@halcro I suspect @chakster 's P77 is the original. It is not that rare - I have seen many samples that look identical to Chakster's P77 in Europe, US & here in New Zealand. It could also be the early P66 with the early P77 stylus.
Now in terms of stylus the early P77 used the Weinz sourced Parabolic. These were superb and underwent a time consuming triple polishing process specifically for the Garrotts. Weinz died in 1980 and at some stage the Garrott's ran out of original Weinz Styli. They managed to get the Weinz shape copied in Japan - probably by Namiki. Here is the official description from the 2nd version "Dynamic Coil" P77 - "GARROTT GRAIN-ORIENTED MICROTRACER PARABOLIC STYLUS".
I know that in the mid 80's when I was a dealer they were offering both the "Weinz Parabolic" and the new "Microscanner" ( also known as "Microridge" ) from Namiki contemporaneously for retips. The Microscanner had the ridge around the bottom, the Parabolic did not, so their description MICROTRACER PARABOLIC in the official blurb for the 2nd version of the P77 is misleading, but probably means that it was the Namiki sourced parabolic ( Not a microscanner profile )..
Garrott's had strong views on matching tip profiles and cantilever materials to specific cartridges. For example Brian built me a custom Denon 103 with Boron cantilever and Weinz Parabolic tip - refused to put a Microscanner on this cartridge.
They also tweaked cartridges whilst retipping - for example Koetsu's "worst built cartridge in the world" were often tweaked internally. The motor assemblies in stone bodied Koetsu's in the 80's for example were held in by paper shims, which were usually eliminated by Garrotts but they did not advertise these tweaks/mods.
|
Dear @florence4 : As you said: long time ago. Unfortunatelly almost no one tooks seriously the advise, maybe because new vintage cartridge recomendations came almost each single day. Too many and we have to make a choice for some of them and ADC was not very well regarded even today.
Good that you own it.
R. |
Raul. Thank you very much for the clarification. It’s a big help. (I i had actually purchase it based on your recommendation long time ago. ). I’ll have to give it a listen... |
Dear @florence4 : The black one is for the ADC 25 and the white color is the 26 that came with white cartridge body color too.
About that " red dot " I will try to explain it through the ADC forthcoming review.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R. |
|
I have a complete NOS Pickering ZSV7500, body and stylus.
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.
|
I assume you mean "moot" or was this a Freudian slip ! Haha..... Thanks for chiming in Dover as I know I can trust your information...... So what is your opinion of Chakster's P77? Is it the first version you speak of with the Weinz Parabolic?.....and the stylus in the EBay images that Chakster posted, sure looks different to mine. Chakster, in your new photo.....can I detect a bit of red playdough peeking out at the junction to the black cartridge body? If you pull out the stylus assembly, you may find the stuff I'm talking about 😎 |
@halcro I know for sure that my Garrott generator is not new, because ALL new versions have Dynamic Coil stamp on the frontside, check their website. This is what you can buy right now, and there will be Dynamic Coil logo. My cartridge is P77, it does not have this logo and i have never seen this model for sale, the stylus is not P77i (the "i" is a new version). Here is another picture of my P77 I bought it from Jasper in Australia, who is a member of audiogon too, he’s one of those few audiophiles who documented an hrs of play for each of his cartridges. His Garrott P77 and its stylus does not came from https://garrottbrothers.com/ which could be an easiest way for Australian citizen. He never tried those new styli. But one of the Garrott p77 styli has been sold on ebay last month, few pictures from that sold listing: https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/iZwAAOSwnKdbaWYt/s-l1600.jpghttps://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/qBQAAOSw~SdbaWSA/s-l1600.jpghttps://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/RAIAAOSwlXNbaWTH/s-l1600.jpghttps://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/QwIAAOSwxgtbaWUJ/s-l1600.jpg https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/cwcAAOSwsndbaWUe/s-l1600.jpgAnd thanks @dover for additional info, very interesting. And the last argument is that i really liked the sound of my Garrott on Reed 3p "12, i have a better vintage cartridges, but the Garrott was close and definitely among my favorites. One day i will try those new styli. |
The question is not anymore which cart is better but ''who knows better''? Because I like Dover I think that he knows better (grin). |
@halcro All their P77 cartridges had the raised lettering DYNAMIC COIL cast with the plastic body. Not so. The Garrotts first P77 was the Cambridge based version with Weinz Parabolic. This was produced when Brian & John first started their re-tipping business with the Weinz diamond. Then they introduced the 2nd version of the Garrott P77, the "Dynamic Coil" version with their own design mods. The 2 versions of the P77 produced by the original Garrott Bros are radically different in sound - the Dynamic Coil version having a much more expansive and dynamic midrange than the first. comparing the sound we hear with our two samples, is mute. I assume you mean "moot" or was this a Freudian slip ! |
I hate to be the bearer of bad news Chakster.....but your Garrott P77 is NOT an original cartridge produced by John and Brian Garrott whilst they were alive. All their P77 cartridges had the raised lettering DYNAMIC COIL cast with the plastic body. Perhaps Raul can confirm if that wording is also part of his Cambridge A&R P77 cartridge body? The stylus assembly also appears to not be original..... Compare the perfection of the finish on the gold 'tab' of your cartridge with that of my original and compare the proportions of the gold 'tab' which are decidedly different to the 'original' and results in the relationships to the visible red plastic sides and bottom, being different. Then compare the font of your 'P-77' against my original where the 'P' and '7s' are noticeably different. This is a dead giveaway. I suspect that your stylus assembly is identical to the one you can still buy from the 'new' Garrott Bros in Melbourne, nominated on their Website as Ps-77. That's why I told you to confirm if you had the red playdough on the back of the red plastic stylus assembly..... If yours does not have any.....it is NOT a Garrott Bros original. As I stated before......as you do not possess an original Garrott Bros P77 cartridge......any discussion between us, comparing the sound we hear with our two samples, is mute. |
There are ONLY two type of Garrott cartridges as far as i know: @halcro 1) One made by brothers and it's called P77 there is no "Dynamic Coil" sign on the generator, at least on my old samle which i bought from another reputable Australian audiophile years ago. 2) Another one is called P77i where "i" is for "improved". This is the cartridge with "Dynamic Coil" sign on the front side of the generator. New Ps77 and Ps77i styli available from Garrott for 300 and 400 AUD. |
Yes, but i have an old original motor (generator) and many of us have it too, so the stylus is what we can try on it. You're very good with pictures Chakster. Can you post one of your original P77 with the stylus assembly showing the red Playdough? FYI.....original Garrott P77 cartridges are some of the rarest in the world as they were hand-produced by one man in Australia, so to say "many of us have it too" is incorrect. The Garrott based on A&R is nothing special, i believe they were able to dublicate it for new production? Not true...on both counts. Where is your evidence? Maybe the original P77 "is nothing special"....but with the Jico SAS stylus assembly.....it becomes astonishing. But this is something you don't know 🤗 |
Raul. ADC 26 Stylus- what do you mean red dot? I own two styluses, one is white color and second is black in color. Both with gold dot inside the styluses, but no red dot. Can you tell which stylus I own? |
|
@halcro
So the new Garrott P77i has a different motor, body, stylus and cantilever. You may as well be comparing apples and oranges....
Yes, but i have an old original motor (generator) and many of us have it too, so the stylus is what we can try on it. The Garrott based on A&R is nothing special, i believe they were able to dublicate it for new production? |
@j2d2
Since the AT 170 is no longer available, how about the Clearaudio Maestro? What else? I've never used anything other than a moving coil, but am tired of paying so much money and will buy a mm if there is a very good one available. If so, what is it?
If you will read Halcro's post above you will see that VINTAGE cartridges is the key. To find NOS (New Old Stock) or lightly used one from a fellow collector is a part of the game. You can buy new cartridges everyday online at any shop, but top quality vintage MM or MC cartridges is another story. I know many people on audiogon with big collections of the great cartridges from the 70s/80s. Even if you will buy a new cartridge, my advice is so find some special vintage MM and then you can compare them in your system. Then you can understand why the MM carts from the 80s are so special compared to new MM cartridges. Vintage cartridges does not lose its value on the market, so no risk to lose money on it. |
Dear friends: aafor the ADC to test it I found out some other cartidges as Excel tha was and is very well regarded jpanese cartridge mnufacturer for its own label and for many other OEM cartridge names as today Hanna or the very high price Etsuro LOMC cartridge.
It is the next in line from the aDC one.
R. |
Dear friends: As I said the 4MD-20X is very good performer with less drama than the great Acutex M320 and this less/lower " drama " makes that its sound been more relaxed that music in a live event but this you can be aware only trhough same time comparison to other top carrtridges.
In this week end I will try to make the set up and listening sessions with the ADC 26. First I have to look not only where the cartridges are but what other " things " I have for it.
R. |
Dear @lewm : I already tested my 981HZ and I made something similar as you with the original Stanton cartridge and yes there is an improvement but in direct comparison with the same 981HZ and the Pickering stylus this one defenitive outperforms the original even with your moded help.
If you can try to find out the Pickering XSV 5000 or 7500 stylus replacement, good rewards about.
Btw, in the old times when I bougth the ADC Atrion ( 235.00 ) and due that the cantilever/stylus holder was a little loose what I did it ( something stupid, I think but it works. ) was to glñued. I still have it and years ago I bougth a second sample to compare it and obviously the glued one beats it. I sold the second sample.
R. |
|
@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.
R. |
Chackster (or whoever), Since the AT 170 is no longer available, how about the Clearaudio Maestro? What else? I've never used anything other than a moving coil, but am tired of paying so much money and will buy a mm if there is a very good one available. If so, what is it? |
Dear @halcro : I own the original A&R, the original Garrot and the SAS replacement.
I know you are a real expert on these cartridges and I know this fact not because your latest post but from many years ago.
Jico makes very good cantilevr/stylus replacements my first hand experiences are like the ones you had.
Sometimes problems with any manufacturer of that kind of replacements belongs to the cantilever/stylus holder that’s not exactly or with the same precision than the original but the Jico cantilever/stylus job is really good.
Anyway, we all know that always our knowledge levels is what makes we talk and that knowledge levels we all know are different. Example: that’s why a " roockie " in any sport or even in audio will stays as a " rookie " status till improves his knowledge levels on that sport or whatever he is doing.
Well, time to switch to the ADC 26 and now that you named A&R time too. The SAS is almost new, never mounted with.
R. |
Dear @audpulse : The LOMC characteristics that made the " differences " are: transient response fast decay time at both frequency extremes. The quality performance at both frequency extremes is better in the LOMC cartridges.
No, I'm not saying than in a MM/MI top designs those frequency extremes or transiente response be wrong/bad: no, I only just saying that in LOMC those characteristics are better.
As I said, as better your room/audio system quality level performance as better you can be aware and attest about.
We can't be aware about if the systems not achieved yet the kind of resolution need it for.
R. |
The original Garrott P77 used the body and motor of the A&R P77 from England which has not been available for 30 years I believe. So the new Garrott P77i has a different motor, body, stylus and cantilever. You may as well be comparing apples and oranges.... |
Dear @audpulse : Maybe I have it, who knows rigth now. I still own several cartridges that I never listened the 4MD-20X was an example of that and if @halcro did not posted here maybe I almost never " look at ".
Even that this JVC MM cartridge was manufactured by Audio Technica its quality level performance is different to all the top AT carrtridges including its MM anniversary model and I can say that outperforms all the ATs.
Btw, @j2d2 rigth now forgeret about those ATs and try to find out the JVC 4MD-20X or the B&O MMC 1/2 or ADCD 26 ( red dot. ), Shure ones, etc, etc there are several options.
audpulse, yes the main trouble with LOMC carrtridges resides in its really crazy prices that maybe justify the designer efforts and the low customer quantity but certainly does not justify in the same way against its quality performance levels.
I know ( and halcro and I disagree in this. ) that LOMC good designs performs better than the best MM/MI cartridges issue is that the LOMC designs are wextremely demanding ( against the MM/MI needs. ) with what are surrounded in any room/audio system and through a LOMC cartridges any " not perfect " characteristic in any of the links in the chain system will goes out, it can't stay hide as happens with the MM/MI designs that I know by first hand experiences hides " system problems ".
If we don't like enough a good LOMC design cartridge performance I can tell you it's not because the LOMC link but because exist a " trouble " somewhere in the room/audio system. As better your system as better you can appreciate/be aware of what I'm telling here about.
Anyway, the LOMC prices still is the big problem and is far away to goes down but goes through the time higher and higher. Like you say always are gentlemans that are proudly to own high price items, as higher the better for them.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R. |
I think i was correct by saying that SAS is an improvement for mediocre cartridges, but not an improvement for the state-of-the-art cartridges because they are already comes with the best cantilevers and the best styli (Boron/Beryllium .. MicroRidge, MicroLine, Shibata...). I believe in what you’re sayin that Garrott p77 (i have the original old model) can be better with SAS stylus profile, but Technics EPC-205c mk4 is not better with SAS profile, because the original cantilever and stylus tip mass are very special in its own way. Yes, only one example, but it was obvious for me and i am not talking about cartridges/styli combinations that i haven’t tried myself. BTW the tylus tip on p77 series (old and new) is not an "Elliptical" ! The principal difference between the two Garrott Cartridges is the Stylus Assembly. The new P-77i is fitted with a Micro Scanner MKII diamond and tuned accordingly. The old P-77 uses a Micro Tracer Diamond. The sound of the new MSMKII is more extended at both ends of the Audio spectrum therefore sweeter treble and deeper bass with overall flatter Frequency response (worth to try). So what i am tryin’ to say that SAS is not panacea for ALL cartridges. First of all: Jico SAS does not produce styli for all vintage cartridges, for the SAS i have only one cartridge and this cartridge is Garrott P77. There are many more vintage cartridge that i prefer over the P77 (which i have not used for a long time, since my Reed arm was removed). Since it’s not a problem to buy new SAS anytime, i always have more interest towards original vintage MM. P.S. Mr. Philippe Luder, Managing Director of Garrott Brothers today, is a nice guy. Some of the top Garrott carts comes with Ruby Cantilevers and Fritz Gyger tip (the most complicated stylus tip ever). A person who bank rolled the brothers when they were alive back in the days, posted a nice article and said he was there incognito to make sure about new management of the new Garrott Brothers company. He was very posivtive about people who runs the company today. @halcro The SAS improves my Victor Z1 immeasurably over the Victor original and makes it sound better than my NOS Victor X-1IIE. But not better than Victor X-1 and X-II with Beryllium Cantilever and Shibata stylus tip? :)) |
THIS is what the original stylus assembly from the Garrott Bros looks like. If yours doesn't look like this, then you don't have an original Garrott Bros stylus. There was nothing special about the assembly. It used a 'selected' elliptical stylus on an aluminium cantilever and their assembly was a sloppy fit which Brian Garrott attempted to fix by attaching red playdough on the edges to reduce the loose play. If yours doesn't have the red playdough....you don't have an original Garrott Bros P77 and there is no use you talking about it. The new Garrott Bros Company was formed after the Garrott Bros died and their new cartridges have nothing to do with the original. HERE you can see some of the red playdough on the red plastic. And HERE you see some red playdough remnants on the front of the P77 with its Neo SAS on Ruby cantilever. THIS is the SAS with Boron cantilever whilst THIS is the Neo SAS with Sapphire cantilever and THIS is the Neo SAS with Ruby cantilever. What you say about the SAS stylus assembly is ridiculous....... You have experience with just one cartridge and base your opinion on this.....🤪? The SAS improves my Shure V15/III immeasurably over the Shure original. The SAS improves my Victor Z1 immeasurably over the Victor original and makes it sound better than my NOS Victor X-1IIE. The SAS improves my ORIGINAL Garrott P77 out of sight just as the Neo-SAS (S) and Neo-SAS (R) do. The quality of the SAS assemblies (especially the Neo-SAS) leaves every other OEM behind. What you say about the SAS contradicts everything you have been saying in every Post on these Forums. To paraphrase you....."How can anyone compare a conical or elliptical stylus on aluminium cantilever with a Fine-Line or Microridge stylus on a Boron cantilever?" Yet you now claim the opposite... And you also contradict what you have continually preached to all others about not commenting on things you haven't heard.....🤬 Well...until you actually HEAR an original Garrott P77 with SAS stylus....please refrain from any statements or comparisons. |
@halcro
I have three original Garrott P77 cartridges, all bought directly from John and Brian Garrott with two of them having re-tips done by Brian. Can you explain why you have retipped MM cartridges? The original replacement styli still available for P77 series from Garrott in Australia. Have you tried the last generation P77i ? Whilst having a seductive analogue richness in their delivery....the highs and detail-delivery could not compete with the best designs (both vintage and modern). This was completely transformed with the insertion of the Jico SAS stylus assembly and if Chakster were to hear this on his own P77...perhaps his views may change a little?
SAS is indeed a good option to upgrade some mediocre styli on MM cartridges, but SAS can not even come close to the best original styli. My experience with Technics EPC-205c mk4 is a good example. The original Technics stylus is a killer (state-of-the-art), JICO SAS makes no sense for this particular cartridge. |
@j2d2
Just checked the Audio Technica website and dont see the ATML 170 - 180 listed.
The AT-ML180 has been discontinued in the 90's and the AT-ML170 even erlier. In my opinion they are the best MM cartridges ever made, extremely hard to find nowadays. MM cartridges are out of fashion today, but the price for a vintage AT-ML-180 MM is higher than for a brand new ART-9 MC.
|
August 31st: Just checked the Audio Technica website and dont see the ATML 170 - 180 listed. Does AT have an equivalent? For use in my AVID Sequel tt with SME V arm, Einstein Turntables Choice into a ?C-J CT 5 pre amp. |
Raul, it is nice to know that you like the JVC 4MD-20X and that you think it is perfect.Just like Halcro alluded to, wait till you listen to the 4MD-1X. It is in a different league.I have both of them and have since been looking for another 4MD-1X.The question that I am always asking myself is why are mc costing thousands of dollars after hearing what the JVC's are capable of doing. If audiophiles can go on a hunt for more mm gens out there and stop buying mc , maybe, just maybe the cost of mc will go down south.We live in a world were a few audiophiles that are not music lovers and have huge pockets will always gravitate to the expensive mega mc thinking that they have achieved the pinnacle of music reproduction. The reviewers are not helping either. When was the last time you read about a two hundred dollars nos cartridge been showered with praises. Raul I think there are still more nos mm gems that are still out there.Keep up the hunt fellows.
|
Something a little weird with this JVC cartridge is that its serial number has 8-9 digits !
R. |
Dear friends: Here something important listen experiences with my JVC 4MD-20X sample. As you can imagine it's an extraordinary tracker, its abilities are second to none: through my very demanding evaluation/test cartridge proccess its run both frequency extremes not only so easy but with a " calm " that's admirable it does not matters if was playing the Telarc 1812 cannon shots or really dificult Carrillon grooves or the Dafos or Fiesta or Symphonic Fantastique ( RR recording. ) last movement or just the Apassionata great Bethoven composition: just a champ about.
Other cartridge characteristics is the exceptional layering definition where you can " touch " each layer, its great focus, dynamics transiente response and rythm. Tonal balance?, just " perfect. Female voices are sometyhing to listen to this JVC cartridge, Montserrat Caballe sounds as " heaven " but P.Barber or M.Black, Dido, D.Krall, E.Cassidy, DShuur, Nah Youn Sun. If we take jazz or blues compositions by M.Davis or whatever you want it I'm sure any one will enjoy to do it.
Yes, I'm very found with this cartridge. Is " perfect " no nothing is.
@halcro , I read it through the net. Even that the cartridge body ( with different build materials. ) looks as the 20SS I agree with you that the cartridge comes with shorter cantilever than the AT ones and your other model even shorter.
I can't remember how much I paid for it but certainly had to be at those times low price for a no regarded MM cartridge. I bougth it but only today I'm knowing its quality perfomance levels.
As everything audio item evaluations depends mainly on the room/audio system quality level performance and each one of us music/sound priorities and knowledge levels about.
As I already posted, this cartridge motor deserves today better cantilever/stylus shape and fine tune suspension.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R. |
Dear Raul, I’m pleased to hear you like the 4MD-20X. Are you sure that it has a beryllium cantilever? I’m interested in learning where you found that information? The 4MD-1X is, as I reported earlier.....even better than the 20X and its cantilever is shorter. It can also be found for ridiculously low prices ($120-140) 🤪 I’ve owned the Lyra Helikon, Titan i and Atlas and could only live with the Helikon. The Titan i and Atlas sounded to me, so divorced from the essence of realistic musical reproduction that I puzzle over their euphoric advocates....🤔 I’ve also owned the Koetsu Urishi, VdH Grasshopper, Clearaudio Concerto and Insider Gold, Dynavector XV-1s, ZYX UNIverse, the Denon DL-103R, the AT-33Mono, the Victor MC-L1000 and Acoustical Systems Palladian and can attest that only the Palladian equals the performances of the Fidelity Research FR-7f, the Sony XL-88, the SPU Ae Gold and Silver Meister II, and the JMAS MIT-1. Even the Sony XL-55 gives me more insight and joy than the previously mentioned LOMC cartridges. Yet I own more than a dozen vintage MM cartridges which compete with (or exceed) the performances of ALL the above mentioned LOMC cartridges and cost fractions of their prices. So on this point Raul.....we have to agree to disagree 🤗 Regards |
Dear friends: I already listen for a few days my JVC 4MD-20X MM cartridge that as I posted was manufactured by Audio Technica expressely to JVC specs/characteristics.
Comes with Shibata stylus shape and berylium cantilever and with a 2mv of output level, as you can imagine is a high compliance design. It came from the 70’s years. Yes, loaded at 100k.
My sample is a NOS unit and after mounted and listen with a VTF of 1.6grs I noted that’s taller than other " normal " cartridges. VTA/SRA a little up at the tail.
In the first minutes to listen it it sounds dull with almost no real high frequency range even that in its frequency response chart showed a tilt from around 17khz and up.
It took several hours for the cartridge " opened " to shows at its best. It took way more time that other MM cartridges. I have to say that the cantilever/stylus holder makes very good grip against the cartridge body that lower resonance/vibrations in between, this is a good thing that I appreciated.
Even that came from AT it does not mimic other top AT cartridges and if I need to compare it maybe the nearest sound is the one from the great AT24.
Anyway, overall is a very nice finding because I own it from several years and never listened till halcro just posted about. It’s one of the lowest distortion levels on all the MM/MI crtridges I experienced and where at both frequency extremes are nearest to the quality performance that comes in a good LOMC cartridge, especially in the bass range where shows a tigth and fast decay time.
At the begening I was feeling that the cartridge was not very good at high frequencies as if losted " drama " but it is not that way. Things are that that lower any kind of distortions makes we can hear that way, so I gone a little up with the listen SPL at around 1db+ and now I can say that this 4MD-20X is a keeper/winner and over the future time due to its great " motor " a strong candidate for a boron/Ogura/MR today replacement. Yes, it’s that good.
Highly recomended and a must to own/listen it. Not very dificult to find out, I don’t know if still exist the ebay link for the cartridge sale that I posted its link a few days ago. I think was/is in NOS condition.
Was a true refreshment for me. Now, that I want to listen other cartridges I just can’t because this JVC just capture me ! and I want to following with. No, it's not a top today LOMC unit or alike to but nearest than I imagined.
Regrads and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R. |
Dear @orpheus10 : Grado merans quality. I own and owned several vintage Grado cartridges and never disapointed me. So even that I did not listen the today Grado models I know for sure that are very good and that's why you are so happy with. Congratulations !.
R. |
|
Dear @cleeds : Sometimes things are so obviously that you just don't need to listen it and your self knowledge levels/wide experiences makes the differences for you don't need to listen it.
R. |
Dear @lewm : """
might degrade the signal a bit, """
only a " bit " , seriously? you can listen to the Etna against the ETNA SL that has a little lower output, maybe two round less wire at the cartridge coils ( I don't know for sure. ) and you can listenan important difference for the better.
So, forme the degradation of what we are talking about is not a " bit " but greater than that. Think about.
R. |
chaksterPeople comment on stuff that they never heard, never tried. Quite so. I'm dealing with this now in another thread.
|
"People comment on stuff that they never heard, never tried. This is typical audiogon today, pretty sad" Chakster, what you say is true, but don't you realize that you are also often guilty of this foible? Read some of your own posts, if not. Nobody's perfect.
|
Well, I would only agree that the added ICs and connectors (input and output) in the signal path, when you use an outboard "head amplifier" or "pre-preamplifier" might degrade the signal a bit, but otherwise devices like the ZYX only are doing in another box what is done IN the box, when one is using many high-gain phono stages. (This is not true of my own MP1 or Raul's phonolinepreamp or for one more example, Allen Wright's RTP3C, because all 3 of those have one single very high gain stage right at the input; there are not two stages of gain needed to bring up the signal voltage of an LOMC before RIAA correction. I'm sure there are other examples of this approach.) But many other high gain phono stages suitable for LOMC have a built-in pure gain stage ahead of what is really an MM phono section that adds additional gain after the input gain stage and before RIAA correction. That's how those devices achieve compatibility with both MC and MM cartridges; if you choose MM, the signal bypasses that input gain stage. Not so different from having a built-in SUT vs having an outboard SUT; the advantage of the former is fewer connectors and wires.
|
@rauliruegas
Any external SUT or headamp needs additional cables, connectors and cable soldered joints from where the delicated LOMC cartridge signal must pass and where suffer severe degradations.
Just imagine any cartridge signal passing and traveling " hundred of miles " inside that unit, we can have only heavy degradation. That item was designed to a price point market average/mediocre market.
Right, better listen to DIGITAL then, you can even avoid tonearm |
|
I'll take a matched pair of metal-film resistors any day over those copper coils! |
Dear friends: Just imagine any cartridge signal passing and traveling " hundred of miles " inside that unit, we can have only heavy degradation. That item was designed to a price point market average/mediocre market.
Universe II through that item? just make no sense.
If we use an average/mediocre audio items that's exactly what we listen through our room/system but to each his own.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R. |
Dear @lewm : I unknow why owning an active phonolinepreamp you are doing so many questions about a headamp/pre-pre that only degrades the LOMC cartridge signal against your unit and even that yours has tubes in the signal path.
Any external SUT or headamp needs additional cables, connectors and cable soldered joints from where the delicated LOMC cartridge signal must pass and where suffer severe degradations.
Now, ZYX must know that a cartridge is a balanced device and its unit is not balanced design ! ! go figure and if you look inside is full of connecting cables instead to be all soldered directly to the board. It's that ZYX things that we are analog " rookies ". In its Artisan model its RIAA deviation is a very high 0.4db swing when any decent phono stage comes with a +,- 0.1db.
ZYX has very good cartridge designs and I think that you can attest it with your Universe.
Many things makes no sense here for say the least.
R. |
Dear @roberjerman @orpheus10 : Yes, no matter what MM are high inductance cartridges where MI has really lower inductance: 2-3/5 times lower that the MM inductance.
""
It slows transient speed. And the loose suspension used allows for a form of frequency-modulated (FM) distortion....""
that's correct and any one can attest it in a comparison evaluation where no MM can even the trasient speed of a well regarded LOMC cartridge not even the MI that are closer to. FIM distortion is higher too.
I remember that I posted here that the MM/MI cartridges sounds with lower distortions than the best LOMC ones and remember too that J.Carr posted that was the other way around but on those old times my enthusiams/emotions just closed my eys/ears about.
Btw, yeras ago SS was licensed by B&O not only to be an official B/O rettiper but to use its patents to produce/build its own cartridges. I own B&O cartridges and listen it SS top model and none compares against top LOMC like the VDH or Etna SL.
Every manufacturer is deep founded in what they build and have on sale.
Now, in cartridges the main subject is the " sum of the design parts " and its quality level excecution. One characterisitc can't says everything.
R. |