Dear Don, To be honest I was very sceptical about the G800 but I asked Axel for the same upgrade as Raul without any idea what he ordered. The G 800 was his idea btw. I am also suprised that you needed new suspension for your Ruby 3S. This is pretty new model and my is like new. My quess is that 'S' means Gyger S . Anway Gyger S is writen in my measuring paper.
Regards, |
To you guys and any other BAT amplifier users, I have six matched pairs of NOS 6C33Cs, selected by and purchased from Victor Khomenko of BAT, himself, about 10 years ago. They are available for sale. I originally bought them, because my own Atma-sphere OTLs used to use 6C33Cs, until I recently converted them to use type 7241 triodes. (I get a little more power per tube with the 7241s and thus can use fewer output tubes per chassis with no downside, except the extreme rarity and cost of the 7241.) The 6C33Cs are vintage early 1990s, were manufactured at the Ulyanov factory, which makes them desirable. I also have NOS sockets for each tube. Sorry for the OT comment and for the sales pitch. You can contact me privately.
For a relevant comment, I was just recently able to purchase an NOS Acutex M320. Now I will find out whether I agree that it is superior to the LPM320. |
Hello Don,
By Ruby "S" I assume that you mean Soundsmith F9 Ruby with OCL? I have been on the fence about ordering one. What does the SS stylus holder look like?
The Acme fuse was icing on the cake of many mods to VK75SE. In addition I bypassed the soft-start thermistor with silver wire-- which is also worthwhile. |
Good Morning and hello, Nandric, I mounted my new suspended Ruby "S" to the tone arm this morning after removing the Goldring G800Ax (Ax for Axel). How does it compare? Well,.....Lets just say, I think you picked the wrong cantilever material for yours! Regards, Don |
Dgarretson, I was not aware that we both use the same amp. A VK75SE. I have the original fuse supplied by Victor. Looks like it's time for a new fuse. Regards, Don |
Lewm, I can confirm similar results with an Acme silver fuse at AC inlet on my BAT VK75SE. I have not tried their fuse holder. |
I try to keep an open mind on issues such as boutique fuses. My reading led me to believe that the possible benefits might be related to (1) a ceramic body, rather than a glass one, and (2) silver, or some other metal combined with silver, as a conductor. I found a source in the US for ceramic fuses with silver wire, here in the US:
http://www.acmeaudiolabs.com/products.htm
Their silver/ceramic/cryo-treated fuses cost $16 each. That's good enough for me. I will not pay $59 for a fuse. Also, it seems absurd to spend big bucks on a fuse unless one also pays attention to the quality of the fuse-holder. Most of them are made with fairly trashy metals as conductive contacts for your boutique fuses. Acme also sell nice quality fuse holders for a very reasonable price. I use both their fuses and their fuse-holders.
Do I hear a difference? My OTL amplifiers require a fuse on each output tube. In other words, the fuse and fuse-holder are in the signal path, so I have no doubt that there is a rationale for using the best possible. I installed them in conjunction with some other more major upgrades to the amplifiers. All I can say is that I am very pleased with the overall result of that work. Maybe some day I will install some cheap hardware store fuses and do a comparison test; maybe not. |
Dear friends: Years ago when started to appear " magic fuses " that transformed an audio system quality performance level I was really sceptic till I started to try it. I try 3-4 diferent manufacturer fuses like Furutech or HI-Fi Tunning and I corroborate that really works and improve the performance level in an audio system.
Why is that?, till today I have not a precise answer so I can't understand yet why works so fine but the important subject is that it works.
For the last 2 years my preference are the Hi-Fi tunning that are the ones I use in all my electronics.
Two-three months ago I read about the " new kid on the block " by Synergetics Research and what I read move me to bought and test it. I mounted first in the external amplifiers , four of them ( my system have around 16 fuses. ), and I was not with very high expectations about because my today audio system level is really high and not easy that a " new fuse " could help it especially when already has top " fancy " fuses.
Well, I had and have a notorious improvement. Why I say a " notorious " improvement: well when you have a " 98.5% " of something good in audio try to achieve 99.5% of that good thing is very very dificult and a hard task. It is more easy to pass from 80% to 90%. Distortions goes lower. First LP I use it under the system test was my sample of the 33rpm single Laura Branigan " Self Control " ( I use this recording in my overall testing process for several reasons, between them to test: rhythm. ), at the very begening this track has the natural agresiveness that has the live music but here the high frequency is a little to agressive and only on top system with very low distortions you can hear it with out or very low shrill. I really was satisfied on that regar with my system till I heard those fuses in there: the last tiny shrill veil disappear. This HF lower distortions follow appearing through all my recordings even I check if really those distortions gone lower and I did it with that recordings and others incrementing by 1-2-3dbs to see what happen in my ears/system limit ( that I'm aware in very precise way. ) and if I can go higher with out " pain " and yes I go higher with no single problem other that at that so high SPL is risky to my ears after several minutes to hear it.
What happened at the other frequency extreme?, well in that test recording and others ones happened the same: lower distortions that not only gives me a better bass management but that help for not only the midrange shine it with new " light " but the overall audio system performance level.
I decide to follow testing those SR fuses in all my electronics, next step in my Phonolinepreamp and from there to the amplifiers internally and obviously my subwoofers.
Highly recomended.
I bought it here: http://www.highend-electronics.com/38.html#qf
and I have no relationship there, Alfred Kainz was the person I contact it.
Btw, you can buy with no risk about your investment because you are free to test it at your place for 30 days and if you don't like it they return your money.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
There are those who think that an Armani coat in combination with the jeans looks cool. I observed something 'similar' with the exotic cantilevers + exotic styli glued in an aluminum tube behind them (grin). |
sorry: " if we want... ", not " can " as I posted.
R. |
Dear Thuchan: As Fleib pointed out there are cartridges that was designed and voiced with aluminum cantilever to fulfil the designer targets, same when were designed with boron or other kind of cantilever build material.
My LOMC overall today refrence cartridges comes with aluminum cantilever but this not means that material is superior to other ones.
For years I was using VDH services and he use boron material and all those cartridges performs top very top.
The subject in my Clearaudios is that the aluminum choice was a bad choice if we can achieve the best that cartridge can shows. Unfortunately we are not the cartridge designers so any one of us decide what to do and if like me the choice was wrong then always is time to retify that is what I'm doing.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Ortofon is using an aluminum cantilever for the Candeza Mono. The designer prefered this material for the Candeza. Wouldn't say it was a bad choice for this cart. |
Hi Raul, Very interesting. You now have what is essentially a Maestro stylus on a Virtuoso. The tip is a Gyger 2 instead of the microline (microridge). I suspect that gives you the best of both, the good stylus w/o the overdamped body. I say this based on your comments about the sound of the Maestro. Now that CA has increased the amount of wood, it might be an opportune time for some, to pick up an older wood CA that needs retipping.
I don't know what kind of agreement AT has as an OEM, but I would imagine there would be some kind of exclusivity. It would be smart for them to make a CA generator in a deluxe body to offer as an alternative to the 150MLX, but I doubt if it will happen. Phono carts are now more of a secondary business for AT. Microphones and headphones seem to be their main products. They'll probably keep making carts, and occasionally come out with a new model as long as there is demand. They must be aware of the CA performance quality with all the recommendations etc. Maybe contractual obligations limit them, and maybe if they came out with the same product it wouldn't have the appeal as that same product coming from a company that makes a $15K cart.
I think you'll find a few carts that are better with an aluminum cantilever. This probably doesn't include the vast majority. Sometimes cantilever resonance is built into the voicing and might enhance frequency response or lend a warmer or more forgiving nature. The DL-304 and DL-S1 come to mind. Perhaps Miyabi is another. Regards, |
Good evening Don, To my knowledge Axel is not yet 65 old. He can retire but still loves his work. I stated somewhere in this thread that this craftmanship of making carts is 'old man business'. Axel is in this business for 40 years. Only daily repetition and actual work make such craftmanship possible. The problem with 'retip' is that 'it' actualy means replacement of the whole cantilever/stylus combo. There is a repair service in Holland which do the real retip for extra payment but I am new in this practice and have only experience with Axel. What I also need to ask Axel is if those 'aluminum' cantilevers are not some kind of alloy. I know that there are beryllium/aluminum alloy cantilevers (AKG top line carts for example).
Regards, |
Dear Fleib: Boron, I don't use aluminum any more but when is " strictly " necessary.
In the past I was willing to preservate a cartridge nearest to its original design and that's why I asked SS to re-tip my review sample with aluminum and similar stylus than the original ( Peter was a little renuent to make that but finally agreed. ). Through several experiences on SS/VDH/Axel I decided to forget a little about and to make the whole cartridge re-tip at the top of what we can get.
Today I know was a mistake to re-tip some cartridges with aluminum pressure fitted stylus, no more. Right now: boron, berillyum, saphire and the like with the best stylus I can find.
I'm re-tipping cartridges that just came from Axel because of that and I'm sending some cartridges to Dominic, Expert Stylus and VDH ( again. ). I want to have the best and know it and the only way to do it is comparing in between.
Yes, to do that I have to have samples of the same model and fortunately on some cartridges I have 2 and even 3 samp´les and I'm still buying.
Btw, I wonder if Audio Technica knows for sure has that " incredible " cartridge generator/motor that comes in the 95 and the Clearaudio as you stated.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Good Morning Nandric,
Axel does "advertise" retip! Perhaps he sends them to E/S or VDh? It definitely takes very steady hands and excellent eyesight to do an actual retip of a cantilever. Maybe he has some young person working for him that does this dificult task? I do know that he is in his 70's. If he does use others, he might not want to reveal that information for fear of his clients deciding to go directly to the source instead? I guess it really doesn't matter as long as it is done correctly. So far, I have had nothing but excellent results from him. |
Dear Dover, Despite of your eloquence your are fetched in contradictions. While I always thought that logic is a weak part by Raul. BTW he should quote his own statements from time to time in the same context. My experience is that the more sentences one produce the more chance for contradictions. So you probable also deserved an Mexican copper mask. Even without any info about your behaviour by accidents. |
Dover and Halcro, At last we have a subject upon which we can agree; the original CLS was one of the great speakers of all time, IMO, at least from the mid-bass on up. I still recall the night I first heard a pair at one of the few high end emporia that then existed in the Washington, DC, area. (Now there are none, zero.) I had prior to that evening been listening to a variety of different Magneplanars in my home system. (That was my only vacation from ESLs, lasted 4-5 years.) I was amazed at the life-like speed and transparency of the CLS (especially in contrast to the slow and damped sound of the old Maggies, sans ribbon tweeter) and bought a pair within a week after hearing them. I drove them with a pair of Futterman H3aa OTL amplifiers. It was all quite lovely. Then when the CLS II came out and was highly touted, I made the foolish error of selling my original CLSs in favor of the CLS IIs, without a prior audition of the latter. Needless to say, they sounded like s**t in comparison to the CLSs. I then learned that the major difference between the CLS and the CLS II was impedance. The former had a nominal impedance of 8-15 ohms; the latter had an impedance more like 2-4 ohms. Thus the CLS II was really built for solid state amplification. After that, M-L came out with the CLS IIz, which was to correct for the terrible load presented by the CLS II. It sucked also. And thus I drifted away from M-L speakers, altho I did own one of their hybrid designs later, which was quite good, but not as pure as the original CLS. Now you Aussies want to claim creative input to the CLS? Ok. Good job then. Too bad M-L has never gotten the point that their ESLs sound best with tubes. All their subsequent designs are aimed at the dreadnaught solid state amplifier crowd. Sometimes I peruse the for sale section of this website looking for a pair of original CLSs. They are quite a bargain, but I have enough speakers for this lifetime. |
Dear Dover: This is what you posted: +++++ " or you prefer the ginormous distortions of higher output MM's, ideal for listening to Mr Whippy tunes, than the tiny distortions in LOMC's, which is quite reasonable " +++++
" sorry to my misunderstood " .
Anyway enjoy your Ikeda distortions that are way different to the MM/MI alternative.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear Don, I kind of already fool you with my Miyabi. My is the 'American Takeda'(Krell KC 100) and I am very reluctant to say what I paid for. To my knowledge Axel does not fit styli in any cantilever but get those as combos (stylus already fitted in the cantilever) from his supplier. I have an whole list of questions for Axel but he has at present so much work that I need to ask 'piece by piece'. My next will be if he does the actual retip. That is 'glue' the selected stylus in the existing cantilever. That to me that is the 'real meaning' of 'retip'. The pressure fitted styli have the advantage that there is no glue between the cantilever and stylus. Not to mention the danger involved by cleaning the stylus with fluids.
Regards, |
Raul - you misrepresent my position on MM's. I dont think there is a definitive answer on which flavour has most "distortions" as you like to call them. They all have different strengths and weaknesses. I have been consistant in that I prize speed, timing, coherence, transparency and want to get the maximum possible out of the groove. I dont mind colourations, dont mind a rising or falling high frequencies. I cant stand compression or phase anomalies and I cant enjoy the music if there are timing issues. My 2 favourite cartridges in this respect are a Moving Iron ( the Decca ) and a Moving Coil ( the Ikeda Kiwame ). Hopefully I may be able to add a MM to the list one day. |
Comrade, "1. Miyabi". You do not fool me you sly one. We are Comrade capitalists. Did you have Axel pressure fit the line contact? Regards, Don |
Dear Don, Only a damn capitalist can afford nude Shibata/ Berillium combo. My retip is the proletarian kind: Aluminum / line contact. I am not sure yet how to rank the G800. I tested this one for just two days. But anyway my Ruby 3s is better.
Regards, |
Fellow Comrade, I had Axel do a "suspension refresh" on my Benz Micro Ruby 3 in addition to installing a nude Shibata & Berylium cantiliver on my G800. I've had them both back over a week now. I do have the Ruby mounted on a arm wand, but I can not force myself to remove the G800 from the tone arm! I'm in awe of the transformation! What cantiliver/stylus did you opt for. Regards, Don |
Dear Don, Yes I have. With Axel's retip.
Regards, |
Hi Nandric, Have you in your arsenal, a Goldring G800 (with Axel's retip)? Regards, Don |
Dear Fleib, I am glad that I followed your suggestion and bought the Genesis 1000. While you was sceptical about Axel's retip (line contact pressure fitted in aluminum cantilever) I can say that Genesis 1000 with Axel's retip is a much better proposition then Dyna 17 D models. Besides the retip with the line contact/ aluminum is relative the most economical upgrade at present. In my present ranking: 1. Miyabi 2. ex aequo: Ruby 3S, Sony XL 88, Genesis 1000 3. Phase Tech P-3G ,Dyna Karat 17 D2 (Axel's retip), AT 180 , Virtuoso black and Glanz 31 L.
Regards, |
Regards Raul, What cantilever does your Virtuoso with Gyger 2 have? I was thinking, probably aluminum, but I shouldn't assume. Thanks, |
That HOMC was unknow for me in everyway. When I make the report will let you know the manufacturer and cartridge model.
R. |
Dear Dover/Timeltel/Lewm/all: Years ago on this thread ( I think was here??? ) when I posted that the MM/MI had lower distortions ( for different reasons. ) than their MC " brothers " the first person that disagree was J: Carr it self whom posted that the MC were the ones with lower distoritons. Like Dover this time.
Through all these years and through almost endless experiences with both sides I can't understand yet where JC/Dover can prove that MC superiority/superior " characteristic.
I think that with cartridges happen almost the same that with electronics: that the measurements do not fulfil or explain what we are hearing because we are not taking the " right " ones. Could be that in fact the MC are or has lower distortions elsewhere against the MM/MI but that is not exactly what some os us are hearing or at least we don't be aware yet of that.
In the last weeks/months I was and am testing in deep not only the top MM/MIs but several vintage and today LOMC cartridges and as all in audio does not exist the perfect " answer ", both cartridge designs have its own trade-offs.
Can I hear always lower distortions with the LOMC ones?, no but with some set-ups a LOMC has lower distortions against a specific MM/MI cartridge set-up but not against a different MM/MI model. So seems to me that we have no specific rule here about that " MC lower distortions ".
I'm not finish yet my revision of LOMC cartridges, I bought more than 30 MC vintage cartridges, to give here a more precise " light " on that distortion subject that is really critical because distortions are important part/factor of quality level performance. When I finished I will report here.
Btw, Lewm I agree with you about HOMC cartridges that I listened sevral times not only in my system ( I own HOMCs. ) but other audio systems but that not only could change but already changed with an unexpected gift ( I pay nothing for the cartridge. ) that came with my Sony tonearm that I just bought and that I'm testing. This tonearm arrived with a HOMC cartridge where IMHO not only me but you or any one can detect in ANYWAY is HOMC!!!!. My report on a few days latter.
This experience confirm what I always support: every single day is a learning one!.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear Nandric, I have not tested all Ikedas, the carts I know I will be able to say something. I prefer the FR-7fz and next the FR-7f of the old carts. I prefer the 9 Rex rather than the 9TT. The Rex is a MI design, the 9TT comes with a cantilever. Many believe that the 9TT is not built by Ikeda sensei himself but who knows. For me It does not show the virtues of the Rex Kawami. If your going for a Rex best is you get it fixed in the headshell, it is hard work aligning it in the headshell.
If you are looking for more information maybe use this link:
http://audioexotics.hk/index.php?option=com_simplestforum&view=postlist&forumId=1&parentId=10177&topic=true&Itemid=53&limitstart=10 |
Dear Thuchan, Those among us who have the priviledge to own the FR-64S are, I assume, interested in the new Ikeda's carts. But the nomenclature is very confusing. To my knowlegde there are three versions . Can you 'rank' them for us?
Regards, |
I would not go for the new Ikeda rather for the FR-7 designs or the 9 Rex Kawami. Going for a good Mono try the Ortofon Candeza Mono. |
Ooohhh Nikola, You are in for a treat. On your beautiful FR-64s......I await your verdict with excitement and apprehension? Regards |
Dear Henry, Within 12 days you can use the plural 'we' without any fear to be accused of exaggeration. I just posted my FR-7 to Axel for the same retip.
Regards, |
Dear Fleib. You are right about the Virtuoso. One of my samples has Gyger2 stylus and is outstanding over the other Virtuoso(s) I own and owned.
Btw, Dover I think could be a good idea that you try an Axel's Virtuoso wood in your system with Gyger2 stylus, IMHO hands down the Rex 9 I own by a wide margin. You can get right now an Acutex LPM320 through ebay auction, other good very good alternative to top MM/MI performers is the Astatic MF-200 or even a MF-300 or you can get for " penauts " a Goldring G800 ( very easy to buy on ebay. ) and send to Axel to re-tip.
I think that these cartridges could make that you re-set your grading on MC vs MM/MI ones.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear John and Dover, I think almost everyone who heard the original CLS over 20 years ago were similarly stunned? I remember listening to them in the Dealer's showroom on a Saturday afternoon with my friend Richard. On the following Monday morning he had ordered them.....and by Wednesday evening they were singing in his listening room powered by the Audio Research SP-9 preamp and D-115 power amp. Unfortunately.......like most samples of those speakers......the panels shorted after a few weeks and after having new panels installed.......the same happened to them after a few more weeks. It was a problem that spelled the end for the CLS......and the CLS/II was a entirely different (and unsuccessful) final gasp for that particular concept? It's footnote in history however.......will remain until we too.....expire? |
Halcro - re FR-7f (Axel version) - thanks for clarification. Hopefully someone will compare the new Ikeda with cantilever to the FR-7f at some stage. It would be interesting to know if they are of similar design or whether some new developments have come about. |
Halcro - one of the original co-designers was either Australian or moved to Australia. I imported the 1st CLS into NZ. The first few came from Aussie to get over import restrictions and then later we imported directly from the states. I think they had a falling out but not absolutely sure. The Aussie guy imported the panels complete, and used Aussie made interfaces and frames. My memory is fading, it may be that the Aussie mods were the source of a difference with Gayle Sanders and the license pulled. To my ears I preferred the original Aussie version, due in main to the slightly different interface. Unfortunately cant remember the guys name. |
I had my FR-7f originally re-tipped to original specs through Dertonarm's Japanese Master in Tokyo. So I heard it with brand new conical stylus. When this new diamond spontaneously sheared one day.......I sent it to Axel. As far as I know.....I have the only FR-7f that Axel has re-tipped with a new Line Contact diamond? So 'I' am the ONLY one of 'ANYONE'.......and thus blessed.......feel safe from contradiction? For the time being......... |
I didn't know the early CLSs were built in Australia? How did that come about? |
If you send the FR-7f to Axel.....for €179 extra, you will have the best LOMC anyone has ever heard Do you know everyone, or is this the collective "we" ? or the royal we ? Glad you like Mr Ikeda's early designs. By the way I agree with you on the CLS's with tube amps. You may or may not know the early CLS were also produced in Australia, with slightly different crossovers & Australian hardwood frames. These went lower and did not have the 50hz bump the american model had. With Quicksilver 8417's this combo reproduced recording acoustics unlike anything I've heard, which includes Dave Wilson's own monitoring system. |
Dover and Halcro, My main turntable these days is my SP10 Mk3 with Reed 2A tonearm. I also do have an FR64S which I have not heard yet, only because I have to find a way to mount it, probably on the secondary armboard on the Kenwood L07D. Contrary to the experience of whomever you may know who owns a Kenwood tonearm, I find little to fault with the L07J tonearm, which is the one that comes with the L07D. What one must do is to upgrade the wiring; makes a big difference. The way the L07J tonearm is mounted into the structure of the L07D turntable is unique and represents very sound engineering, but I guess it might be said to violate the Copernican view. I know of no other factory built tt/tonearm combo that is so well done, on that score at least. I have heard LOMCs on the Triplanar (with several turntables), the Reed (with Mk3), the L07J, and on an RS Labs RS-A1, which is shockingly good despite the quite weird design. (Ortofon MC7500 may have sounded better on the RS-A1 than on the Reed 2A, by a hair.) I modified my RS-A1 so as to run the wiring straight from the cartridge to the phono inputs. The same will be done for the L07J, now that winter is approaching. I do plan to rig the L07D so that I can mount the Triplanar and/or the FR64S in the secondary position. I am working with a machinist to create the mount platform. |
Dear Halcro: The subject about low-midbass/low-bass frequency range goes deeper that what you posted and obviously that what I posted too.
My explanation was not complete or precise about, let me try to add something that could help on that subject:
that range is the hard to fulfil at first rate quality performance IMHO hardest that midrange/hf range.
Why speakers with " restricted " response in that bass frequency range performs so good ( I'm talking of decent/top speakers. ) with that disappear act and that so palpable midrange/hf range?:
bass frequency range management means not only to handle with accuracy and neutral/natural that range trhough the fundamentals but all that create harmonics that goes almost endless and that afect as the fundamental notes our whole perception. This range affect seriously the midrange/hf perceived response as no other factor in any audio system. When that bass management is not " right " we lose midrange and HF perception of the sounds that were generated there but that we can't hear in the right way because that wrong bass management preclude that we can have the clarity and transparency need it for the midrange and HF can shine in all its glory.
Please read carefulli this post that at the end/conclusion talks precisely on what I'm saying here:
http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1117893153&openflup&27&4#27
Now, independent on that ask you: why with " thousands " of different speaker models we can find out only a few ( very small quantity ) that are real full range ( flat 20hz to 50khz. ) speakers and always are and have the highgest prices?, yes because that last one and a half bass octave is almost to get but with an active speaker system. No one passive speaker I know handle in " perfect " way that bass frequency range.
We need active designs here, especialy in that bass range.
Btw, all those factors that you posted about efficiency o9r speaker electrical impedance and the like are solved with active speaker designs.
Finaly, I think that the speaker is not the weak link in the audio chain. IMHO the first weak link is the medium it self followed by the analog rig ( including the phono stage ) and then perhaps the passive speakers/room link.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Greetings Timeltel, What I was eventually working up to is a correlation of electrical parameter relationships. It is often agreed (it seems) that inductance < 450 - 500mH, impedance < 800 - 1K ohm, and yes output < 3.5mV, are indicitave of the best HO carts. This seems true regardless of mechanical parameters or generator type. But is there an ideal relationship? If all 3 parameters are very close in value (Virtuoso), is that indicative of a superior generator or a superior AT MM type, or coincidental? You seem well versed in this area. I have no idea about the spicific electrical parameters of most of the "best" vintage models and it may be difficult to get all the numbers. Just looking at AT, Virtuoso has 420mH, yet seems to outperform some others with 350mH. Is the high impedance of the 150MLX the problem? The V has 660 ohm impedance and DC is like 480. I've long suspected that CA ordered a close to ideal generator for this type. Gotta give them credit cause there's nothing special about the stylus.
The 103 mods that have become popular, inspired me to pot an AT-95. A tiny screw, acessable from the top, removes the plastic top from the body. This is the same body as the CA. Tilt the body back so the epoxy flows toward the pins. I used reg liquid epoxy. It doesn't take much. Then glue the top back on cause the screw hole is now filled. I'm not sure how much epoxy made it past the threaded insert in the body. I also made an aluminum top piece, out of an old headshell. Not exactly sure what did what, but it seemed to make a noticable improvement. A Gerry Mulligan record seemed to be much more like the sound of a master tape dub I used to have. It didn't have the detail of a top cart, but more enjoyable than before, surprisingly so. Regards, |
Dear Dover, agree on your thoughts and conclusions. While it is fun comparing MMs and MCs it might be worthwile concentrating on MIs, too. The Ikeda 9 Rex Kawami and the London Reference are currently two of my favourites. I believe you can reach good results with MMs, especially using a "tuning machine" like the EMT JPA-66. Nevertheless the real High-Lights I experienced with some MCs and MIs. But it also depends on the arms, the phono stage and the chain itself. So I am pretty sure that this is a personal experience & assessment and does not mean a general statement.
One may also not draw the conclusion -which some people do - that MMs are the poor people's Moody Blues. It seems to me that there is a world for all three designs. |
missprint in the last line, not front end but "back end", sorry |
Dear Ct0517, thanks . yes would be interesting hearing about your own listening impressions in that room. unfortunately I am not very close to Toronto - to this wonderful city - right now :-))
Dear Halcro, agree loudspeaker design is the most critical issue regarding a Top-System. We are always working on the front end forgetting that the amplification, the perfect matching with the speakers and the design of the listening room deserves more attention. What does it help speaking about 0,01 % improvement on distortion regarding maybe a MM, MMI, MC when the front end is not working at its best. |
Dear Halcro,
I agree completely about the original Martin Logan CLS panels and would also add a few Magnepan models of my experience; that occasionally and briefly sounded like the "real thing". It is indeed spooky when it happens and has brought me from another room more than once. My newer Martin Logans do almost everything right but never ever have they sounded "real".
John |
Lew, If you really want to hear the very best of what LOMCs can deliver....I have two suggestions. Firstly....the ZYX UNIverse which is .24mV and quite unfussy about arms (I used it with success on 6 arms from a Hadcock GH228 to the Copperhead and FR-66s. It is now back in production with a new price of $5,000 from Mehran of ZoraSound ZYXEvery discriminating listener to the UNIverse has had nothing but praise for it. Secondly.....if you want to save yourself $1,500 yet own possibly the greatest LOMC cartridge ever made.......buy a Fidelity Research FR-7f FR-7f for $2,000 and get a Fidelity Research FR-64s tonearm for $1,500 FR-64SIf you send the FR-7f to Axel.....for €179 extra, you will have the best LOMC anyone has ever heard. Better than the legendary Olympos! |