373978225953664_3615805771045928960_n.jpg?_n...
ADC Astrion is a waste of money, after many years of discovering so many NICE vintage MM cartridges in this thread someone decided to go back to the mediocre cartridge from the first page of the thread ! Hey, everything ok?  
I’m curious about SONY XL50 laminate core Moving Magnet Cartridge with Boron Pipe cantilever. Made by Sony Sound Tec. corporation in 1981 (the price at that time was ¥ 25,000). There is a Delta sign Δ around the cartridge in the catalog and inside the manual you will find that it’s for a "Jointless Delta-type Core". A very commom meaning, specially for capital delta Δ ( a triangle) is difference, so what does it mean?

Has anyone tried it ???

********************* features *************************************

*The Jointless delta-type core Δ , a design unique to Sony.

*Boron Pipe cantilever is lightweight and extremely rigid. Distortion caused by flex is virtually eliminated.

*A screw holds the stylus holder firmly in place

*Super lightweight for low mass tonearms

*Sony recommended 47 to 100k Ohm load impedance

*Stylus life is about 400 hrs

Output: 2.0 mV
Frequency response 10Hz - 50000Hz
Channel separation: 28db
DC resistance: 170 ohms
Impedance: 470 ohms
Compliance: 20cu @100Hz (pretty high)
Stylus: Hyper Elliptical Nude Diamond
Recommended tracking force: 1.5g
Weight: 4.2g







@lewm

The "problem" with the ADC XLMs, for me, was their very very high compliance. Unless you have a very light tonearm to go with, the suspension tends to bottom out at any slight provocation, like a minor warp or an underdamped cuing device. I was constantly worrying that I had broken mine. The Infinity Black Widow was a good companion tonearm for the XLMs. I think also M-S made a very light CF tonearm. And was there also an Audio Technica tonearm with very low effective mass?

Black Widow is problematic, the build quality is not very good, the carbon armtube is fragile. There is another arm with carbon armtube - Stax UA-7, but i never tried it.

But in my opinion the best "answer" to the Black Widow is Luxman TA-1 tonearm made by Micro Seiki. This arm has removable armtube and heavy tonearm stabilizer. Look at this picture of Luxman TA-1. This is actually an image (of my tonearm) made by previous user. Great inexpensive tonearm with low effective moving mass for high and super high compliance cartridges, i think the estimate price is under $750, so it can compete with Victor UA-7045 which is also great arm for high compliance cartridges. Since it was made by MICRO the quality is much better compared to Black Widow. Stanton CS-100 WOS and Grado Signature XTZ are great on this Luxman TA-1 tonearm (I know you have both of these excellent high compliance cartridges). Luxman TA-1 with removable armtube and heavy stabilizer is quite rare, there was a cheaper/different version supplied with Luxman turntables.   
Micro MAX tonearm is very expensive these days, but not everyone is fascinated about it as much as Raul. Here is what @opus111 posted in Micro Seiki thread not so long ago about this tonearm: 

Is this a joke? Having owned 1500, 5000, and 8000 I am a MS fan but the 237 and 282 arms are by far the most overrated tonearms of all time, and nowhere near the level of their better turntables. They sound thin, sterile, and downright unmusical. A cheap Rega 250 sounds better...far better

Dear Nicola

While our chakster

''strongly '' believes in resistors made from ''pure copper'' Lew

stated that he will need so much wire that those would impossible

fit in his ''beloved'' phono-pre. To put this otherwise ''facts don't

care what we believe''.


Fact is what i see inside my ZYX CPP-1 pre-preamp which i own and use, Lewis does not have this device, you too. If you have not seen yet an input resistors made by ZYX of pure copper coil wire then all you need is to look at my picture. Take in count that ZYX Cryo Copper wire is just about 0.035mm in diameter. What you see is two coils with this tyni pure copper wire and this is what Nakatsuka-San use as his special input resistors. I hope i've been able to spread the light on this technology a little bit. And i will be happy to read comments from technically advanced members. 


@lewm 

Chakster, Are you sure about the diameter of .035mm (millimeters)? That is very very very tiny and would be very fragile

Yes, i'm sure, this is exactly the same cryo copper wire you will find in the coil of your ZYX Universe (and other ZYX cartridges). You can simply check the manual. They are fragile and there is a warning sticked with a good advice not to open cpp-1, but i had to just to replace the expired batteries inside this device. 

Input Impedance: 125 ohm

Personally i’m not against SUT, i have phono stage with built-in Lundahl SUTs, also i have Toroidal Silver SUT as a separate unit, but ZYX Pre-Preamp is something special for some cartridges for sure (not for all cartridges) and that’s the reason Arthur Salvatore compared it to the best SUTs ever made (in his opinion). http://www.high-endaudio.com/RC-Step-ups.html

I am posting info about ZYX Headamp because its design is special (look at those resistors), but you guys are still repeating same mantra all the time. I think i am more open minded at least.

Now i have new phono stage with high gain. I just need more time and more experience with different MC cartridges. But decent vintage MM cartridges are simply better than most of the MC i have tried so far. Practically they are better, they are neutral, white the some MC are colored and requires all that additional devices such as SUTs, Headamps etc (also re-tipping process etc).

Playback should not use the same machanism as Cutter Head, as far as i know Allnic Puritas MC looks exactly like Cutter Head, but who cares ? How many people on here using Allnic Puritas MC cartridge? http://allnicaudio.com/?page_id=1254 Why it's not the best MC ever if it was made like the cutter head then ? 




@roberjerman

 High inductance of MM's coils is the culprit.

Are you aware of the low inductance MM cartridges?


It slows transient speed. And the loose suspension used allows for a form of frequency-modulated (FM) distortion as the stylus is pulled forward by the vinyl groove.

Find yourself a decent MM cartridge first, i believe you judge the MM cartridges by 30 years old memories, not today's experience with some of the best MM like the Audio-Technica AT-ML180 LC-OFC discovered in this thread long time ago by a group of audiophiles with some amazing LOMC in their arsenal.   


MC types are largely free of these two problems!

There are many problems with MC cartridges and Peter Ledermann will explain you better in this video: https://youtu.be/F65mODzn4Gk The reason why his own cartridges are MI, not MC  

People comment on stuff that they never heard, never tried.
This is typical audiogon today, pretty sad

P.S. Metal-Film resistors are outdated, in 2011 Vishay Naked-Foil resistors were introduced especially for high-end audio applications. http://www.vishaypg.com/foil-resistors/press/2011/100111heaa/en/
@rauliruegas 

Any external SUT or headamp needs additional cables, connectors and cable soldered joints from where the delicated LOMC cartridge signal must pass and where suffer severe degradations.  

Just imagine any cartridge signal passing and traveling " hundred of miles " inside that unit, we can have only heavy degradation. That item was designed to a price point market average/mediocre market.

Right, better listen to DIGITAL then, you can even avoid tonearm

@j2d2 

 Just checked the Audio Technica website and dont see the ATML 170 - 180 listed.

The AT-ML180 has been discontinued in the 90's and the AT-ML170 even erlier. In my opinion they are the best MM cartridges ever made, extremely hard to find nowadays. MM cartridges are out of fashion today, but the price for a vintage AT-ML-180 MM is higher than for a brand new ART-9 MC.   


@halcro 

I have three original Garrott P77 cartridges, all bought directly from John and Brian Garrott with two of them having re-tips done by Brian.

Can you explain why you have retipped MM cartridges? The original replacement styli still available for P77 series from Garrott in Australia. Have you tried the last generation P77i ? 

Whilst having a seductive analogue richness in their delivery....the highs and detail-delivery could not compete with the best designs (both vintage and modern). This was completely transformed with the insertion of the Jico SAS stylus assembly and if Chakster were to hear this on his own P77...perhaps his views may change a little?

SAS is indeed a good option to upgrade some mediocre styli on MM cartridges, but SAS can not even come close to the best original styli. My experience with Technics EPC-205c mk4 is a good example. The original Technics stylus is a killer (state-of-the-art), JICO SAS makes no sense for this particular cartridge.  

I think i was correct by saying that SAS is an improvement for mediocre cartridges, but not an improvement for the state-of-the-art cartridges because they are already comes with the best cantilevers and the best styli (Boron/Beryllium .. MicroRidge, MicroLine, Shibata...).

I believe in what you’re sayin that Garrott p77 (i have the original old model) can be better with SAS stylus profile, but Technics EPC-205c mk4 is not better with SAS profile, because the original cantilever and stylus tip mass are very special in its own way. Yes, only one example, but it was obvious for me and i am not talking about cartridges/styli combinations that i haven’t tried myself.

BTW the tylus tip on p77 series (old and new) is not an "Elliptical" !

The principal difference between the two Garrott Cartridges is the Stylus Assembly. The new P-77i is fitted with a Micro Scanner MKII diamond and tuned accordingly. The old P-77 uses a Micro Tracer Diamond. The sound of the new MSMKII is more extended at both ends of the Audio spectrum therefore sweeter treble and deeper bass with overall flatter Frequency response (worth to try).

So what i am tryin’ to say that SAS is not panacea for ALL cartridges.

First of all: Jico SAS does not produce styli for all vintage cartridges, for the SAS i have only one cartridge and this cartridge is Garrott P77.

There are many more vintage cartridge that i prefer over the P77 (which i have not used for a long time, since my Reed arm was removed).

Since it’s not a problem to buy new SAS anytime, i always have more interest towards original vintage MM.

P.S. Mr. Philippe Luder, Managing Director of Garrott Brothers today, is a nice guy. Some of the top Garrott carts comes with Ruby Cantilevers and Fritz Gyger tip (the most complicated stylus tip ever). A person who bank rolled the brothers when they were alive back in the days, posted a nice article and said he was there incognito to make sure about new management of the new Garrott Brothers company. He was very posivtive about people who runs the company today.

@halcro The SAS improves my Victor Z1 immeasurably over the Victor original and makes it sound better than my NOS Victor X-1IIE.

But not better than Victor X-1 and X-II with Beryllium Cantilever and Shibata stylus tip? :))

@j2d2

 Since the AT 170 is no longer available, how about the Clearaudio Maestro? What else? I've never used anything other than a moving coil, but am tired of paying so much money and will buy a mm if there is a very good one available. If so, what is it?

If you will read Halcro's post above you will see that VINTAGE cartridges is the key. To find  NOS (New Old Stock) or lightly used one from a fellow collector is a part of the game. You can buy new cartridges everyday online at any shop, but top quality vintage MM or MC cartridges is another story. I know many people on audiogon with big collections of the great cartridges from the 70s/80s. Even if you will buy a new cartridge, my advice is so find some special vintage MM and then you can compare them in your system. Then you can understand why the MM carts from the 80s are so special compared to new MM cartridges. Vintage cartridges does not lose its value on the market, so no risk to lose money on it. 

@halcro 

So the new Garrott P77i has a different motor, body, stylus and cantilever.
You may as well be comparing apples and oranges....

Yes, but i have an old original motor (generator) and many of us have it too, so the stylus is what we can try on it.

The Garrott based on A&R is nothing special, i believe they were able to dublicate it for new production? 
There are ONLY two type of Garrott cartridges as far as i know:
@halcro  

1) One made by brothers and it's called P77 there is no "Dynamic Coil" sign on the generator, at least on my old samle which i bought from another reputable Australian audiophile years ago.  

2) Another one is called P77i where "i" is for "improved". This is the cartridge with "Dynamic Coil" sign on the front side of the generator. New Ps77 and Ps77i styli available from Garrott for 300 and 400 AUD.   


@halcro I know for sure that my Garrott generator is not new, because ALL new versions have Dynamic Coil stamp on the frontside, check their website. This is what you can buy right now, and there will be Dynamic Coil logo.

My cartridge is P77, it does not have this logo and i have never seen this model for sale, the stylus is not P77i (the "i" is a new version). Here is another picture of my P77

I bought it from Jasper in Australia, who is a member of audiogon too, he’s one of those few audiophiles who documented an hrs of play for each of his cartridges. His Garrott P77 and its stylus does not came from https://garrottbrothers.com/ which could be an easiest way for Australian citizen. He never tried those new styli.

But one of the Garrott p77 styli has been sold on ebay last month, few pictures from that sold listing:
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/iZwAAOSwnKdbaWYt/s-l1600.jpg
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/qBQAAOSw~SdbaWSA/s-l1600.jpg
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/RAIAAOSwlXNbaWTH/s-l1600.jpg
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/QwIAAOSwxgtbaWUJ/s-l1600.jpg
https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/cwcAAOSwsndbaWUe/s-l1600.jpg

And thanks @dover for additional info, very interesting.

And the last argument is that i really liked the sound of my Garrott on Reed 3p "12, i have a better vintage cartridges, but the Garrott was close and definitely among my favorites. One day i will try those new styli.








@dover 

I suspect @chakster 's P77 is the original. It is not that rare - I have seen many samples that look identical to Chakster's P77 in Europe, US & here in New Zealand. It could also be the early P66 with the early P77 stylus.

Now in terms of stylus the early P77 used the Weinz sourced Parabolic.

These were superb and underwent a time consuming triple polishing process specifically for the Garrotts. Weinz died in 1980 and at some stage the Garrott's ran out of original Weinz Styli.


Good to know. This is probably the reason why i like my old Garrott. 

But what do you think about new styli they are offering now? 
@dover 

I have never heard the current P77i, only the first 2 iterations from the original Garrott Bros. Halcro I think has both old and new.

Well, his "new" is JICO SAS (MicroRidge) made in Japan, it can be a Sapphire, Ruby or older Boron cantilever. 

@halcro you never tried new Garrott styli? I can not remove my stylus from the cartridge body, don't want to apply to much force just to check for those red dots. 



Watch the latest Peter Ledermann’s (SoundSmith) lecture on RMAF 2018 about energy transfer, his talks about cartridges starts at 19:00 in this video, again MC versus MI design. Very interesting! In his opinion MC is the worst! The video has been uploaded only about 10 days ago. 

MI (Moving Iron) invented and patended by Bang & Olufsen in the 60’s, SoundSmith made all B&O carts back then. SoundSmith required the licence from B&O 20 years ago and has improved MI design.

Also the MMC design was invented and patented by Bang & Olufsen. The MMC cartridge is a variation of the Moving Iron (MI) design. Magnets and coils are stationary while a micro crossmoves with the stylus, thereby varying the distances between the arms of the cross and the magnets. It is claimed that the MMC design allows for superior channel separation, since each channel’s movements appear on a separate axis.


What Peter didn’t said in his lecture is that all Grado cartridges use a derivation of the moving iron principle which features patented optimized transmission line cantilever technology, pivoted fixed axial stylus-generator module, and Grado’s flux-bridger generator system. My favorite is Joseph Grado Signature XTZ. How about that?

Moving Magnet (MM) and Moving Iron (MI) cartridges:

In a moving magnet cartridge, the stylus cantilever carries a tiny permanent magnet, which is positioned between two sets of fixed coils (in a stereophonic cartridge), forming a tiny electromagnetic generator. As the magnet vibrates in response to the stylus following the record groove, it induces a tiny current in the coils.

Because the magnet is small and has little mass, and is not coupled mechanically to the generator (as in a ceramic cartridge), a properly adjusted stylus follows the groove more faithfully while requiring less tracking force (the downward pressure on the stylus).

Moving Iron (MI) and Induced Magnet (IM) types (ADC TRX-2 being a well-known example) have a moving piece of iron or other ferrous alloy is coupled to the cantilever (instead of a magnet), while a permanent, bigger magnet is over the coils, providing the necessary magnetic flux.

@travbrow 

 The models I liked the most were the ATML170, Technics 100CMKIV and the Empires. 

Welcome back.

The AT-ML170 and AT-ML180 are killer MM and i like then much better than Technics EPC-100c mk3 for example. Also never seen AT-ML with bad suspension, always perfect, tried many samples. The experience with Technics is just opposite, too many bad samples with dead suspension, the price is insane today, just because in this thread. I think the AT-ML180 is superior compared to any Technics cartridges. 

Each time we’re discussing a "new discoveries" please add the reference cartridges you’re comparing your "cart of the week" to (in both directions weather it MM/MI or MC).

One vintage MM cartridge can be better than others, but when you comparing it to the reference MM cartridge it’s much more interesting.

Because some of the reference MM/MI are simply unbeatable by any others. Which makes a new discovery worthless, until you will find a real gem!

In other words it’s much more interesting to read which vintage MM cartridge is still your top choice and can’t be exceeded by others.

In my collection the reference MM are (not in order):

-Grace LEVEL II BR/MR LC-OFC (Boron/MicroRidge) and with additional experimental Ruby cantilever stylus made by Grace Level II.

-Grace F14 Excellent with RS12 stylus (Beryllium/MicroRidge) and with additional RS14 stylus with the same cantilever and stylus.

-Stanton CS-100 WOS (Sapphire coated Alluminum / Stereohedron)
-AT-ML180 OFC (GoldPlated Boron / MicroLine)
-Glanz MF-61 (Boron/Paroc)
-Victor X-1II (Beryllium/Shibata)

Some of them are high compliance, some are mid compliance, so it worth to have all of them in collection. All of them designed with the best parts such as the most advanced cantilevers, diamond profiles, some of them have the best coil wire too.

For some reason all MM/MI with alluminum cantilever and conventional elliptical profiles are all inferiour compared to more advanced cantilever/styli combo. Even when i try different styli on the came cartridge (such as Grace for example). I think it’s very important to seach for the best materials in stylus replacement assembly when it comes to MM. This is all about sound quality, so conventional Alluminum/Elliptical in MM design must be avoided when much better styli available.

Unfortunately none of the other MM or MI cartridges i have owned can surpass these reference models. These carts are mindblowing even compared to some serious LOMC of the highest price.



@travbrow 

Chakster, most of those cartridges you mentioned are hard to find and mostly not cheap. I’ve recently seen a USED ATML180 for $1400.00! Most of the cartridges I bought were under $200.00. I like finding bargains like the last one I bought, an Empire 4000DIII in excellent condition for $177.00 bucks. I like some of those lowly aluminum elliptical models.

If i were you i'd love to buy all them when they were $200 each, but i have joined MM marathon when none of them were cheap. A fellow collector offered me $3k for NOS AT-ML180 in factory box (unused), it was hard to resist. I think $1400 for a used AT-ML180 is more than fair price nowadays. At the same time an inferior cartridge, compared to AT-ML180 (the Technics 205c mk4 with suspension problem) normally goes for $1500 minimum, even in Japan and for up to $2k on ebay. I regret that i sold mine for about $700 few years ago. 

I think the great bargain is Glanz MF-610LX, but "bargain" today is $300-450 in my opinion when it comes to serious performers (not junk) with Boron cantilevers and LineContact type of styli. 

    


@travbrow 

Chakster, I’ve owned a few Technics with BORON pipe cantilever and they were very good. Yes they can suffer suspension collapse. I owned a Technics P205CMKIV  with bad suspension and sent it to that guy in Germany (along with a Technics 100c) about 5 years ago, never seen or heard from again. It’s a risk to buy those Technics models, though I just read an add at eBay for a new repair service of Technics 100c models.

Reparing Technics EPC series is very bad idea, i've had repaired samples from Axel (that German vendor is retired now). Investment is not worth it. There are much better carts around. Technics 205 mk4 and 100c mk4 is stupidly expensive and 99% of them suffer from suspension problems. 


 I have to disagree with the idea that a cartridge without some fancy cantilever and stylus is automatically junk.  Is that what your telling me? 

I'm not trying to say it's automatically better, but the problem is that you can't compare different styli on one cartridge. You could do that with Grace F14 or LEVEL II for example, because the company gave a customes a wide choice of styli from entry level Aluminum/Elliptical combo to the high-end Beryllium/MicroRidge or Boron/MicroRidge. Anyone can swap a styli on the same Grace cartridge (amazing option), once you hear Beryllium/MicroRidge it makes no sence to return to the Aluminum/Elliptical, the difference is huge. 

When we're comparing one cartridge to different cartridge is a different story. 

I guess I’m easily impressed or just not as critical of a listener.

We're all impressed by a new toys, but i just said that comparison must be made to some reference cartridges, i'm curious to which reference cartridge you (or anybody else) comparing their new discoveries? 

Because for me one cartridge is impressive until i will find a much better cartridge. The nature of audiophilia is upgrade, not downgrade. Right? 

I can not find anything better that my top 7 reference MM for example, i wish i could, but i can't find anything close. Some carts are really good, but not as good as a reference models. 


Someone has to buy that ATN180 stylus, it's extremely rare and almost impossible to find. And even if you don't have a cartridge generator (budy), you can have mine to add the stylus on :) 
The AT-ML 180 OCC or OFC is clearly much better cartridge than original Technics EPC-205c mk4.

Here is a pair of my 205c mk4 , i also tried Jico SAS Boron on it and also had refurbished 205c mk4 by Axel. So have tried every possible variation of 205c mk4.

None of them can beat the Audio-Technica AT-ML180 OFC or OCC
First of all the Audio-Technica stylus profile is MicroLine, but the Technics profile is just pain Elliptical. The tip mass is extremely low on AT-ML180, the presentation is much more involving, the suspension never fails.

I must say that Grace F14 Boron/MicroRidge or LEVEL II Boron/MicroRidge are also much better cartridges than Technics 205c mk4 or 100c mk3 (imo).

A fairy tales about superiosity of Technics cartridges is an urbal legend, a chance to buy Technics cartridge with good suspension/dampes is close to ZERO, the price is insane today and everyone will cause only more troubles and will spent a fortune to refurbish it with VdH.

I’ve been there, tried them and discovered much better cartridges with zero problems in operation, they are all designed with equal or better cantilevers, better diamond profiles etc.

I’m pretty sure that every Technics cartridge owner already find a better cartridge if he tried to.

This blind faith in Technics carts is nonsense!

Let’s face it, at least after 10 years of research someone should say it in this thread.

The problem with top vintage carts is that if we do not buy styli today they will cost more tomorrow. Or we need a time machine to go back in the 80s for them :) 
@travbrow

Chakster, I loved the ML170 I once owned. I bought it used for around $200.00. Eventually One channel went dead, I managed to get it apart and the hair thin wire of one coil was detached and I couldn’t get it resoldered. Got frustrated and tossed the body and sold the stylus and original packaging for what I paid for the whole cartridge.

Bad luck? I’ve bought at least 3 samples over the years, never had any single problem with them (until a friend came to break the cantilever :). Sold them when i discovered AT-ML180 (which i still own and like a lot, got NOS styli for it too, still sealed, it’s a keeper, love this cartridge). I must say that AT-ML180 was released in two different versions, please look at my boxes and read what is written about cantilever material on each box. Any AT-ML180 is much better than AT-ML170 (which is also great cartridge). Read this article if you haven’t seen it before.



I dont own any Technics models anymore, all sold off. They were fine, especially the P100CMKIV, but not as involving and “alive” as my Empires.

Yes, this is exactly what i feel about Technics cartridges, not only me, but folks who discovered a better cartridges also sold their Technics. Well, i’ve never tried an Empire cartridges, but as an alternative to the bright Technics 100c mk3 and 205c mk4 i love the Stanton cartridges like the SC-100 WOS or 981 series. This is what i call very involving sound, just pure joy.

@jpjones3318 I got lucky with 205c mk4 as stated in my earlier posts, however i really doubt it is even possible to find healthy one. They are all lowriders, even unused samples, at least in my experience, i've tried many samples. The 205 mk3 does not worth the effort at all (i;ve had them too, at least 4 of them).

Never tried 100c mk4, but as i said the price today is absolutely insane. 

I am not a fan or collector of Technics gear, so for me it is not important to have them, but i got other rare cartridges and all of them are better than my ex MINT condition 205c mk4.  

I've tried pretty much everything: Original, Refurbished by Axel, JICO SAS. In total i've tried at least 6 samples of 205c mk4. 

Technics mich be ok for those with unlimited budget to buy all the existing samples hoping to find 1 out of 10 with good suspension. Or for those who like refurbished cartridges better than the original.

Not for me, definitely. 

  
The diamond on this one is black over a small clear section compared to all clear of the used stylus.

When you see something like that it is a Bonded diamond, not a Nude One. Bonded diamonds are inferior and much cheaped than Nude diamonds (they are always chrystal clear)
Most of the sellers are playin' fools, but once someone poited out that a cartridge stylus is fake then why they’re still selling them as originals ? Everyone has a right for mistake, but since the buyers explained them it is not the original and if they did not corrected their error then they are cheaters. I’ve seen sellers like that many times. What would be nice is just to add a high resolution picture of the cantilever and stylus, then everyone can see what they’re buyin to avoid fake. Many sellers can’t even make a picture.
@travbrow 

Some Empires are black over clear, as is my Empire 4000DIII. Nothing inferior about it regarding sound quality in my experience. It’s still nude mounted into the cantilever.

If it's nude then it's fine. But Bonded vs Nude is a huge difference. 
Nude styli, shaped from whole diamonds, are more costly than bonded styli.

Some vintage styli needs cleaning, but Nude Diamond is clear after cleaning. I have cleaned the "Vital" Contact Line nude diamond myself and when i took this picture i was shocked how beautiful this diamond looks under my macro lens. Amazing! Fidelity-Research PMC-3 cartridge BTW. 

Bonded is not clear, because a diamond tip is glued on a metal shank that is itself glued into the hole of the cantilever.

@cakyol

 Let me tell you my experience. I have come to experience (not believe) that it is NOT the type of the cartridge (MM/MC) but more the actual type of the stylus (elliptical, shibata, microline, van den hul, etc) that seems to make a much bigger difference to the quality of sound. I am not saying that a $500 MM cartridge sounds as good as the $10,000 Lyra atlas but when properly furnished with a good stylus, most MM cartridges are about 80-90% of the performance of an MC cartridge.... especially with my hearing :-) The difference is definitely not worth the $9500 price difference.

You're are right, absolutely. The reason i love and collect Grace F14 and LEVEL II cartridges is because Grace made so many different styli for them with Boron Pipe, Beryllium Pipe, Sapphire Pipe, Ruby and even extremely rare Ceramic cantilevers. These stuff comes with MicroRidge, MicroLine, Shibata nude diamonds. Simply amazing! 



Also, MM carts are cheaper, styli can be replaced and they do not need very expensive phono stages. Plus, most seem to be of relatively higher compliance so they can be used with lighter arms. So, if you have an older vintage arm, MMs are typically more suitable to be used.

Yes, another reason i like many of them for my Grace top models. So easy to swap, so nice for the sound qulity. 

MM technology is so cool and user friendly.  
Grace LEVEL II and F14 are definitely my favorite MM type when it comes to different styli. The most universal cartridge ever made. 



Yes generally the better the stylus the better the sound for a particular model. But Ive come to the conclusion that a cartridge with just a mediocre aluminum/elliptical can sound impressive.

I can not recall any MM/MI with plain elliptical/aluminum that sound better than what you call " fancier ones". A fair comparison is when you use same generator, but different styli on it. For example the Victor X-1II (Shibata on Beryllium) is better than Victor X-1IIe (Elliptical on Titanium). Any Grace F9 will be beaten by F14 or LEVEL II with "fancier" stylus/cantilever. But even the same F14 with mediorce cantilever can’t be better than advanced cantilever added to the same cartridge body. When you exchange the stylus replacement on one particular cartridge the difference is obvious. When you comparing AT to Empire is not the same comparison to judge about the subject, just completely different cartridges.

The same subject: When people re-cantilever their MC, for example DL-103 with Ruby / LineContact is always much better than stock Alluminum / Conical for some reason. But when someone refurbishing a state-of-the-arm MC from world famous cartridge designer whey could go wrong if their vendor using third-party parts, but this is a disadvantages of MC (imo). 

@bimasta

Some truly great carts had aluminum/elliptical. They have a special quality, as Raul points out, and it must be the motor. It is the "heart" of the cart. As Raul discovered "that truly inferior (on paper) stylus" sounded "right".

I would be happy to get rid of all MM cartridges with elliptical stylus, alluminum cantilevers and inferior specs on paper, but i would NEVER say on public forum that they are better than MM cartridges with the best cantilevers and best styli, because it’s not true. As i said i’ve tried different original styli on the same cartridge signal generator (motor).


Put a better stylus on a good heart and it will probably benefit.

This is exactly what i’m trying to say, what if the MM "motor" is already superb, best, top of the line etc? For example: the Grace F-14 LC-OFC is already superb MM generator, you can use inferior RS-9e stylus (Aluminum/Elliptical) on this motor ... or you can use a high-end RS-14 BR/MR stylus (Hollow Pipe Boron with MicroRidge diamond). It would be so stupid to say that RS-9e is better than RS-14BR/MR for whatever reason. The difference is huge and everyone can hear it immediately. The difference in price is also huge i must say, but well worth it. Grace gave a customer so many option to upgrade the stylus replacement, they made all kind of styli and all kind of cantilevers (Boron, Beryllium, Ruby, Sapphire, Ceramic...) in the 80’s for their best models such as F14 and LEVEL II.


But I won’t retip just for that — I got most of my vintage carts NIB NOS and they have many prime hours left; I love them, and I’ll retip when they need it, in a year or three.


No comments

Chakster, the point is, certain cartridges with the aluminum/elliptical can outperform others that sport a higher end stylus. Nobody said you should use your cheap stylus if you have a better on. I’m happy for you Since you already own the best. For me I like to find cheaper alternatives that put some expensive cartridges to shame. These are mostly vintage and no longer made.

I'm also glad you like your Empire cartridges, but i am talking not about specific cartridges, but about all vintage MM cartridges.

The disadvantages of the Elliptical profile is very short life-span, so if you can't buy a decent profile you will have to find an alternative when your Elliptical is expired after 500hrs. With better profiles like MicroRidge you can use your MM cartridge for 1500 hrs, practically this is much better solution to invest more in such styli (in my opinion). The life-span is 3 times longer. It is also much better to secure yourself when buyin' used, because used elliptical is most likely expired (worn or very close to be worn). 

@nandric 


Changing cantilevers by MM kinds is done either by gluing new

cantilever/stylus combo OVER the restant of the old cantilever

or gluing new cantilever IN the restant of the old cantilever.


You know i don't retip MM cartridges, i've tried some refurbished and it's a bad idea, the vendors do exactly what you described when they are replacing a cantilevers. 


But i like ONLY fully original MM cartridges with Boron, Beryllium, Ruby, Sapphire cantilevers, those cantilevers are one piece, there is no collar (joint pipe etc). Also i have no intention to send my best MM cartridges to any vendors, i will never retip or refurbish them. I will definitely buy another working MM cartridge if i can't afind another NOS MM stylus (the original one). Luckily i've bought some NOS styli for my rarest MM cartridges and i am happy about it.  



It’s all in the article, there are info about different elliptical profiles, but the MicroRidge, Gyger and Shibata are always better and will serve us 2-3 times longer with less record wear than any Elliptical.

Actually any modern cartridge manufacturer would like to sell you very expensive cartridge, then very expensive service, this is business.

When i buy a VINTAGE cartridge i want to have the best possible profile to make sure i have a cartridge with the longest life-span of the stylus tip. Because the original styli for vintage cartridges are not easy to find (or almost impossible for some models).

This is a rational explanation in my opinion. The message from another user has NO rational explanation, why shall we use inferiour styli ? I have no idea why.

I’ve heard a transformation of inferior cartridge to a high-end cartridge, the only different was just the stylus/cantilever. For axample Glanz 31L with square shank LineContact stylus on Aluminum cantilever can not come even close to the Gralz 61 with Boron cantilever and square shank Paroc stylus. It’s day and night difference in sound. The Moving Flux generator is the same! I already mentioned the situation with Grace cartridges.

Put a different (original) cantilever/styli replacement on the same MM generator and you will be blown away! This is how it works in my experience, not the other way around, never.

I have no beef with people who don’t want to upgrade, but when someone is telling me that an elliptical tip on vintage cartridge is good idea i’m free to disagree.


SoundSmith provided a lot of information about stylus shape for those who would like to learn a bit about this subject. In the end of his article SoundSmith added infro from the JICO, but "figures provided by Jico can at least be doubled, and in some cases quadrupled!"

However anyone can see than a life-span of the Elliptical is much shorter than MicroRidge or even Shibata, no doubt about it. Vintage cartridge with elliptical tip is BAD IDEA if the replacement styli not available. The life-span of elliptical is too short. You are free to mess around with your elliptical styli, but your cartridge will die much faster than any advanced styli such as Shibata, MicroLine, MicroRidge, Gyger, VdH, Paroc, Vital etc ... that will serve us 3 times longer! If you’re buyin pre-owned vintage cartridge with elliptical tip than your risk is much higher. That’s it. Absolutely no matter how good is your "motor" (aka signal generator).  

see below:

"Wear, Tear and Life

So we know that the more extreme line contacts reduce wear.... but what is the difference?

Apparently according to Jico (manufacturer of the highly regarded SAS stylus), the amount of playing time where a stylus will maintain its specified level of distortion at 15kHz is as follows:

  • Spherical / Conical - 150hrs
  • Elliptical - 250hrs
  • Shibata/Line contact - 400hrs
  • SAS/MicroRidge - 500hrs

This is not to say that at 500 hrs a SAS stylus is "worn out" - but at that stage the wear has reached the point where distortion at 15kHz surpasses the level specified by Jico for a new stylus. (Which I believe is 3%).

Some manufacturers have traditionally defined a stylus as being "worn out" when it starts to damage the record... in these terms the figures provided by Jico can at least be doubled, and in some cases quadrupled."

The LP gear selling a lot of replicas and also privides little info, many of their styli are blank without original cogo. I wouldn't buy anything from them, just sayin' 

A good vintage MM carts must have an original (genuine) stylus or it doesn't make sense at all (except for jico s.a.s. alternative replacement for a few models)  
Just uploaded a nice picture of the Stereohedron stylus tip.

Stanton's most advanced stylus: The Stereohedron has the advantage of long and narrow contact surfaces that allow it to track high frequency modulation while minimizing record wear.

This is beautiful stylus profile, long life-span, minimum records wear, amazing quality - this is the reason i like it much better than any Ellipticals. 

Dear chakster, According to my information those Stereohedron

styli are produced by ''Expert stylus UK'' . Their own retip stylus

is called ''Paratrace'' which I have in two of my carts. The price

is about 200 GBP. Their chief engineer has, like Axel, 40 years

of experience.


Right, i've heard about it. So any Stanton/Pickering owners who's afraid fo vintage (used) diamonds can sent their carts to Expert Stylus in UK. I have contacted them myself and reply was quick by email. But you know i never retipped anything, cos i use originals :) Anyway Expert Stylus are specialized in Stanton service, so i can recommend to others, expecially when the GBP exchange rate is so low nowadays. 




@lewm

Cantilevers have been made from aluminum, aluminum alloys, boron both hollow and solid, beryllium, titanium, sapphire or ruby, and diamond. That’s a nearly complete list, unless you want to include carbon fiber and cactus.

I would add my two rare Ceramic cantilevers made by Grace (Shinagawa Musen LTD) in the late 80’s for LEVEL II and F14 models. This is definitely the most exotic cantilever and extremely rare. Never seen anything like that from any other manufacturer! 

@slimpikins5 Just from everything I have read from people who have a lot more experience than I do, the Beryllium was the best material ever used for cantilever’s.



I agree about Beryllium cantilever, i can’t hear any advantages of the Boron vs. Beryllium comparing two nearly identical cartridges (AT-ML180 OFC and AT-ML180 OCC). Both carts are my reference MM and styli are interchargable between LC-OFC and PC-OCC models. Both cantilever are Gold-Plated, the diamond is MicroLine. The specs are very impressive.


I cannot comment on the other variations of aluminum cantilevers as I have only played with the AT15/20 version, but the difference from Beryllium was so remarkable that I don’t really have much interest in it.



The AT-20SLa is Limited Edition version, the stylus is genuine 20SL with Gold AT logo (not like the unknown blank LP gear bootleg). It was very impressive cartridge, but i prefer the AT-ML170 and AT-ML180 models from AT.

@harold-not-the-barrel Never ever will waste my time and money on Audio-Technica cartridges. As some serious/experienced audiophiles also here on A´gon say, AT carts have a household sound ? Well whatever the case, not my cup of tea, in the end of a day.


I can’t complain about Audio-Technica top vintage MM cartridges from the 70s/80s, i think they are spectacular, but a team of engineers who designed them are retired, new cartridges designed by different team. Today’s trend in High-End is LOMC, not Moving Magnet. Obviously an old AT’s Moving Magnet carts are much better than any today’s MM from this brand (imo). I’ve studdied the AT sound by trying different samples and i was hooked from AT-ML150 to AT-ML170 and finally AT-ML180. At least 2-3 samples of each and all perfect.

Beryllium was cheaper than Boron (which is very expensive today) and very close if not the same. Many of my favorite cartridges have Beryllium cantilevers, we can’t go wrong with Beryllium (fact). AT-ML150 is excellent and the most reasonably priced in AT-ML series, it has beryllium Cantilever. For some reason top of the line AT-ML180 released in two different versions (Boron cantilever and Beryllium cantilever). I think AT’s guys understood what is "quality". I really think the Beryllium is like Boron to human ear.


*****


P.S. It’s pretty funny when Raul is talking about cantilevers, when i've mentioned Ceramic Cantilever made by Grace in the 80's, he’s talking about SAEC headshell for some reason, or about ceramic tonearms and other stuff that has nothing to do with the cantilevers. Maybe we can compare my ceramic tea cup to a cantilever?

Ceramics have beneficial sonic properties too, here is the article about Junji’s new line of electronics Shigaraki. This product related to 47 LABS who distributed legendary Miyabi cartridges in the USA (before Takeda-San retired).

"Shigaraki stoneware is seldom seen in the West yet is very important in Japanese culture. I suspect that Junji is probably the first person ever to incorporate Shigaraki ceramics into a commercial product such as HiFi electronics. That’s right, Shigaraki stoneware pottery is what forms the casework for Junj’is line of Shigaraki electronics. "

" Junji has been interested in the sonic properties of ceramics. Ceramics are hard and light and release resonant energy fast. Fine-grained ceramics are good but very expensive. Actually, ceramics of coarser, less pure grain are sonically more interesting. Their resonant character can be more evenly distributed. The difficulty is to ensure consistently accurate production. So when the time came to manufacture the Shigaraki line, Junji found a ceramic manufacturer who specializes in Shigaraki and could meet his design criteria - the owner of the company is an audiophile and music lover. Modern ceramic manufacturers no longer use wood firing. They use gas-firing kilns to control heat fluctuations within0.1 centigrade. Some ceramic artists still use the ancient methods but their approach isn’t suitable for manufacturing our Shigaraki chassis because of the heat fluctuations."

If Boron is so good why ONLY Technics made BORON TONEARM ? Why not all tonearms are made of Boron like EPA-100 MKII ?

And when someone using a Bamboo or Cactus for cantilever it doesn’t mean that tonearm must be made of Bamboo or Cactus too ? Or from DIAMOND maybe ?
I sent an offer to the Japan seller of the Glanz MFG610, he wouldn’t agree.


@travbrow
his price for Glanz MFG-610LX is extremely low! This cartridge is based on my favorite Glanz MF-61 which was sold once for 1200 GBP on ebay (impossible to find model). At that time 1200 GBP was about $2400. The MFG-610LX is later version. None of that MF types (i’ve had many) has Boron Cantilever and nude Paroc diamond. $450 for such cartridge is a fair price, actually very low price in my opinion. The real price must be over $1k. The 610LX is not identical to Glanz best MF-61, but must be close anyway. The MF-61 was spectacular on my Reed 3P tonearm. I don’t know why people are spinning on that Glanz 610LX, this cartridge is far better than some old crap we discussing here.
BTW has anyone measured the "terribel resonance" of the Orsonic AV-101 headshell, exept the Raul, who has his special hearing abilities with built-in resonance and distortion meter?

How many people on audiogon does not like the Orsonic AV-101 ?
Maybe less than 1% of the members i believe.

P.S. I’ve never owned any Lira cartridges, i have nothing against them, but there is only ONE disadvantages in its design (imo) is the unprotected cantilever which looks like it was made to be bent accidentally. Not only Lyra designed in such way, but also some VdH and Dynavector cartridges. I would NEVER buy ANY cartridge with cantilever like that (for security reason). This is so easy to destroy!


@travbrow

I’ve read on another forum about this Glanz model, the owners are very satisfied highly praised the performance, but a little concerned that it’s a low rider, not being sure if that’s normal for these models? I asked the EBay seller how many he has left, he didn’t reply.

My advice for you to buy it, but prior to buy just ask him about suspension condition if he could check. If it will be refused then you can still buy (you can return if the suspension is failed during your own test). The seller does not have to answer the question like "how many do you have?".

I’ve had 5 Glanz cartridges, not from that Japanese seller, i’ve bought from Germany, only one of them was a lowrider, but it was Glanz MFG-71L (that model is nothing special, however Axel fixed the damper for 40-60 euro for me and i sold it). The MF-61 is in my top-5 cartridges and i would never sell it.

@travbrow Great, congrats! I'm pretty sure you will be impressed, i hope you know that on ebay you're protected by "paypal buyer protection", even in the worst scenario (if the cart has any deffects) you can return it for full refund and it's guaranteed by paypal. I think it was decent price for such special cartridge with the most advanced cantilever and stylus tip. It may require a burn-in for 50 hrs, because it's a NOS.