Lewm Maybe Axel soaks the cartridge in chilled Jagermeister. Though I can't imagine a cartridge would track all that well afterwards. Not to mention making all vocalists sound like Dean Martin ..... forget about PRAT! :) |
Nandric, To me as an English-only speaker, the term "refresh" conjures up an ice cold glass of lemonade or the beverage of your choice, on a hot day. Or a cold shower on that same day. So perhaps Axel must dip the cartridge in some ice cold lemonade?
Thanks for your response, Dave. I feel better now. |
Lew, you should be fine with your NOS M320III STR. My used example came with suspension damage that necessitated replacement of rubber that had been pinched by bent induction tabs that extend from the cantilever into the cartridge body. I suspect the damage was caused by careless insertion of the stylus assembly. |
Dear Lew, As long as we have no idea what 'refreshment' means or entails we can speculate about till we pass away. What I know in connection to Axel's work on my carts is this. He can exchange and tune the suspension (rubber) in MM carts but not in the MC carts. When one look at the construction of both one can easilly (?) see why. By MC carts the suspension is 'pressed' after the coils so to remove the suspension will probable damage the coils. How then a new suspension can be put there is even more criptic. Otherwise my Shiraz would be repaired already and on its way from Germany to Holland.
Regards, |
Lespier, My thought too; the sax sounds "louder" (bad word for what I am thinking) than the human voice, in the sense that the human voice (I am speculating) is a more complex entity, comprised of more frequencies above and below the fundamental, compared to that of a sax. Thus the total energy in the voice may be similar to that of a sax, but the latter sounds louder due to more of the energy being devoted to the fundamental. (Why human voices sound more different from one another than do the "voices" of different saxophones and saxophone players????) Thus the sax may be better able to overcome the house sound system. (I realize this could be total bullish*t, just thinking out loud. Two minutes from now, I may disagree with myself.) Anyway, the fact remains that's the way I heard it. And further evidence for your hypothesis and mine is that the drummer, who was furthest from my listening position, was obviously the most "live"; there was no sense of the drums being artificially augmented.
Most of my unhappy experiences with live performance have had more to do with the acoustics of the venue than with the nature of the amplification being used.
Dave, keep us posted on your re-tipped Ruby; as you know, I am in the market for a re-tip of my broken one. Also, until now I had not realized that your M320 was "refreshed" by Axel. Do you (and Raul) mean to say that the wonderfulness of the M320 is dependent upon an Axel refresh? I would be very disappointed to know that, as I paid "a lot" for my NOS M320 and would not want to spend yet more money on it. |
Hi John, moderator approval happened to me also. maybe we are too creative individuals? BTW when I asked for my post I got the answer the post was deleted. But they are very friendly... |
Dear comrade (Don), There is no 'asking price' by my Ruby well the 'reserve' as is usual by auctions. But you can see the technical data in my listing and compare them with your Ruby 3 and tell us what differences there are if there are any. We will then know what the difference is between Ruby 3 and Ruby 3S.
Regards, |
Here is the Soundsmith Ruby OCL stylus:
http://cgim.audiogon.com/i/vs/i/f/1352189501.jpg
I sweated Ben Day dots detaching it from the silicone blob that fastens it to the acrylic box. It is an undocumented alien, save for recommended minimum VTF of 1.5gm. Its professional-looking engraved, anodized alum stylus holder fits snuggly into the cartridge body, mandating firm but gentle handling while mounting or dismounting to avoid a blunder with the hair-thin ruby cantilever. I was too eager to get this going to dally with the microscope. However, under a simple magnifier the OCL stylus looks perpendicular. At 1.5 gms it rides reasonably high. On the Trans-Fi linear arm the stylus deflects markedly until the air manifold is set dead level-- indicative of a relatively high compliance suspension.
This one replaces M320III STR with Axel's refreshed suspension. The initial impression is that the Ruby is in that league.
|
Jbethree, same thing with happens to me with most posts. I really think it's strangling the forum. There can be no meaningful debate if there's an 8-10 hour delay before posts go up.
Lewm, I've had similar experiences at many live gigs .. on some occasions the vocals are almost totally lost. Several years ago I saw Cassandra Wilson here in Sydney and the sound guy must have thought he was mixing The Who live at Wembley. It was SO loud that one of the PA drivers blew and for the rest of the show she sounded like Joe Cocker. With the saxophone at the gig you attended, perhaps it was loud enough and you were close enough that you were hearing some of the direct, unamplified sound at your seat. |
Nandric,
I have seen the Ruby 2 go for $1500. I've had the Ruby 2 and it is differently a step down from the (your) FG-S Ruby 3. You are running quite a bargain with your asking price! Someone needs to snatch that bargain up! Regards, Don |
Dear Don, You are lucky with your confusion between the Ruby 3 sr. nr. and your hotel reservation. You could also write 'qua' in a totally unaccetable way and make fool of yourself. My euphoria from a week ago with: LP S + Shiraz+ Kiseki changed in a nightmere of three battles. Deed the German fight on two or three fronts btw? |
Dear Lawrence, You wrote, "I'm going to play the devils advocate here and say Lewm really was saying he preferred the sound of his hifi to having better sound then live!"
That is a complete misinterpretation of what I wrote AND what I meant. I meant that the electronics inside the club, through which I was perceiving the star performer, were set up so badly that her particular contribution to the music did NOT sound "live". I inferred by my little aside that if my home audio system were to portray her voice the way I was hearing it inside the club, I would wonder whether something was amiss with the system, i.e., she sounds better (more like "live") on my system than she did for the first part of her performance in the club. (As noted, they evidently tweaked some controls, and things did get better toward the end.) I can say this, because I am quite familiar with Roberta Gambarini's real live "sound", having seen and heard her perform several times previously. I also know well how she sounds on my audio system.
This problem in the club occurred because, even though we were sitting close enough to have heard her without any electronic amplification, what you get in a club when it is full of people is mostly coming from their speakers, which are not typically "high-end", to say the least. I am now wondering why instrumentalists faired much better, because the sax player, who was standing right next to her, sounded very "live". But also he was using a different microphone, so it could be true that that infernal mixer box was sucking the life out of her voice or adding distortion of some unflattering kind. If the issue is still unclear to you, let me know. My post was written in agreement with Pryso's one, wherein he decried the use of electronics in live performance in instances where it might not be necessary, like in a small jazz club. I don't know why you find this even controversial, so I feel that I must not be making myself clear. |
Dear Comrade,
Three battles on eBay! You live a very full (if not precarious), life. Hope all ends well. I wish we could edit this forum. In my post to you I listed the wrong serial # for the Ruby 3 (yours). I have several numbers scribbled on note pads scattered around my desk. The serial # I posted was actually a hotel reservation confirmation #. My mistake but I could not correct. Looks like approximately 7500 cartridges were produced between our two F/G-S's Regards, Don |
Hi John, No wonder your post is 'pending moderator approval'. Besides in our forum are languge lessons not done. I hope your knowledge is not restricted to what one can find in a dictionary? |
Hello All,
What's up with "pending moderator approval" that just started? Have I been singled out or is this for everyone's posts? Even paranoids have can real enemies.
John |
Dear Nandric,
If you insist on using "qua" in every post, could you at least use it properly.
Thanks,
John |
Dear Don, The Benz Ruby 3 S listed on Á'gon is my. You can see the ser. nr. on the pictures. When I bought my I thought that I was cheated because the postfix 'S' was nowhere to find; not on the corpus nor in the papers. So there is no difference qua looks between the Ruby 3 and Ruby 3 S. But you can compere the technical data on your and my and see the difference. I was told that the cantilever by 3 S is shorter while I invented the connection between the 'S' and Geiger S stylus to make my listing more appealing. I also added 'FG' for the same purpose and explained in the listing that this means: Fritz Geiger. This ,say, analytic true, like Vienna means Wien. The Dutch have this saying:'never throw away your old shoes before you got the new one.' Well I thought that I got the Benz LP S but the seller probable changed his mind so I am at present involved in three ebay conflicts. As you of course know our hobby also entail suffering.
Regards, |
I use to do a bit of sound set up at live concerts when I was a student. One of the most common problems in trying to get a balanced sound was the muso's themselves, individuals in a band would typically want their individual instrument amped up and overblown, and they couldn't comprehend that they sounded worse with the instrument hyped, and that the band sounded tighter and much better musically when everything was balanced. |
Tim, I totally agree with you. While my wife and I were waiting for the show to start, I noticed that the house audio system included a mixer that must have at least 32 channels. I said aloud to my wife, "I wonder why they would need such a huge number of channels on their mixer". To which she responded, "What's a mixer?"
It didn't end there. I had to explain the function and why I was concerned that a small club with such a confined space would ever need such a device. In the event, my apprehension was justified. This is Blues Alley in Georgetown, DC. One of the oldest and best known jazz clubs on the East Coast outside of NYC. I have been there many many times over more than 3 decades. I once before noticed that the piano sound, to the left of the stage, was relatively muffled. I think it has something to do with the acoustics of the room. Last night was the first time I detected major issues with the main performer's miking. I heard Diana Krall there, before she was Diana Krall. I heard Dizzy there, shortly before his death. |
Dear In_shore: The value of ADC cartridges was and is: Peter Pritchard its designer ( now pass-on at 83 age. ). IMHO he is one of the Mans that writed the today audio history.
He founded ADC after he worked for GE. He was the ADC owner for a time before he sold it to start a new cartridge designs under Sonus brand.
Well, the XLM was his design and the XLM 2 but the XLM-2 improved and the III and the next ones including the ADC top of the line Astrion were not Pritchard designs and for what were the XLMs the Pritchard ones are worth to try it but not the model you are talking about.
So maybe you can use that money in something more useful.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
I'm going to play the devils advocate here and say Lewm really was saying he preferred the sound of his hifi to having better sound then live!
although the real live performance can suffer at times it still should be the very thing that you must use to adjust your hifi or make decisions on equipment etc...but like a lot of people I have heard there stuff they just love to play with equipment and get themselves off on hifi and(internet bantering) sad because they really are not interested in bringing the live musical event home and this is what causes people to prefer there hifi sound to live! they think the live sound is wrong!!!
End Rant!!!
Lawrence Musical Arts |
Lew my friend, that is the fallacy of the modern "live" performance. I've complained several times on audio forums against the "apparent need" for sound reinforcement for every performance, even in smaller settings for jazz, vocalist, and folk music.
At the risk of sounding like an old fart (which in truth I am) too many younger people believe mics, mixers, and amps are standard equipment for every performance. One example, attending a local university jazz band performance in an outdoor concourse setting, the sound was dominated by heavy bass from the electric bass and drums. So I walked over to the mixing board run by a student to see he had boosted the 50-200 Hz controls way above the others. Even outdoors, with an 18-piece jazz band playing, why was any electronic reinforcement needed (the bass player was already plugged in to his own amp/speaker BTW). Another example, attending a four-member Celtic group playing in a small church activity room (no more than 100 seats) they had every instrument and vocal mic'ed.
So, two problems, either of which could have impacted your experience. First is the application of sound reinforcement when it is not needed. And second, people running the mixing boards when reinforcement it utilized that have no idea what the concept of "balanced sound" means.
End of rant! |
Nandric,
There is a Ruby 3 with a FG-3 stylus listed on Audiogon with serial #151596. That is 6 digits. Mine is only 5 digits,#22258. I don't know what number the FG-S serial #'s started with, but I do know that mine is a very early one. What is the serial # of yours? Regards Comrade, Don |
Obviously, I hope, I was joking with In-shore who accidentally posted the same post 3 consecutive times. Each "Not I" was a response to each of those 3 posts. Just trying to inject a little levity. After all, this topic is not so serious to begin with.
On the subject of Newton, I would have thought that a person versed in philosophy would also embrace Newton. None of those philosophers you like to quote was living in a vacuum, and philosophy was and is affected by advances in concepts that pertain to the physical world. I always felt that Rousseau, Hobbes, and Locke (to name 3 of the meager few philosophes with whom I am familiar) were all influenced in the direction of their thinking by Newton. I am sure you know that Einstein was profoundly influenced by the philosophers of the late 19th century, and in turn, philosophers of the early 20th century were influenced by Einstein and his two major works.
I went to hear a live performance of a very fine jazz singer last night, Roberta Gambarini. We had a very good table only about 15-20 feet from her microphone, front and center. Yet I am here to tell you that if my audio system were to sound the way I perceived the sound in the club, I would shut it down in order to try to figure out what was wrong. Her voice was submerged and lacking in clarity. (I own several of her CDs and have heard her perform live on at least two previous occasions, so I know well how she can sound.) I could barely hear the pianist, who was seated to the left of the stage. Sax, bass, and drums were relatively "real" sounding, off to the rear and to the right of Ms Gambarini. I think she sensed there was a problem, because she kept gesturing toward her own monitor speaker, during the early part of the performance. Things did improve a bit around the middle of the show. But still, there is the thrill and spontaneity of a live performance that is irreproducible in our listening rooms. After a while, I forgot about the relative lack of fidelity. But I daresay, Halcro, Mr Wippy's truck may sound more "real". |
Hi Dover , actually it was an Audiogon glitch. I submitted my question , clicked once and was notified of moderator approval. Over 14 hours passed and still my query ws not posted so I asked again, anyway no big deal.
Lewm I too once owned a Sony SCD777ES, my very first digital player back in 2001, it too went through multiple upgrades over the time that I used it. The promotion of SACD in a certain publication I read back then of the playback qualities intrigued me , I jumped in. On top of this I realized the chance to get away from the high maintence fuss of analog play back,,,,, plop in a disk, sit back and press play , ultimately digital would leave me cold no matter the brand and system I have listened to over the years.
This ADC cartridge is supposedly new and totally unused and if it was under a 100 bucks I would just buy it and check it out myself but its not,the money maybe better spent on something else. |
Dear Lew, I am alas not always able to understand your post, more in particular when you quote Newtons laws, but if enyone asked the question: 'do you understand all that Lew writes?' I would say: 'not I, not I, not I, sorry.' |
In_shore - let me guess, you used the back arrow on a Mac ?? |
|
Anyone here experienced the ADC XLM III with integrated head shell, thank you in advance. |
There is no question about that: one of the most important function of this forum is to prevent people to do stupid things. Those are usualy very costly while we all know that the most advices are asked only pro forma. But our hobby is already very expensive. As my gratitude for the warrning about the Voltmeter I want to do something in return. The issue is about Raul's 'refreshment'. The expression looks more lyrical than practical but it seems to suggest something about the suspension as well that 'it' can be not only fixed but even 'refreshed'. The 'practical part' is of course the fact that we all buy (very) old carts by which one can expect 'some deterioration' of... the suspension. Well as I already mentioned by my Shiraz 'dreams' the suspension by MC carts is not easily fixed if at all possible. In this context the expression 'refreshment' get a totally different meaning. And Axel used the expression 'irreparable' in this connection. My friend Lew warrned me not only regarding my Voltmeter. He was also sceptical about the assumed 'cheapness' of the (old)MM carts. He even quoted some, probable American, saying: 'there is no such thing as a free lunch'. He anticipated , so to speak, the new retip and refreshment prices by Axel. There is no question about that the so called 'payment by instalment' is not invented to further the savings. And we all know that our members will proudly mention the buy price of their 'object of desire' but than somehow forget to mention the following expenditure. My comrade Don with his exotic berillium + Geiger II upgrade not included. As should be the case with Raul's thread it seems indeed true that qua repair or, better, qua 'refreshment' the MM alternative is in any case less dangerous.
Regards,
|
Anyone have any experience with a ADC XLM III with vta adjustments with the integrated head shell? Thank you in advance. |
Anyone have any experience with a ADC XLM III with vta adjustments with the integrated head shell? Thank you in advance. |
Here is where I admit that before I knew any better, I tested the internal resistance of my Koetsu Urushi using a very cheap-ish meter handed to me by an audio salesman in Tokyo. I had ordered the cartridge from this dealer so its delivery would coincide with a visit to my son, who lives there. I wanted to be sure it was "good" before paying for it. Like you, Nikola, I had the luck of the ignorant. No damage occurred. But I won't do that again.
Tim (Pryso), In fact I usually test cartridges these days by playing a record. It's a lot easier than any of the more scientific alternatives. In recent years, I've been buying used cartridges, like the rest of us. Usually, I don't know the seller, and there is no warranty. So why not? BUT if you were to measure the AC voltage output of a cartridge, which would have to be done most likely after amplification by the phono section, you would ideally like to see no more than a 1 db difference between the two channels. (You'd have to know also the intrinsic difference in gain that may reside in the phono stage itself, between its two channels.) If one wanted to measure the internal R of an MC, one might place a resistor in series with the meter to protect the coils from an excess of current. For example, if you might put a 50-ohm resistor in series with the coils for each channel. In that case, if the expected reading is e.g. 6 ohms, the meter would read 56 ohms, etc. I think that should work but I have not tried it. The resistances of the two channels of an MC should be very close to exactly equal. |
Hi Nandric, If it has a needle you could always hook up the cart and try it on an unimportant record. If you want to test the generator with a meter, only use a digital meter, put it in the appropriate resistance range, and only test it long enough to get a stable reading. You'll be measuring DC resistance, not impedance, so the value will be lower than published impedance. Regards, |
Dear Lew, Attributing any sense to the handling of an Voltmeter to a layman is very polite and kind from you. But I should be more clear about my intention. The intention has, alas, nothing to do with competence. What I want to know when I buy in particular an MC cart is if the coils are OK. I do this for years with the Voltmeter and because the 'inocent' are protected by the Almighty I somehow never burned any coils. My interest in the coils is pure pragmatism. If the coils are damaged one can forget Axel or whomever for a repair. Nobody wants to lose money delibarately while we all lose some unvoluntary. BTW I keep my Voltmeter at an visible place to impress my visitors. The comments are like: 'Gosh you are ALSO technical' . My answer than is very modest: 'measurung is the same as knowing'. Now how should I know otherwise if those damn coils are ok. Fleib ?
Regards, |
So Lew, just to be clear for anyone not solid in electronics (like myself), testing of the electrical performance of a cartridge (separate from tip wear, suspension, etc.) should be done as follows:
MM and MI - use multi-meter to measure the resistance by connecting to the hot and ground pins of each channel. Is there a recommendation for acceptable differences (%) between channels?
MC - while playing a 1K signal (or similar) on a test record, measure the ACV for each channel at the output of the phono stage. Again, what is an acceptable (%) difference between channels? Also, how do I establish that the gain in the phono stage is the same in both channels?
Thanks for this elementary guidance. |
Dear Acman3, now THAT is timing. I just received the LP yesterday; after too long a wait. I plan on listening to it in the next day or two and will report back. Regards. |
Nandric, You keep talking about "voltage". There is no voltage difference to be measured across the pins of a disconnected cartridge. I would think you are measuring resistance, in ohms.
But maybe I am totally out to lunch (not unusual). You may be measuring voltage output of the cartridge whilst it is playing a test LP putting out any single frequency in the audio spectrum, say 1kHz, via the phono inputs. That's fine. No danger to the cartridge in doing that. You could compare R and L channels which will tell you that both are working normally, if the voltages are very nearly equal or better yet exactly equal. If this is what you are doing, please forgive me for my failure to understand. |
Dear John, I would rather get some confirmation from someone else in case the problem is on my end. I am not adding load, so other people may get different reactions and my copy of the recording is almost 30 years old. The results may only apply to me in my current system, but if others confirm this I will let you know.
One last thing, some of the cartridges do other things very well and would be silly to not get just because it cannot play a record most do not even own. I just happened across this phenomenon and I am actually asking more out of my curiosity than out of judgement. |
Dear Acman3,
Please don't keep us in suspense; which cartridges play the cymbals correctly, and which ones have a hard time?
John |
Dear Acman3,
Don't keep us in suspense, which cartridges play the cymbals correctly? And which have a hard time?
John |
Dear Lew, My mom also told me always what I am not supposed to do but never what I may do. So you should explain how the voltage should be measured and why. |
Dear Frogman, did you ever get a chance to listen to the Jack Dejohnette " Pictures" recording? Those cymbals on the 1st cut have proven to be hard for several other cartridges. I was wondering if my copy of this recording could be bad or if you had noticed the same thing. I can actually hear a smearing in the imaging with some cartridges, others just produce static, and others play the cymbals correctly. |
Still, not recommended. Specifically, when you use any meter to measure resistance (not voltage), the meter puts out a current in order to sense resistance to flow of current. The current put out by many volt-ohmmeters is sufficient in magnitude to heat up the very delicate coils of any MC and thereby damage them. That is to say, the coil may fry, in which case the cartridge becomes an interesting but inadequate paperweight.
The act of measuring destroys that which is measured. As I wrote to Nandric, this is Heisenberg's nightmare. |
Well Lew I and I have no secrets. He was worried about my use of the Voltmeter to check my carts. If not done properly one can damage the (sensitive) coils by the MC carts. However I never damaged any cart with or without an Voltmeter. But it feels good when your comrades care about you.
Regards, |
Dear Nandric, I just sent you an email re your damaged cartridges. |
My Gosh! I had no idea that complaining in this thread is so rewarding. Sympathy and empathy from 'all sides'. But I need to warn you. At my age the list of complaints is nearly endless... BTW I bought both carts (+Kiseki) by the same English person who owns a HI-FI shop. I as a amateur measured both carts with an (20 Euro)Voltmeter and 'discovered' a death left channel by the Shiraz and both channels death by the Kiseki. So I already warned the Briton that his joy will depend from Axel's finding. To my mind the most stupid thing one can do on ebay is to try to sell rubish. One can be 100% sure to get involved in those complaints procedures. And those are not funny.
Regards, |
Dear Jbethree: Through my digital experiences I prefer the DVD-A over SACD and as you said: " it capture the analog " magic " " that I like it but I'm not 100% sure is right.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Comrade, I agree with Dover's NorthWest Analog repair option. I think he would be someone to give serious concideration too. Sounds like your cartridge has a problem that someone with extra time available to do complicated internal repairs is what is required. I do understand that ebay returns have a time limit so, tuff call on your part. Personally, I'd go for the possible repair. I've heard great things about the Shiraz cartridge. It would be nice if someone worthy scored one. Wish you the best Comrade. Regards, Don by Griffithds |
Dear Dover, Thanks for your sympathy. I am of course joking as usual or like to exaggerate as by my friend Chris. Axel would actually do everything he can to restore my carts but the problem is the suspension which is totally dry out. He was willing btw to repair the left side coils. He also got an Kiseki cart from me which is also irreparable. My curiosity for the Shiraz was induced by Thuchan who regards his own EMT DST 15 LZI as one of his best carts. So my hope as well as speculation was to get something 'similar' but for cheap. The added problem are those ebay time limits for complains. So I told Axel that if he wants to try or experiment he has 10 days available for this purpose. Not 'all' is lost but I am very sceptical.Anyway I already started the ebay procedure to save time as well as my rights.
Regards,
|