Check out these specs for the empire 1000ZE/X with aluminum cantilever and hand polished .2 x .7 micro elliptical stylus.
4-40,000hz frequency response
channel seperation 35db
Who needs a MM cartridge type when we have MC?
Chakster, most of those cartridges you mentioned are hard to find and mostly not cheap. I’ve recently seen a USED ATML180 for $1400.00! Most of the cartridges I bought were under $200.00. I like finding bargains like the last one I bought, an Empire 4000DIII in excellent condition for $177.00 bucks. I like some of those lowly aluminum elliptical models. Check out these specs for the empire 1000ZE/X with aluminum cantilever and hand polished .2 x .7 micro elliptical stylus. 4-40,000hz frequency response channel seperation 35db |
Each time we’re discussing a "new discoveries" please add the reference cartridges you’re comparing your "cart of the week" to (in both directions weather it MM/MI or MC). One vintage MM cartridge can be better than others, but when you comparing it to the reference MM cartridge it’s much more interesting. Because some of the reference MM/MI are simply unbeatable by any others. Which makes a new discovery worthless, until you will find a real gem! In other words it’s much more interesting to read which vintage MM cartridge is still your top choice and can’t be exceeded by others. In my collection the reference MM are (not in order): -Grace LEVEL II BR/MR LC-OFC (Boron/MicroRidge) and with additional experimental Ruby cantilever stylus made by Grace Level II. -Grace F14 Excellent with RS12 stylus (Beryllium/MicroRidge) and with additional RS14 stylus with the same cantilever and stylus. -Stanton CS-100 WOS (Sapphire coated Alluminum / Stereohedron) -AT-ML180 OFC (GoldPlated Boron / MicroLine) -Glanz MF-61 (Boron/Paroc) -Victor X-1II (Beryllium/Shibata) Some of them are high compliance, some are mid compliance, so it worth to have all of them in collection. All of them designed with the best parts such as the most advanced cantilevers, diamond profiles, some of them have the best coil wire too. For some reason all MM/MI with alluminum cantilever and conventional elliptical profiles are all inferiour compared to more advanced cantilever/styli combo. Even when i try different styli on the came cartridge (such as Grace for example). I think it’s very important to seach for the best materials in stylus replacement assembly when it comes to MM. This is all about sound quality, so conventional Alluminum/Elliptical in MM design must be avoided when much better styli available. Unfortunately none of the other MM or MI cartridges i have owned can surpass these reference models. These carts are mindblowing even compared to some serious LOMC of the highest price. |
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I'm with you travbrow and Raul. The 1000 ze/x is a lovely music maker. I also still like the even-earlier 888TE and the much later 600LAC, and have been using all three since the very early days of this thread. Betwen those, my Astatic MF100, my Goldring 800 w/ Astatic shibata stylus, and spare styli for all, I feel like I'm set for at least another 10 years! Jim |
I have been listening to a older Sonus Gold Blue NOS cartridge. You are correct with the negative VTA. It’s a fantastic sounding cartridge. I am approaching 30 hours and sound is sublime. Best tracking cartridge I have ever owned. Tracking at 1.20 is also pretty light but it has not affected the tracking of the cartridge. Very natural sounding and beautiful bass. I love it. Its also one of the quietest cartridges. |
The 1000ZE/X may end up being my favorite. For the $100.00 I paid included the original wood box and packaging, I think it was as a great bargain. Though the NOS Empire stylus is still available for this model, the price is a lot higher now then a few years ago. Still cheap considering the cost of high quality cartridges made today. Also it took some adjusting to hear it sing, though it tracks at less than .5 grams I found between 1 and 1.2 grams the best setting. It can produce bass quality above most any cartridge I tried, very nice natural sounding midrange, impressive soundstage width, imaging and dynamics. The highs were a bit weak till I raised the tonearm to affect higher vertical tracking angle. This thing is nearly 50years old!!! Unlike a bunch of other models I tried and sold off, it’s a keeper and I’ll never resell it. I actually made profit on a some of the models I sold off. Especially the two Acutex LPM 420 I sold. This is all personal preference, other cartridges are more refined, but that isn’t a priority for me. |
Dear @travbrow : I knew exactly what you are saying because I own/owned all Empire catalog models. Yes, the DIII is really good but the 1000 as you said is " impressive " but not many Agoners here cared about when I mentioned, good that you own it. The .9 was the latest Empire model and top of the line ( 250.00 in those times. ) and is very good too but the 1000 and D3 are even better. In the other side exist no MM AT that can beats to the Technics MK4 in stand alone version. Perhaps the nearest of the AT group cartridges was the TK10ML MK2. The best from AT are its LOMC cartridges not MM even that are very good ones. I own/owned all AT catalog MM models and MC too but the today 1000. Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R. |
@travbrow The models I liked the most were the ATML170, Technics 100CMKIV and the Empires. Welcome back. The AT-ML170 and AT-ML180 are killer MM and i like then much better than Technics EPC-100c mk3 for example. Also never seen AT-ML with bad suspension, always perfect, tried many samples. The experience with Technics is just opposite, too many bad samples with dead suspension, the price is insane today, just because in this thread. I think the AT-ML180 is superior compared to any Technics cartridges. |
One of the advantages of You Tube is that it allows comparisons without leaving the comfort of your armchair. Check this out... https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=cwGmwBiVmgY Previously I was against the idea of either re-tipping or buying 2nd hand carts but hearing some of these has altered my viewpoint. :) |
I haven’t posted in a long time, but I was here on this thread quite often in the beginning. I owned quite a few of the models mentioned in the thread or you could say I belonged to the “mm cartridge flavor of the week club” The models I liked the most were the ATML170, Technics 100CMKIV and the Empires. I still own and use Empire 4000DIII, EDR .9 and just got a used 1000ZE/X. The 1000ZE/X is very impressive to me, even with a questionable stylus assembly it still sounds very good. It sounds best to me with tracking force around 1.1 gram and some positive VTA. I like it enough that I ordered a new original stylus. |
Dear friends: As I posted in the ADC 26/27 review I still own several cartridges that I never gave a listen like that ADC. I wonder who of you own Mayware cartridges because I'm listening to a Mayware and is a very nice " surprise " its quality level performance. Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R. |
Very rare NOS PRECEPT PC440 on eBay: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Precept-by-A-T-PC440-NOS-cartridge-SHIBATA-on-Beryllium-cantilever-AT20SS... |
Having waited over two years to find my first Victor X1 cartridge with its ORIGINAL stylus.....I couldn't believe it when a Victor X-1II came up for auction on Japan Yahoo complete with its original stylus and Victor headshell. As there was only one other Bidder....I won it for $300 🤪 and when it arrived, it was LIKE NEW and appeared to have been rarely played. As I now have the COMPLETE SET.....X-1, X-1II and X-1IIE.......a 'Shoot-Out' between them on my "Hear My Cartridges' Thread could prove interesting....🧐 |
Watch the latest Peter Ledermann’s (SoundSmith) lecture on RMAF 2018 about energy transfer, his talks about cartridges starts at 19:00 in this video, again MC versus MI design. Very interesting! In his opinion MC is the worst! The video has been uploaded only about 10 days ago. MI (Moving Iron) invented and patended by Bang & Olufsen in the 60’s, SoundSmith made all B&O carts back then. SoundSmith required the licence from B&O 20 years ago and has improved MI design. Also the MMC design was invented and patented by Bang & Olufsen. The MMC cartridge is a variation of the Moving Iron (MI) design. Magnets and coils are stationary while a micro crossmoves with the stylus, thereby varying the distances between the arms of the cross and the magnets. It is claimed that the MMC design allows for superior channel separation, since each channel’s movements appear on a separate axis. What Peter didn’t said in his lecture is that all Grado cartridges use a derivation of the moving iron principle which features patented optimized transmission line cantilever technology, pivoted fixed axial stylus-generator module, and Grado’s flux-bridger generator system. My favorite is Joseph Grado Signature XTZ. How about that? Moving Magnet (MM) and Moving Iron (MI) cartridges: In a moving magnet cartridge, the stylus cantilever carries a tiny permanent magnet, which is positioned between two sets of fixed coils (in a stereophonic cartridge), forming a tiny electromagnetic generator. As the magnet vibrates in response to the stylus following the record groove, it induces a tiny current in the coils. Because the magnet is small and has little mass, and is not coupled mechanically to the generator (as in a ceramic cartridge), a properly adjusted stylus follows the groove more faithfully while requiring less tracking force (the downward pressure on the stylus). Moving Iron (MI) and Induced Magnet (IM) types (ADC TRX-2 being a well-known example) have a moving piece of iron or other ferrous alloy is coupled to the cantilever (instead of a magnet), while a permanent, bigger magnet is over the coils, providing the necessary magnetic flux. |
Guys, I've enjoyed this thread a lot. Thank You! It has opened up my eyes to mm/mi cartridges. I've been trying different ones the last 6 months or so & have enjoyed every one of them. Now granted that is only 3 cartridges. An old grado signature 8 that I put the XTZ stylus on. Now that one came with the 8 stylus originally & upgrading it to the XTZ was a huge improvement from top to bottom. I also own an empire 4000d/iii that I've tried three different stylus's on; Shibata, lp gears bliss, & an old walco (I believe). Although the shibato & bliss stylus's sounded remarkably better than the walco, they also brought with it a distortion at certain frequency that is absolutely irritating. If it were not for that I would absolutely love this cartridge. With the walco stylus in it, it lacks the resolution I'm looking for. I've tried the empire in a couple different tonearms (victor 7045 & Polestar) with the same results. I recently purchased a clearaudio virtuoso ebony cartridge new for little money & have to tell you this one is very nice. It doesn't have the "purity" of the empire but is close. It also doesn't have the irritating distortion. In short, I like it better than the LOMC's I've used in the past but would love to be able to eliminate the distortion issue with the empire, as that one seems to be glorious in every other aspect. Any suggestions? |
For over two years I have been searching for the elusive Victor X-1 MM cartridge with original intact stylus assembly (Shibata on beryllium). Thinking I had found one a few weeks ago.....it turned out to be a Victor 4MD-1X which I found to have astonishing performance for a mere $140...👅 I already own a NOS Victor X-1/IIE and two Z1 models (one with original stylus and one with a Jico SAS). All these Victors, combined with my Victor TT-81 and TT-101 turntables......have certainly qualified me as a Victor ’Groupie’ 😎 The admiration I have for their engineers and designers of the 70s and 80s is endless....and certainly higher than for even those at Fidelity Research and Micro-Seiki during the same ’Golden Age of Analogue’. Finally, two weeks ago.....HiFi Shark alerts me to a Victor X1, not just with its original stylus assembly, but also an original ’spare one’. HERE Frantic Auction bidding over the next 5 days pushed me to within $5 of my maximum limit (those Japanese audiophiles know their ’onions’) but I secured it. HERE It certainly wasn’t NOS (so Chakster was not a bidding competitor) and even the spare stylus looks to have some use.....but after the long wait, I was not prepared to let this one escape 🤪 It came with an aluminium Victor headshell as well as AT silver cartridge leads and I plugged it into my trusty Dynavector 507/II to see if it worked. It didn’t sound great...but at least both channels worked and I knew that a metal headshell would NOT be the resting place for this jewel. I smiled to myself as I pictured all the Reviewers and High-End Audiophiles who are stuck with tonearms ending in ’fixed’ metal headshells. Metal headshells in my experience......rarely allow a cartridge to show its ’best’. Only two of my 50+ cartridges reside in a metal shell.....👎 So I removed the X-1 from the Victor headshell and will probably try it with WOOD or CARBON FIBER. Let’s see how this ’threatened species’ of a cartridge compares to its brethren..... |
I just scored on a NOS Signet tk10ml for what I think is a reasonable price....$435. It now has about 20 hours on it and it sounds fantastic. I have now discovered that there was also a series 2 and a series 3 in later years. Does anyone know what the difference would be from series 1 to 3? Also, I wonder how it compares to the Audio Technica AT ML180 OCC? I do have a cartridge that compares very closely to the Signet. It is the Acutex lpm 320 str. |
Dear friends: This is a cartridge that along the ADC 25/26/27 or the B&O ones lmost no one cares about even that was mentioned here trhough the thread years, I'm talking of the:
Excel ES-70EX4 that I understand was its top of the line. Exel manufactured too MC cartridges and designed/manufacture ( even today. ) cartridges for other companies, so it's not a manufacturer with out good " credentials ". I mounted this model and really performs very good, it's a MM design that can competes whith any other top vintage and today MM cartridge but the mentioned ADC models. Recomended. Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R. |
Dear @florence4 and friends: https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/adc-26-best-pritchard-cartridge-ever-or-best-cartridge-ever R. |
So I guess I didn't spell it out clearly enough for some - T H E "E I N S T E I N T U R N T A B L E S C H O I C E" IS A MOVING COIL ONLY PHONO STAGE. THE ONLY POSSIBLE CARTRIDGES THAT IT COULD RUN OTHER THAN LOW TO MEDIUM OUTPUT MOVING COIL PHONO CARTRIDGES WOULD HAVE TO BE LOW OUTPUT. THE INPUT LOADING AVAILABLE ON THE EINSTEIN TURNTABLES CHOICE HAS A MAXIMUM OF 900 OHMS. THE ONLY NON MOVING COIL THAT I AM AWARE OF THAT WILL SUIT THIS PHONO STAGE IS THE SOUNDSMITH PAUA - LOW OUTPUT AND RECOMMENDED LOAD 500-1000 OHMS. I HAVE PERSONALLY HEARD THE SOUNDSMITH PAUA AND IT IS VERY GOOD. THE GRADO STATEMENT AND TOP WING LOW OUTPUT MM/MI CARTRIDGES BOTH REQUIRE 47K LOADING AND WOULD NOT BE OPTIMUM WITH THIS PHONO STAGE. |
@j2d2 @lewm Don’t think the Einsteins Choice suits MM cartridges, too much gain and low impedance input. ( Highest input impedance is 470ohms or 940ohms in balanced mode. ) The only possibilities I can see for that phono would be the Soundsmith & Grado low output MI cartridges. The Soundsmith low output MI’s generally pan out at around 470 ohms for best sound. |
J2d2, keep in mind that when calculating the resonant frequency, you need to include the mass of the headshell the screws and the cartridge in the equation. However taking the SME by itself, it would fall into the category of low to medium mass. I assume the quoted effective mass of the SME would include the mass of its OEM headshell. So, if you use a different headshell just remember to add or subtract the difference in weight between your aftermarket headshell and that of the SME, in grams. Which means it is highly flexible. Because you can mount a low compliance cartridge and use a heavy headshell to Increase the effective mass if you want to. Likewise your phono stage has enough gain for just about any cartridge one would reasonably want to think about. |
^ I agree, that´s why I sold my copy of JVC 4MD-20 (from the glory days of the cart of the month era) and it fits only for 100K Ohm impedance as is designed for 4 channel records, actually it sounded harsh at 47K. And all this lead my way to try much lower impedance values like 30K with certain MM cartridges with success, to my great delight. I think our Halcro can enlighten us more about low impedance values ... : ) |
Der friends: Now that I'm testing the ADC 26 I came back to the JVC 4MD-0 nd to the Acutex M320 and confirm what I posted in reference that the JVC has not the " drama " levels that we find out in live music and certainly in many cartridges as the M320. The JVC is a good performer but not at the level of the M320 or the 981Hz or MF2500 or JVC X1MK2. I hope that next week I can finish the 26 review. R. |
Dear @j2d2: This was my answer to your question in 08-31: @j2d2: Very good the Maestro and you can look too the Ortofon 2M Black or the Reson Reca or the Audio Note IQ3 or 2. and you can add de MI high output from SS ( it build similar B&O today design: SMCC1. ), AT Anniversary, Garrot, Sumiko, Grado. You have very good alternatives about. R. |
Of the contemporary mms which are the best for use in a system consisting of Avid Sequel SP table with a SME V arm, C-J CT 5 pre amp, Einstein Turntables Choice phono pre amp, Quicksilver 88 monos and Reference 3A Grand Veenas? I have always used low output mcs but have been thinking about moving magnets for sometime. Thanks, JD II |
Dear @lewm : Could be interesting to discuss about but in my case rigth now I can remember a cartridge that truly dislikes me. I think that as what we like has different levels/grades what we don't like has different levels too. Example I don't like the SPU quality performance levels but I do not dislike totally, cartridges almost always has something that makes it good. I think is more dificult to make a ranking list of what we really dislike as a cartridge that a ranking list of the ones we like it more. As a fact I never thougth about till today by your post. R. |
Actually, I own both MMs and LOMCs that I like very much, and I don’t think one type is categorically better than the other. But I do hear the differences that you refer to. MI and IM types are also to be respected highly. It might be interesting to discuss cartridges that one does not like. And say why. |
Der @lewm : "
I think”we” should refrain from assigning a cause to an audible effect, unless we have actual data to support the claimed relationships. For example, the relationship between the high inductance of an MM to how it sounds different from an MC. Pure speculation. (Raul and Robjerman) Moreover, it is my opinion, based only on listening that the best MMs are superior to good MCs precisely because they better convey the decay of musical instruments. The tendency to leap to conclusions with no data is more problematic even than having a negative opinion of something one has never heard. """ Decay time is a parameter with influence in transient response and transient speed we perceives and things are that you like more the MM in that regards but that does not means that LOMC " leap " some kind of signal information on that regards . For we can be sure @jcarr could explain in a precise way about, he is an expert with. R. |
@dover I have never heard the current P77i, only the first 2 iterations from the original Garrott Bros. Halcro I think has both old and new. Well, his "new" is JICO SAS (MicroRidge) made in Japan, it can be a Sapphire, Ruby or older Boron cantilever. @halcro you never tried new Garrott styli? I can not remove my stylus from the cartridge body, don't want to apply to much force just to check for those red dots. |
Dear dover, Congratulations with your memory. Considering your age that is. My is not what it ever was so I have sometime difficulty to remember the name of my mom. But I do remember very bed experience with lending carts and even with those which I give away as present. However the ''old barter'' or exchange are ok with me. But you should offer ''some'' of this ''holly water'' from (Dutch) New Zealand in exchange for my Magic Diamond. |
@chakster I have never heard the current P77i, only the first 2 iterations from the original Garrott Bros. Halcro I think has both old and new. @nandric I'm not sure I know enough for a full history, but I could consider adding Reto into the story. Perhaps you could send me your Magic Diamond cartridge so that I can spend a couple of years contemplating that prospect. Indeed both the Garrott Bros and Reto were and are true artisans, both with wide ranging engineering skills beyond cartridge design. |
Dear Dover, If you write the history of the Garrott Brothers you should not forget ''the third man'' , their little brother Reto Andreoli who went to Australia at age of 15 and speaking only German with intention to learn the trade from the (big) brothers. Reto went back to Switzerland and started his own company producing ''exotic carts'' ( Magic Diamond) and amps and publishing about his own ''analog philosophy''. |
@dover I suspect @chakster 's P77 is the original. It is not that rare - I have seen many samples that look identical to Chakster's P77 in Europe, US & here in New Zealand. It could also be the early P66 with the early P77 stylus. Good to know. This is probably the reason why i like my old Garrott. But what do you think about new styli they are offering now? |
@halcro And in @chakster s 2nd photo above the stylus assembly is from the P66 ( black body ). It is not a Microtracer as described on the packaging. https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/qBQAAOSw~SdbaWSA/s-l1600.jpg Probably someone upgraded a P66 to a P77 and stuffed the P66 stylus into the P77 packaging. |