Btw, according to the seller ( Lewm, this is the same source from what you bought an Empire stylus replacement. ) the enginners in Nagatron came from Shure brothers and instead the cartridge design been a MM one ( as Shure. ) is a MI one.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Stltrains: According my notes I mounted the Nagatron 9600 in the Grace 945 with a magnesium Audio Technica MS-8 headshell, running at 1.25grs with positive ( tiny. ) SRA/VTA, dead center azymuth , no antiskating, 100k on load impedance and 100pf added capacitance.
Regrads and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Hello Danny (Acman3)
Can I ask what VTF you were tracking with on the AT7V before you changed to the other cartridge?
Cheers Chris |
Hi Folks
Following on the earlier discussion about LO vs HO, and low Inductance vs High Inductance...
I used my Pickering stereohedron D7500S stylus in an XLZ7500 and a XSP3003 - basically the HO-High Inductance body vs the LO-Low Inductance body - using the same stylus,
I started by measuring Frequency response, and square waves at differing loads for each setup - and then set the loadings on both to a value that provided one of the better square wave results (minimised overshoot), along with almost identical Frequency response (within 0.2db of each other, and the 0.2db difference is at above 20kHz).
I then recorded a series of tracks with both, and adjusted the levels so both recordings have matched levels.
Not suprisingly they sound the same - are they truly identical... no, the LO body has higher noise levels by about 6db (a product of the additional gain required I assume)... but in terms of sound - I am struggling to differentiate between them. I will be doing some more listening to these over the next couple of days, and will report my findings, but my initial "gut" response is - why bother?
The other thing that is worthy of note is that the XSP3003 is a low inductance high output design - 250mH. So I am not comparing a 600mH+ design vs the 1mH LO cartridge. That would be quite a different comparison - would be interesting having a Stanton 880 - 510mH body to add to the comparison.
Another aspect of this comparison was configuring the electrical loading to ensure that it was critically damped (no resonance) - with some drop off in the high end to balance out the cantilever's mechanical resonance slightly (m-resonance at 20kHz).
Other statistics I took showed that dynamics (peaks compared to average) were within the margins of error of my tools - no difference there either.
By the way - these two sound excellent, and I have been enjoying listening to them.
bye for now
David |
Raul thanks for sharing this info. Sense you have the same 9600 what discoverys have you come up with vta/vtf. Really looking forward to what this cartridge will bring. Mike |
Dear Stltrains/Acman3/friends: All this day I been in touch with the nagatron seller through several emails.
The cartridge that any one of you will receive is exactly like mine " refurbished ". This is an email from the seller that explain about:
+++++ " Hi This is a very complicated subject and I hope I do not run out of room trying to explain. I was contacted by the past president of Nagatron (David Monoson probably in his eighties)in October of 2010 regarding the sale of the remaining Nagatronics inventory (By the way, this was a personal purchase of mine and not related to the Garage-A-Records). This included the 9600 cartridges, Z couplers and a bunch of other misc cartridges etc. Nothing was boxed and all of the cartridges were in clear plastic vials without spec sheets but were labeled the lid of the vial. I also received a notebook with some promo pictures a couple of spec sheets for other cartridges. I assumed everything was new except for the items already installed on headshells. I did nt have any info on the 9600's except for a picture with the features I listed on the ebay ad. I tested one of the cartridges and it sounded super and started marketing them on ebay. In April as I was looking at the remaining ones I noticed that a couple of the cartridges had what appeared to be experimental styli on them. This was a shock to me as I had no reason to think that all of the cartridges did not have the same stylus inserted. Since I did not have any "real" data as to what tip was actually there I decided that specifing "ELLIPTICAL" would be a "best" representation of what the cartridge actually had and listing the condition as "Manufacturer Refurbished" . I think that towards the end of the company life, they could no longer get the triangular stylus and were scratching heads to see what would work in this phenomenal cartridge body that they created. All of the styli on the 9600's have a green marking on the cantilever and were made for nagatron and are not current aftermarked styli, I do know that. What I do not know is what the actual tip size and have no way of actually determining that. They could be triangular, hyperelliptical or elliptical, I just honestly do not know. Hope this all helps! """""""++++
the build quality on the cartridge is first rate and you will be the best judge on its quality performance level ( btw, the cartridge needs more than 20 hours to shows at its best. ).
Btw, for that persons that have interest on SUTs nagatron builded a very fine unit named: Ag 9200 Z coupler. They designed for its 0.04mv output ribbon cartridge: """ features chemically pure silver windings and very short magnetic circuit; selector for balanced or unbalanced line hook-up. Input impedance 3 ohms; output impedance 33 kohms; load resistance 47kohms min.; gain 40 db and price in 1980: 325.00 dollars.
I understand that this same seller has some NOS units on ebay and you can contact direct and ask about.
I HAVE NO REALATIONSHIP WITH THE SELLER IN ANYWAY other that I'm a customer from him on the Nagatron cartridge.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
The seller got back with me and there will be know setup info included. And the net is not any help either going in the dark should be interesting. |
Hi Raul, Thank you for the information on the Nagatron. I'm sure it will work out OK. |
Raul I believe for the asking price you can't go wrong and bought a 9600. I asked some questions but no response yet. Your last post helped make my decision. Hope more setup info is included with the package. Mike |
Dear Acman3: I bought this cartridge through ebay/same seller last November where he stated: " Semi-line nude stylus ".
I was unaware of what the seller states this time till your post.
Now, I deal in the past 3-4 times with this seller and on each one he was honest on what he states. I don't have any doubt ( as Lewm that in this regards is sceptic. ) that the cartridge comes with a Nagatron stylus , not an after market one , as the seller states.
The information I have on this Nagatron cartridge is this:
+++ " tapered, tubular boron cantilever, frequency response 20-30,000 Hz; output 2mv; channel balance/separation 1db/27 db at 1 000 Hz; dynamic compliance 15cu at 100 Hz; tracking force range 0.9-1.3 g; triangle-tip elliptical semi-line contact stylus; effective mass 0.031 mg; weight 7.6 g. " +++++
this is supposed the one I own but with out the one in the today seller ad I can't comapre through microscope.
The 9600 in 1980 had a retail price of 225.00
Now, all the Nagatron top models I know, including the 350/360 in the 300 series that I own, comes with elliptical stylus tip and aluminum or carbon fiber cantilevers Only the 9600 is " elliptical semi-line contact " with boron cantilever. My take is that more than the stylus shape if there is a quality performance differences could be because the different cantilever build material but I think that the cartridge signature is still there to both cartridges.
I hope this can help you and no there is no stylus replacement source that I know.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Nandric and Acman, I am a bit disappointed in the integrity of some who sell these unusual items. One company we know about says on their website that "all" their styli are NOS, when we know thanks to others that this is not so, at least for their "Acutex" styli. (I am not referring to Garage-a-records; I know nothing about them.) And this is not meant to cast any aspersions on the seller in the eBay ad. I was just suggesting that buyers should ask questions about the provenance of that elliptical stylus. |
Hello Lewm, The seller is actually from Garage a Records. So at least it is a actual company but as always "Caveat emptor".
Now if I can only find a triangle stylus.
Thanks, Danny |
Dear Lew, 'Caveat emptor' is an old 'rule' from the Roman Law. But the buyer has the right to demand what is promissed or suggested in the listing. I assume that nobody will risk a negative feedback for, say, $200. However one should always ask about the details if anything is not quite clear. Regards, |
With regard to Acman's question, I am wondering whether or not there is some double-talk on that eBay ad. The seller is allowing us to think that the elliptical stylus on the cartridge is an original made-by-Nagatronic stylus that was offered as an alternative to the "triangular" stylus, or in late production after Nagatron may have ceased to supply the triangular one, This is all well and good, but he never comes out and says so explicitly. Therefore I wonder whether he is supplying an after-market stylus assembly, which could be good or bad. Caveat emptor. |
Hello Raul, I was just beginning to post a question about that Nagatron when your post to Stltrains came through. I got one yesterday.
What is the difference between the Elliptical and Triangle and where can you get replacement stylus?
Thanks |
Raul im on it and many thanks. |
Dear Stltrains: This one is worth to try it too:
http://cgi.ebay.com/Nagatron-9600-Cartridge-Stylus-/320720331248?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item4aac6be1f0#ht_1247wt_1139
Nagatron was a company with very " low profile " or at least not very good knowed by audio people but its cartridges designs ( this one was top of the line in its times. ) are exceptional ones and at that " ridiculous " price for a NOS unit IMHO you can't let pass it.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Here it is:
http://www.kubotek.com/haniwaaudio/p_cartridge.html
Internal resistance (shown here as "output impedance") = 0.8 ohms!!! Inductance = 1.3 microhenries!!!! Yes, that's "micro", not "milli", as we are used to seeing for MM cartridges.
Yet, output is 0.35 mV and tracks at near 1.0 gm.
Probably you should not go near this cartridge if you are wearing a pacemaker, so powerful must be the magnet.
So sue me; the name does not begin with either N or K. But the distributor's name does begin with K (Kubotek). |
Dear Nandric, I don't know about the totality of your report of what Mr Lukashek says, but yes, as far as I know the number of turns of wire in the coil is the major determinant of cartridge inductance.
Dear Travis, You got it..."Haniwa" was the guy or the company with the very novel MC cartridge. I will see if I can Google it based on that. I had one of his brochures here at home but in one of my cleaning frenzies I discarded it, apparently. |
Regards, all: In the AT20SS/SLa cartridges, can anyone comment on the differences in the two styli? AFAIK, the ATN20SS stylus is a Super Shibata on beryllium, the ATN20SLa Shibata on tapered alu. There must surely be a difference in voice, can offer a fairly informed guess but would appreciate any direct experience with the two. Thanks in advance,
Peace. |
Dear Stltrains: This is my secure advise for a next " orgasm ":
http://www.lpgear.com/product/BOMMC2.html
IMHO, buy it while it last.
regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Lew, My electronic training is 'blanco' but from Lukatschek ( the owner/designer by Benz) I understand that the low impendance is the function of the 'bobin' material ( iron or something else ) and the number of coil windings. He uses ruby-plate because this way he can use stronger magnets. On the other side he needs more coil windings so that is why his LP and Ruby models have +/- 40 Ohm impedance. This imply that the iron core (aka bobin) have some limitations reg. the magnets choice which he obvioulsy want to avoid. In his comment on Fremers revieuw of his LP cart he made his objections against the iron core. I hope that my reading of what Lukatschek has to say is correct.
Regards, |
Chris now that I've reached 50+ hours I started different vta settings Tracking at 1g settled with a slight higher position. Yea this fine MM cartridge does really sing. Now like you want to try others. Mike |
Lew, The VERY low output impedance carts are designed by Mr. Y. Miyadaira, proprietor of MY Sonic Lab. If it was a "K" it could have been the Kubotek Haniwa, which was designed by Miyadaira-san. Don't know any "N" companies he designs for. He does low-impedance designs for Air-Tight too. And obviously does his own. |
I have often seen the statement that LOMCs make current rather than voltage. Since I lack formal training in electronics (beyond college physics), I am always cautious about my own thoughts on these subjects, but it seems to me that this is marketing hype. LOMCs make current insofar as they tend to have a very low output resistance. So if you think of their output "power", P=current X voltage, the term for current would tend to dominate. But I would like to see some measurements of the current made by an LOMC compared to that of a high (voltage) output cartridge. I would bet that high output cartridges that are so-called because of their voltage output would also tend to make more current than a typical LOMC. Don't know but wonder about that.
At RMAF, I visited a room where a VERY low output resistance MC was being touted. And it had vanishingly low inductance. Yet the output voltage was quite reasonable, around 0.3mV, I think. It is a Japanese company and I think the name begins with N or K. A very interesting product that I meant to follow up on but forgot. The designer himself was in the room and seemed miffed that his cartridge was not getting a lot of attention. He also had bookshelf speakers that were quite novel in design and sounded very good. |
Stlrains - It gets much better. I am into probably 150 hours now on it maybe more and well this cartrdige has reached that special status with me. Meaning I don't hear the cartridge anymore - just the music. It doesnt do anything to bring attention to itself.
I have tried different VTF's and it will track with no problems at all on my ET 2.5 at .2 gms !
But in talking with Henry I have left it at 1 gm the last two weeks - sounds real fine.
It will be quite the duel with the knobby AT7V - aka the Swedish Snowmobile that just arrived at my house after that postal strike. Anxious to see if it is able to disappear like the 4000dIII.
Cheers Chris |
And after 5hrs of music my wife and myself are quiet impressed |
|
Hi Stltrains - is your catridge the "DIII Gold" version? In which case the stylus itself is gold colored.
http://cgim.audiogon.com/i/vs/s/f/1308600281.jpg |
Banquo363 ive contacted the seller to verify it has the empire logo like on the photo of rauls. as of todays exchange rates the price asked is less than i payed for the nos cartridge but not by much. many thanks for the link and hope im not boring any with my post dont want to waste anyones time cause im a newbie and all here on the MM thread. happy 4th of july to all. |
Without considering totally impractical output levels like .01mV, I wonder why it is that Soundsmith's TOTL cart is low output? Granted, his other MI carts have an output of .6mV and I don't know the inductance but it must be quite a bit more. I think this is an interesting question and deserves more than a compromise solution. Maybe after the holiday I'll call and see if he's available. I've spoken with him before and he seems like a really nice guy. There's also a big price disparity between the top HO cart ($1500?) and the LO ($4500). Maybe it would be best to get if from the horse's mouth, as it were.
I imagine that designing a cartridge is like a juggling act to get everything to work and sound like something desirable and coherent. A very light moving system should sound fast but the more damping used the more phase deviation there is. That's why David observing that capacitance reduced overshoot in a HOMC is an interesting occurrence. Would this be available to most HO users? With many HO carts, when you get up to 300pF or more, the hi freq resonance is lowered and augmented, and the extreme hi end is rolled off. I suspect that along with HO comes a compromise in electrical performance sometimes. Different designs seem to exhibit very different relative amounts of inductance. Regards, |
on the replacement stylus for empire d3 i am having not much luck locating one that looks like the picture of yours in your review of d3. not giving up yet though. The shop in the Netherlands at the link I posted above has it or at least had it 3 months ago when I was looking for it. I sent them pics to confirm. |
Dear Fleib: Yes we know that hihg inductance is not the way to go but what Dlaloum already posted make sense.
We can't IMHO forget ( as you want to theorysed on the subject. ) in which environment those cartridges will " run ". We have to take in count that out there are a lot of tube phono stages with the people that does not likes LO cartridges.
IMHO equilibrum could be the name on this regard, try to find the equilibrum is the target.
You said that there is nosense on hum...with LO cartridges but IMHO maybe there is nosense because there are " noises/distortions " that we can't hear it but that are in there and a higher output gives lower sensitivity to those " noises/polution ".
Yes, you don't have noise problems because your PS is a SS design ( as mine . ) but even SS designs can have problems with noise with very LO cartridge designs like the Ortofon MC2000 ( that I own. ): 0.05mv or the 0.04mv of the Jeweltone, against which real quality performance advantage? which trade-offs?
I'm with Dlaloum and my take is to find out the equilibrum that gives the better/acceptable trade-offs in favor of levels of excellence.
I think that an audio item designer must be fully aware of the customer needs and design according.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Fleib - interesting comment about MC's generating current - and there are phono stages that focus on current rather than voltage - Dynavector P75...
I'm not saying lower inductance is a negative by any means, but I do question quite specifically 1) What is gained by lowering inductance 2) At what point in lowering inductance has the gain reached its maximum point. (if taking the induction further down only gains 0.01% improvement is it worth it?)
Also a point of caution - the lower the inductance, the harder it is to match the two channels - when production variations are fixed values rather than % of the inductance, the error factor increases exponentially. There are cost factors involved in mass producing low inductance cartridges. Possibly one of the factors keeping MC cartridge costs high might be the reject rate - they need to be hand made as too many are out of balance and have to be hand rebuilt until their channel balance is within the required tolerances... painful?!
Once inductance drops below 100mH (arbitrary number chosen) - what improvements are gained? Once inductance drop below 50mH?, 25mH?, 1mH? In an absolutist sense why limit ourselves to cartridges with a huge 0.1mV output - why not go down to 0.01mV and accordingly lower inductance? (perhaps with some circuitry onboard in the cartridge to minimise noise pickup and ampligy the signal)
bye for now
David |
yea Raul what a revelation these MMs are last night spinning lps was a total delight to the ears.
on the replacement stylus for empire d3 i am having not much luck locating one that looks like the picture of yours in your review of d3. not giving up yet though. |
Dear Stltrains: I forgot, I own samples from this current cartridge manufacturers: Sumiko, Shelter and The Cartridge Man.
As we can see we have a lot of today/current MM/MI alternatives!!!!
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
From a theoretical viewpoint irrespective of amplification considerations, there may be benefits to low output beyond the lack of inductance. The few examples of low inductance posted above, are certainly not the norm. Today the trend seems to be going in the other direction. If you look at the inductance spec on modern carts, many are > 600mH. I think that limits their potential.
In general terms, depending on the magnet strength and generator type, low output is usually characterized by much fewer turns of wire. A high output cart can have as many as 3K or more turns. There's nothing to be gained by having high inductance as a property of the output, except the requirement for less preamp gain. So, what price high output? The only catch is having an excellent hi gain stage. All the nonsense about hum and cables has long been overcome by MC users. Indeed, my Genesis 1000 has .2mV and is dead quiet through my phono stage. My Stanton is .3mV
I'm really not interested in discussing what's appropriate for a newbie or all the nice carts available today. There's plenty of stuff about that and it's readily available. But if you're considering just how good it could be, the only thing to be gained by high output is the ease of amplification? It's said that a MC generates current rather than voltage. Does a low output MM/MI lack this current generating capability? Maybe a moderate output is appropriate, but in my experience Soundsmith knows what he's doing and the new Sussuro has .3mV VDH made a couple of MMs, is anyone familiar with those? Regards, |
Dear Lewm: Well the Stanton/Pickering are lower than that, anyway I take your point.
Now, all those electrical cartridge parameters along its output level are " only " part of the overall cartridge design. We are rockies on cartridge design and I can tell you that a cartridge with so many " factors/characteristics " surrounded it that at the same time are all interrelated for the final result makes that achieve targets be really dificult, especialy our targets.
In some ways the tonearm and even electronics designs are more " easy ", well different kind of challenges. We have a long road to go on our cartridge design especialy because we are not the builder and we can't make " changes " fast to ntest it and decide.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Hi Lewm,
Yes - I was channeling "Audio Golem" - I have been a fan of the Lord of the Rings books since first reading them in the mid 70's... and with a name like Sussuro... how could I resist!
With regards to the conflation of low inductance and low output - "It ain't necessarily so" (Paul Robeson version)
Lowering inductance from the 800mH that some cartridges use has definite tangible benefits...
But you soon start reaching the point of reducing returns, and at some point reducing the inductance further no longer improves things, Once you reach that stage, you start increasing the problems/issues in the amplification stage by continuing to lower output, while no longer gaining tangible benefits from lower induction.
The Shure V15 is around 330mH, ADC SuperXLM 250mH, Signet TK9/10 88mH, Technics EPC100 33mH.
All of these are traditional High Output designs (output above 1mV@5cm/s) - and all of these are highly regarded top flight MM / MI designs.
In marketing terms, there are myths that can be leveraged by selling a LO MM/MI - but in engineering terms, I am not convinced that a true advantage exists. But I am open to being convinced!
bye for now
David |
Dear Raul, Depends on how you define "LO", does it not? LO for an MM could be anywhere from around 1.0 mV at 5cm/sec down to 0.15 mV. That's a ~10-fold range. So if we have a reasonable output of say 0.6mV, that's only about a 7 to 8 fold different from a typical MM at 4.0mV or so, which I hope you would call "high output". That difference in output does not require anywhere near to 40db extra gain from the preamp, more like <10 db extra should do it. (I have not stopped to make the calculation and cannot remember the log of 8.) OK, so why do it at all? My answer: wouldn't such a cartridge have lower inductance than a 4mV MM, which by the accounts of Timel and Dlaloum would be advantageous? Then if you also eliminate flimsy junctions between stylus and body, use an exotic cantilever and a state of the art stylus shape, you might really have something. Just a thought. |
Dlaloum, Could you be channeling the Golem from Lord of the Rings? My kids and I loved that character as he was depicted in the movie. "And what does it have in its pocketses, my precious? A Sussuro?" |
and we can't forget: Garrot.
R. |
Dear Dlaloum: I miss the meaning on Stltrains post before.
I think that we can add some other today cartridge manufacturers that build very good MM/MI items:
Roksan, Rega, Goldring, Audio Note, Reson or Clearaudio.
I own some cartridge models from this Europan list and are very good performers.
I think that almost no one of us already take care on today MM/MI samples because we are to busy with so many vintage ones but today MM/MI designs are very good but of course we have to pay the today price, no bargains here.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Thuchan: +++++ " are not wiling to start a LOMM project .." +++++
why they should?, I mean why a LOMM design? I can't see any advantage real advantage ( not theory ) on a LO cartridge against a higher output one.
The LOMC designs IMHO has precesily that disadvantage: LO, and not because design it self but because the cartridge needs at least 40db additional gain stages in the phono stage and this sole characteristic ( LO. ) makes that exist trade-offs that in my case are unacceptable against top MM/MI designs.
So, I can't understand why you and other persons could " spread " this LO cartridge subject. Please let me know what am I missing on this precise subject?.
I own the Stanton LO top of the line and I heard the Susurro and both are good performers as many LOMC ( like the A90. I agree with you. ) but if we " strip the leaves (or petals) off " on a top LO cartridge against a top vintage MM/MI one the differences for the better ( overall ) IMHO goes to the MM/MI side, just that Stlstrains is now " discovering ".
Both designs has its own trade-offs but in some ways that needs of added gain in LO cartridges IMHO " kills " other intrinsic advantages. The dependence for quality performance level on LO cartridges is a lot higher on the phono stage quality design that the same dependence that a HO cartridge needs on this same regard.
The point is not only on several " troubles " inside a phono stage designs because that huge added gain but the cartridge signal it self is a lot more sensitive and more prone to be contaminated for the surrounded " pollution " ( RF, amps transformer noise, bad ground set ups, bad cable designs for,etc, etc ).
The whole issue IMHO is more complex that that " happy " question you posted.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear banquo363: Than you, appreciated.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Lewm, sorry - you are right. I should have read it.
best & fun only -Thuchan |
Sussuro.... my precious.... (licks cartridge.... gently cuddles it against his cheek....).... pressssioussss..... |
Dear Thuchan, Lest anyone else pick up on what you wrote, I did make a point of saying that I was NOT making a "judgement" of the MC A90 as compared to the Sussuro. To further quote myself, "the [listening] conditions did not permit that". Believe me, I would love to own either of those two cartridges. |
David what a fine list thank you now that I have my feet wet I want to move deeper in the pool.
Listening to several lps this evening I am still in awe of the presentation the 4000 delivers this is about as enlighting a sound these ears have heard in a few decades. What was mentioned in the very early posts in this thread is becoming true. The MC detailed bloom is over blown and this little empire prooves it. |
Dlaloum, you are right there are some good MMs (also new models) on the market. You made a good list! And maybe also thanks to this thread attention has grown.
But there is nothing wrong about excellent MCs except of the price. I regard the Sussurro as one of the finest designs among the latest developments. Peter could convince me handling one of his test units to me in Denver. Regarding the A 90 I come to a more positive judgement than Lewm. This is a musically playing MC of its best. Having in mind the material costs of MCs - and I understand that the final price also includes a portion for the design and development and the production of course - those high prices are not justified. Ortofon shows us that you don't need to spend 10.000 or 15.000 for a unit.
It is a real pitty that cartridge producers are not wiling to start a LOMM project at the moment. As they might have projections of a maximum of let's say 500 units for the market when pushing a new model they will not have enough profit if a state of the art LOMM will see the market for 1000 Dollars.
I think you are right with the comparison to the automotive industry. But when you mention Ferrari in this field you should also name Hermes to give an equivalent for the ladies :-)
best & fun only - Thuchan |