Dear Raul, I assume that you mean by 'common listening bias process' that we should all have, say, 4-5 of the same LP's such that anyone can refer to some specific tracks in order to substantiate what he hears ? This way we can argue about the same music or tracks. So in this sense we will know what we are talking about. This was your idea some time ago but is somehow lost while, if I remember well, there was consensus that this was a very good idea. This means that we need suggestions about those 4-5 LP's.
Regards, |
Regards, Frogman: The Acutex's are chameleons. It's been mentioned before. Tonearm/cart matching is as influential to performance as any of the carts I'm familiar with. Have been doing some "TT rolling", the Acutex 420 is a complete stranger when heard on the 12" graphite arm on a Pio. PL-70L 11 with variable silicone damping. The upper-mids have taken several steps forward in apparency as compared to the impressive bass heard on the EPA-250 arm. To my ears, this is not an improvement, however the AT20SS gains hf clarity, a tautened body in the bass registers and a very attractive mid-range luster on the Pio. Exclusive arm. Headshell build materials, the thickness of those materials as well as isolation techniques and the materials involved all have an easily heard influence on the Acutex LPM series of cartridges.
Cartridges share the category of "transducer" with microphones. The LPMs are responsive to the vinyl below as well as (IMHO) more so than the usual influence of the arm above. Practical observation and a considered position as an enthusiast relieves one of the professional requirements of measuring resonant nodes of a pipe, the Young's modulus of a specific material, the relation of boundary resonance to line transmission of those resonances, or the influence of taper, sleeving or bend of that pipe. I have noticed that some cartridges do well on a specific tonearm, not so well on another. This, at my informational level, is frequently referred to as "synergy".
Is it possible that with certain microphonic carts, the characteristics of the tonearm are more evident? This is not a suggestion that those who are critical of the 420 have inadequate gear but rather that the mount is not the Acutex's best feature.
Frogman, IMHO there is a certain mechanical resonance related "brassy/boomy" quality heard with the Acutex LPM 4xx carts on the several tonearms I have available. This quality is (again, IMHO) favorably reduced with a mount fashioned of a material other than the flimsy plastic provided by Acutex, even the mount from the earlier 3xx carts offer improvement with a 4xx generator fitted. In all other considerations & in particular balance, soundstage & imaging, I believe the cart is excellent.
Peace, |
Ipad strikes again! Apology for double post. |
Dear Nandric,
I agree with you. But defensive? Not at all. Merely striving for clarity. Interesting, the parallel between how we each hear differently as well as how we each interpret the written word differently; no? Yes, part of my comment is in response to Raul's "inner detail" comment, but only as a "launching pad" for the general comment about a subject that I feel is often overlooked. Tonal quality is usually given much more attention than rhythmic quality, IMO. Besides, this is only electronic gear after all; certainly not worth getting defensive over. Regards. |
Dear nandric/Frogman/friends: That's why we all need a " common listening bias process " where through different audio item evaluations we can understand in precise way what each one of us are we talking about with precise LP tracks ( and which part inside those tracks. ) where those evaluations been made it.
I was part of an intent to do it in other thread but we had no luck because almost no one really been interested on it. Even in this thread I made it a second intent about but no real response from almost any one.
Maybe in the future???
regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear Acman3: ++++ " Acutex 420 likes linear arms, so you may need to get another arm to fully hear it. " +++++
I'm truly convinced that the " problem " with the 420 is a native design one, I tested in several tonearms/headshells including my " universal " self design tonearm and I did not found out something that could justify to buy a linear traking tonearm for this cartridge.
I think that with all in audio there are some items that are better than others and that's it. We can go to the road to buy new audio items only to " see "??? if an audio item could be better performer!!!!: this could be an endless " crazy adventure ", don't you think?
Remember that we all have music sound differences in our priorities. In my case the 420 does not fulfil mines and certainly not what my system likes because my system does not needs any " distorted help ".
regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear Nandric,
I agree with you. But defensive? Not at all. Merely striving for clarity. Interesting, the parallel between how we each hear differently as well as how we each interpret the written word differently; no? Yes, part of my comment is in response to Raul's "inner detail" comment, but only as a "launching pad" for the general comment about a subject that I feel is often overlooked. Tonal quality is usually given much more attention than rhythmic quality, IMO. Besides, this is only electronic gear after all; certainly not worth getting defensive over. Regards. |
Dear frogman: My mistake to said " inner detail " but " dynamic overall " and this is what I'm refering to.
Btw, remember that the bass fundamentals have harmonics too.
Acman3 posted he was enjoying the 420 and I can say I can do it too because the cartridge is not so bad that we can't enjoy it.
Now, I know very well that music sometime could be " nasty " ( as you say ) but this is not the rule. In the other side I'm comparing it against not only the M320/LPM320 that are ( IMHO ) overall better than the 420 but against the G800, Virtuoso and Nagatron 9600 that are terrific performers and IMHO even better than all the ones you name it.
Btw, the more home audio system elusive frequency range ( at any price ) IMHO reside in the bass and is here ( bass management. ) where an excellent system distinguish over a good one. I supported and still support this statement because I have the experiences about ( first hand. ) through years on audio listening so many audio systems that " I can't remember " as live events at normal and near field listening. The other frequency extreme is very important and elusive too and maybe hard to be aware on " real music " against distortions in that range, we have to be trained ( heavy trained ) to understand and be aware of.
The bass management is a critic part on that dynamics you are talking about and that dynamics is the difference not only between a system performance and a live event but the main difference between a " child and a mature " audio system. I heard 300k$ systems that were only " childs ".
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear Frogman, Normal hearing capability presupposed we all hear in the same way. But we all interpret what we hear with our cultural, educational and personal developmet as a backgound. There is no such thing as 'objective' or 'neutral' hearing experience. Our consensus is based on our similar cultural background I assume. Our disagrement on the other hand on our different experience and tastes. You post about the Acutex 420 is clear, eloquent and with very good aruments but you wrote this in a kind of 'defensive way'. Because of Raul ? If we agreed on everything there would be no need for a forum as this one. Nobody should apologize for his preferences I think.
Regards, |
My comments are about the Acutex 420, in case its not clear. |
What the Acutex does correctly, and better than many other cartridges in my experience, is make sense of the dynamics-related aspects of a musical performance. In my prior comments about this cartridge (in another thread) I did not once make any reference to that cartridge's handling of "inner detail". The focus of my comments has been it's handling of dynamics overall, and ability to present the musical content in the bass range with a level of truthfulness that is usually reserved for the midrange and (less so) the highs. In my experience even the best gear/ systems gloss over musical detail in the bass range, and I think we are so accustomed to this that we routinely handicap that aspect of performance when we assess equipment. Think about just how often we are aware of the musical contribution of the bass "voice" in a composition or improvisation as a melody. Well that is what it is, but is heard (more times than not) as simply bass "weight", "extension", etc. Can we clearly hear that the bass note is the root of a chord in the music and identify it as such?
I made the point that the cartridge "is not a beautiful sounding cartridge" because it has a sense of what I like to call "directness" that will sound somewhat unrefined to some in the quest for ultimate "refinement". The problem is that music doesn't always sound refined; it can sound pretty nasty sometimes. And if we think that the gulf between what even the best rigs are capable of and the incredible complexity and variability of the sound of real music has been narrowed to the point that we can use terms like "accurate" to describe it, I think we are kidding ourselves.
I have never heard the Acutex 320, and based on Raul's and others' comments I am sure that it is a terrific cartridge, and very well be a "better" cartridge than the 420. I do own and have listened with (at length) to the Andante P76, Azden PVL50, Empire 4000IIID Gold, and the AT 170MLOCC (or something like that) among other MM's, and more MC's than I can remember. I mention those MM's because they are (or were) considered "contenders" (particularly the latter three) at various points in the life of this thread, and I can safely say that overall the Acutex sounds more like what music sounds like to me than any of the others.
IMO, the heart of a musical performance lies in it's expressive qualities, and this is connected to dynamics. It is a very complex issue since oftentimes equipment is not consistent in it's dynamic ability at various frequency ranges. The end result is that a performance can sound confused, tense, or simply boring. When a component can separate musical lines with similar dynamic expression, while at the same time make sense of how those lines are intended to interact, then I think there is something special going on. This cartridge has been described as "addictive". Personally I have never known "tonal refinement" to be addictive; the ability to let me feel the deepest groove of the music certainly is. |
BTW, the unusual construction of the M320 stylus suggests that preserving the armature tabs requires slipping a tube cantilever retip over the existing armature sleeve. I can't imagine how an entirely new cantilever could be fitted to the stylus holder. |
Dear Tubed1, my used M320III STR came with an original stylus with a bent cantilever armature tab. If you have a M320, you know that the design is unconventional, with two armature tabs at the hinge of the cantilever that project perpendicularly down into the induction coils at the forward section of the cartridge body. A bent tab has the effect of canting the stylus and shifting channel balance. In the later 415/420, it appears that Acutex simplified the design by moving the induction coils from the front to the rear of the cartridge body and eliminating the armature tabs.
Since the diamond looked(and sounded) pretty good, I asked Axel to straighten the tab and do his best retip as appropriate. We'll see what comes back. This is my first go-round with Axel and I'm inclined to accept his judgment. |
Greetings Dgarretson, Please post your specification/configuration of the M320 stylus to request to Axel. Substances aside, (my Acutex w/420 is addicting enough!)I enjoy the Acutex bloom like no other as inacurate as it may be to me the 420 has a certain "Je ne sais quoi" available in no other cartridge. I am also curious if you used an aftermarket stylus or the original with the M320 upgrade. |
Dear Acman3: I just bought two Nagatron stylus replacements.
I'm not to worry about the stylus shape, seems to me that the one that comes in my sample is very good even if it is conical, but more about cantilever build material and suspension.
One of those stylus samples I will oredr to Axel something especial about that suspension and if it improves its tracking then I will go with the Axel top fix-work. As I posted and I think you already know the cartridge motor in the Nagatron 9600 is really especial and deserve the best we can do for it.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear Dgarretson, Axel is one man company working for one 'big spender' from Mexico. We need to wait till the Mexican reaches the bottom of his (oil?) source. I intend to post to Axel two carts on Monday but am very reluctant to ask any question about the duration. Anyway thanks to you I can estimate the duration for + one month, or so, from Monday. |
While we're onto Acutexes again, I'll add that I'm running in an M415 after 100 hours with the M420. The 420 was very addictive. Like most addictions the stimulation may be due to an additive substance. In this case(rest assured for purpose of analogy only) the substance is more hydroponically organic than lysergically synthetic. The 415 is not too far off the 420. I'm using the 415 stylus in a 420 body. Oddly, in contrast to the 420, the 415 stylus likes the tonearm high up in back, at least during break-in. My M320 has been with Axel for about a month. Hopefully Raul's and my pieces will return soon for comparison. |
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Are the styli from the Acutex series 400 ( 420, 415. etc.) exchangible with the 300'long nose' series (320,315,etc.)? |
Sorry about the lack of proofreading. |
Hello Raul, I am currently listening yo the Acutex 315 lpm so I know what you mean when comparing the 420 against the other Acutex 3xx models. Still ,I enjoy the Acutex 420. Also Frogman and others are saying the Acutex 420 likes linear arms, so you may need to get another arm to fully hear it.
I was somewhere around 1.8 to 2.0 Vtf on the Nagatron 9600 with a few mistracks even at that weight.
I am with you on messing up a good thing by changing the stylus on the Nagatron, but I would like to hear it with a better stylus so I am inclined to upgrade it. I purchased a Nagatron 1460ie stylus from Garage-a records to see if I could at least upgrade the stylus to epiliptical and the 1460ie stylus has the same blue mark as the one on the 9600, so maybe it has a 1460ie stylus as the seller stated . To replace the stylus you would need to transplant the shank. I am not going to do it because as you said, it probably cannot be replaced if I mess up I will let a professional add a line contact and boron cantilever to get close to the original. |
Dear Acman3: During the last 10-12 days that I'm testing different cartridges I left running my Acutex 420 for it has 60+ playback hours and test to evaluate if its performance really change for the better mainly in the hf range.
The " call " for the Acutex was and is very hard ( for say the least " ) against the Nagatron " 9600 " performance and against the M320/LPM320.
Simple as this: no contest, my opinion on the 420 quality performance did not changed a lot on what I posted months ago. It is true that the cartridge performance imrpoves a little with more playback hours but IMHO what was wrong with is still wrong. Is hard to think that the 420 was designed for the same people that designed the M320/LPM320s. Thw 420 is a non-accuarte/non-neutral cartridge with higher distorions that I can or accustom to accept.
Many of that " inner detail " that Frogman posted exist but is more distorted that with other better cartridges where with the 420 I losted definition and clear detail presentation not only that the layering is there but that that layering be really clear with a truly different output level. The other cartridges have that on spades.
Nagatron side again: I'm running my 9600 with a VTF 2.1grs, could you tell me the VTF on your set up?, thank's.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear friends: Just arrived the Azden LOMC GM-P5L that I bought on ebay.
Beautiful made cartridge that's a P-mount design but that with a clever " characteristic " we can use the cartridge with out a normal P-mount adaptor as any 1/2" cartridge ( I will see if that " characteristic " helps for I can use my other P-mount Azden cartridges. ). I don't heard it yet but I'm excited for what I see and what I read in the cartridge manual: boron cantilever with line contact stylus and 0.2mv output level, 10hz to 60khz on frequency response and from its frequency chart I can see that not only has a flat response over the frequency range but 36+ dbs of separation at 1khz.
Something " weird " is that the manual states that the cartridge likes between 100pf to 300pf on load capacitance, this is the first time I see a load capacitance spec on a LOMC cartridge and I have to ask any of you: WHY?
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Hi: Here another Ortofon MC 2000 review:
http://www.gramophone.net/Issue/Page/April%201983/110/746928/The+Ortofon+MC2000+is+shown+already+fitted+into+the+headshell+supplied+Ortofon+MC2000
This cartridge made some " noise " in its time.
regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear friends: The stylus drag subject and its influence in what we heard were discussed on several threads and I found out this post that gives a " scientific "/real measures about and that seems to me that as the post said: whom can hear that " microscopic " speed deviation?, could any one of you?:
http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1222902620&openflup&112&4#112
Btw, I just received my digital manual tacomether and I will start to make measures on my TT speed habilities on accuracy and % time deviations.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Well, the MC 2000's customers complaint was not only to the so low cartridge output but because its high compliance. Both MC 2000 characteristics changed in the MK2 version and the quality performance level too and was not for the better but a down grade cartridge changes.
Raul. |
Dear Dover: Certainly the T2000 SUT put on its signature even that was designed in " specific " for the MC-2000 cartridge. I owned for years and used with other cartridges too.
That SUT impede that the MC2000 can shows you everything it can do. My preference is for an active high gain stage. Both ways the MC 2000 is a challenge to any analog rig and this is a little " unfortunate " becvause this quality performance level must be for any one but Ortofon designed in that " wrong " way ".
In its time the cartridge was a market success that the same market asked Ortofon to design a same MC 2000 with a higher output and Ortofon did it with the MC 2000MK2 that came in a beautiful white ceramic body and with 0.125mv on output and with a " heavy " degraded quality performance level against the original MC 2000. So, Ortofon intented but the " magic " was in the MC 2000 original design. Why?, I really like to know it.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear Acman3: You are right about the Nagatron 9600. Even that is not a great tracker as its little brother 350/360 it performs really really good and as you said: dead neutral, shinning both frequency extremes that put the right frame for the frequency range in between.
Even that our cartridges does not came with the original stylus replacement but with a down side Nagatron spheric/conical??? stylus in an aluminum cantilever is a top performer better that what I remember the first time I tested.
I had the Nagatron 9600 on line to goes to Axel and after my today listening excercise I'm in a hard call: could be wise to send it to Axel for a change on cantilever/stylus when the cartridge performs so good in its today status?, unfortunatelly I don't have a second sample.
The original Nagatron 9600 was designed with a boron catilever and a quasi-line contact stylus. This seems a lot better " characteristics " that what we have now.
What could be your take about?, thank's.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear nandric: Let me re-read all the Axel orders to know exactly what he did and is doing with all my cartridges because are so many that I have not on memory, let you know when that happen.
Btw, I own so many cartridges/stylus replacement ( in good and bad shape. ) that really don't know what I have or don't remember if something I own or not. Things happen that yesterday looking for a cartridge I found out the original Acutex M320 stylus replacement with bent cantilever and this was the one that came in my first M320 sample, I bought the LP Gear replacement and just forgot I have that one. So now I will send the M320 to Axel with the original stylus replacement to fix it!
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Addendum. Dear Raul , the answer for your wondering about the Ortofon MC 2000 may be Per Windfeld? He is also the 'old master' like so many Japanese. |
Dear Raul, In some sense you got your gold mine in Germany while Axel got his in Mexico. No wonder you are both very fond of each other. But you are not explicit enough about the cantilevers/styli combo's which you ordered by Axel. I am familiar only with two of those. The pressure fitted line contact in aluminum cantilever and the boron/ nude elliptical. The first mentioned one is, as we all know, exceptional. Fleib may be interested to know that the boron one is much thiner than what he observed as usual in the present day MC carts. I have no idea how many producers of those parts there are but quess that thereare only few. Consequently the cart producers can use only those that are actually produced. So Axel must have some NOS stock of both: cantilevers and styli which are not produced at present. I noticed, for example,the Gyger II which is not in producton for some time while the Gyger company or this part of the Gyger company may be already exit. One also rarely sees beryllium cantilevers at present. Deed you try other combo's than aluminum/ line contact and what is your impresson about those? BTW while I know that you are not impressed with Basis Exclusive phono-pre I am because I own this one. I hope of course that this one can manage the Ortofon 2000 but I need to find one first to find out.
Regards, |
Or in Holt's case, one hopes that his (g)ear evolved such that he could hear the different between analogue and digital. I wonder if the MC2000/transformer combo mimicked the brick wall filters in his ears. |
Dear Raul,
Gordon Holt really liked that MC2000:
http://www.stereophile.com/phonocartridges/ortofon_mc-2000_mc_phono_cartridge/index.html
However, in the mid-80s he considered it high praise that the MC2000 made LPs sound like CDs. How the ear has evolved since then! |
Dear Nandric: I'm still waiting for the Axel answer, he has one of mi Goldring G800 samples with an after market stylus/cantilever and I want to send him my Acutex M320 second sample with an AMSC. Sooner or latter we could have the answer from him.
On the ortofon MC 2000 side be carefuly before you buy this cartridge due to its very low output: 0.05mv, that's a challenge for " any one ". Be sure that your Phono stage can handel it straight through a non-noise high gain active circuit that IMHO is the only option for the cartridge can shows you its greatness.
I own two MC-2000 samples na d the original one is going to Axel best and top of the line stylus/cantilever he " plays ", IMHO the cartridge deserve the best I can make for it about.
Btw, I wish I be a designer/expert on LOMC cartridge to find out/know why this old Ortofon MC-2000 IMHO outperforms the today very well regarded Ortofon A-90 and all other Ortofon LOMC that were designed after it. Well, all other LOMC I heard it too. I own/owned all those Ortofon models but the Windfeld and the A-90 that right now I'm enjoying for a few hours comparing it against the vintage one.
If you have the " right " analog rig then the MC-2000 is The Cartridge.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear Professor & Acman, My metaphor about the girls 'behind' has, I think, more 'supstance' than I originaly thought. Fleib already noticed that the most new MC carts have the same (thick) boron cantilever from whatever supplyer. This I called the 'front side' fixation. That is to say our attention for the styli. Well I noticed Raul's ,say, new orientation focused on the 'behind' of the styli. Thanks to Axel he can choose whatever cantilever/stylus combo he likes so his attention moved to what he calls the 'motor' of an cart. I prefer the expression 'generator'. I assume that he discovered that many 'old generators' are as good or even better than the new one and is consequently buying them as much as his shares in the Mexican oil industry allow him to do. Some of those go linea recta to Axel, the other get only some provisional test and than follow the same travel direction. As is usually the case with his recommentations I am somehow always too late. Those Ortofon MC 2000, for example, were everywhere just one month ago but are now nowhere to find. I even checked the Serbian ebay with no luck.
Regards, |
It appears there is no shopping cart next to the YM308 so the original may not be available. You may have to talk with them. |
Hello Nikola, another possibility to add to Professor Timeltels choices is, if the Piezo YM-308's stylus fits the Acutex cartridge, Pickupnaald shows an original RS 100 for 31 euro. |
Regards, Nikola: The replacement styli from JICO seem to fall outside the category of "generic" and have pretty much gained the confidence of the audiophile community. Offered are two Akai assemblies of the Piezo YM-308 family. Variations for Kenwood, Piezo & several other brands, the Akai RS120E is $35, the remainder list for $22 to $25, if that's any indication of specs. All are conical. If compatible with your Acutex body, any of these would be of fresh manufacture. JICO is responsive to email queries, compliance values would be a consideration.
There is a good probability the "V-M Audio" (link in previous post) listing for the stylus *707-DE is an OEM Piezo replacement, identified as an an elliptical. If so (the several OEM styli I've purchased there have been exactly as listed), this might be an interesting assembly with the potential for acceptable performance. If the description is accurate, it would be anticipated as the equivalent of an M310E, if there is such an animal. I've found the vendor responsible, well informed and quick to respond.
Considering the influence of the cantilever/stylus on performance it should go without mention that what is heard is a Pfansteil 707-DE, or a JICO YM-308, not the Acutex M320STR-111, a modified nude Shibata. If my objective were an Axel M320ML-Ruby (whatever), and were certain of the fit, the fresh suspension of the JICO assembly would be a first choice for Axel's delicate attentions.
Caveat emptor is still in effect, there's no assurance the fitment of the Piezo YM-308 assembly is correct for the Acutex M3xx body. Perhaps someone else can offer advice? Or, PayPal Gary at V-M Audio $12.00 & then you're just a click away from being the authority. :)
Again, good luck &
Peace, |
Messrs.
The consensus here seems to be that original OEM styli are by far the best. In regard to aftermarket and generic styli; are some brands and/or makers preferable to others? Obviously they cannot all be the same. Did Astatic make better replacement styli than Phanstiel, or vice versa? I know that Jico is highly regarded now but what about NOS replacements from different makers?
There were many companies making and selling styli during the golden age of vinyl, surely a few stand out as superior. I had read somewhere that Astatic made OEM styli for Empire, maybe or maybe not. However, some of the stylus makers must have been OEM as well as aftermarket suppliers. There does not seem to be much information available about the replacement stylus makers and it seems to be a subject worth exploration.
John
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Dear Professor, 'caveat emptor' is , alas, my conclusion connected with those styli you mentioned. I have bought 3 or so of those a year ago and they all are worthless for the purpose :M 320. This is also not the answer to my question. So I need to rephrase my question. When we judge the looks of a girl we are, I assume, interested in both sides: the front and the behind. In the context of the styli there was already much attention for the 'front side' or (the kinds of) the cantilever/stylus combo's. Those however are not in the void of air but must also have a 'behind'. I myself must confess to be interested in both sides of both , uh, domains. Assuming that the producers pay so much attention to the front side of the stylus construction one may assume that this also apply for the back side of the same construction. I observed this connection by the AKG carts by which one can see both sides very clearly. That is also my reason to be sceptical about the 'wonders' Axel can achive by ,as you called them, 'generic styli' or , even better, 'generic styli holders'.
Regards, |
Regards, Raul, Storyboy: Styli for 1xxx, 2xxx, 4xxx & 8xxx carts tested using a compass. No effect. Carts do have magnetic influence, the bass rich 8000 swings the needle from several inches away.
Peace, |
Hi John,
the reason for your findings is most likely attributable to the low moving mass of most IM carts, and I agree with you. Only the rare earth MM's like 881s, F9e, and mf Astatic approach the likes of the Ortofon's, XLM's etc. |
Dear Storyboy,
Thanks, I was just curious to find a common denominator for the cartridges I prefer. Seems to be mostly IM/Shibata (type) stylus for me. I have found several 'cartridge type' errors on the VE database.
John
|
So much for Bible writers... I've taken them apart, they are induced magnetism. |
Regards, Nikola: Generic styli=caveat emptor. Quality is "all over the map". For the generics, VTF is given anywhere between 1.5 & 5.0gm downforce, the quality (and condition) of the suspension may be somewhat questionable. This vendor's information is (typically) accurate: http://www.turntableneedles.com/Needle-707-DE_p_1318.html. There are other references to this assembly's (Pfansteil #707-DE) similarity to the Piezo Y-308, I believe this was discussed on this thread a year or so ago. Another vendor: http://www.thevoiceofmusic.com/catalog/part_detail.asp?PNumberBase=707&SearchType=MfgNameNeedles&MfgName=Piezo&Categories=The 4-digit code (4707) preceding the description (DE -> Diamond Elliptical, 707-D7 would be a diamond 0.7 conical) usually indicates generic, 3-digits (707), OEM. For a fresh assembly from a reputable source, search JICO. They'll have the Piezo stylus as well as an offering for several of the cross-referenced carts from the above list. No association with the above vendors. Good luck! Peace, |
Regards, Storyboy, Raul: "A sampling of full-frequency stereo recordings that provide a true test of stereo-system performance": The Forty Minute Raga/Ali Akbar Khan. Johnny Puelo and his Harmonica Gang, Vol. 2. Switched-On Bach. Time Out/Dave Brubeck. Abraxas/Santana. Hair, soundtrack. Pearl/J. Joplin. Oliver/original cast. Parsley Sage Rosemary & Thyme/Simon-Garfunkle. Trombones Unlimited/Liberty label. (LST-7449, if you've just got to have this one).
From the accompanying brochure included with my 1000ZE/X stylus. Not dated but early '70s seems about right from the referenced recordings. Also, "15 degree vertical tracking angle". By RIAA agreement 20-22 degrees was adopted in 1974 (IIRC). Stylus is adaptable to Empire 9xx, 2xxx, (some) 4xxx & at least one 8xxx series cart, an X/VE. These AFAIK are moving magnet design.
Now for the good part: "Exclusive induced field moving magnet stylus".
"Who is on first."
Peace, |
Dear Storyboy: It is not very clear about because some of the Empire patents refered to IM/MI type but with out any sign of which models.
Now, the person that makes the cartridge data " bible " on VE is some one that knows a lot on cartridges and he made a distinction on the Empire MM and the Empire IM/MI and he decided that the 4000 and the 1000 are MM.
In the other side Empire was very enfatic that with the 4000s the load capacitance must be very low because the HF are way affected and normaly this happen with MM where the IM/MI are a lot less suceptible on load capacitance.
IMHO to be absolutely sure wich type are those Empire models we have to ask Axel when my sample return or we have to open a cartridge and see how was designed.
In the mean time to say if it is MM or IM/MI is not 100% for sure.
Thank's for your post.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Raul, we will await the Acutex M320 results with baited breath. In the meantime for my M320 I am considering the LP Gear highly polished eliptical at $27.95. |
Dear Raul, I don't care what kind of 'meat', to use the butcher metaphor, is in the 'tail' of my styli. There is no way to deduce anything from the MM 'kinds'. The 'magnetic flux' by Astatic is as good for me as the moving- magnet or iron in the other carts. But I am not sure about the 'tail' by the aftermarket styli. I fear that those may have the 'devil tail'. Whatever Axel can do he needs this 'stylus tail' to put and glue some of his cantilever/stylus combo's in it. The fear is always connected with the lack of knowledge and in my case this the case with those 'tails' or tubes in the stylus holder. That is why I am willing to wait till I can get the original stylus for my (poor)M 320. But if Herr Professor or Fleib or both think that the 'tail' is not important I can get the after market kind for 19 Euro on ebay.de and ask Axel to put some of those 'exotic' cantilever/stylus combo in there.
Regards, |
The Empire carts you referenced have induced magnetism and are not moving magnets. |