Dear @frogman : """ One cannot have both the live music experience (as you claim to have) and recorded music as the ultimate reference. You assume that a recording is an accurate representation of the original event. """
Recorded music never is not even close to the " ultimate reference " against live music that’s the ultimate reference. I’m not comparing it in any way. All what I post or posted in this and other forums is about audio home system experiences.
"" suggesting that it should apply to all listeners and you invalidate (ridicule) others’ system goals. """
I think a misunderstood by your part ( please re-read the begining of your last post. ) because I always states and stated which is my main target: stay truer to the recording. I don’t invalidate other listeners targets in any way.
In the other side because I was speaking of the home listening experiences I took that warmth in the audiophile home system terms/scenario.
MUSIC as poetry, sculpture or paint is a true and real ART and this kind of art is a deep expression of the composers with additional expression of the players.
All of those diferent kind of ART wake up different type of feelings and emotions on each single human been and normally those feelings/emotions are singular/unique to each person. That’s the ART’s power/beauty.
MUSIC as an art has the " legacy " that it does not matters the MUSIC source ( a walkman, $$$ home system, car radio or live. ) always wake up some kind of feelings/emotions in each one of us.
Now, each orchestra director has its own interpretation of what was the composer whole expressions in the score and this director will try to shows us that self interpretation additional to what is the self orchestra individual players expressions. All these is extremily and really the deepest subjectivity that in an orchestra with 80 players no one can detect the individual expressions. Even if any one of us attend in two concecutive days to listen the same score we will find out differences on both performances. Even if instead of an orchestra we are listening to a single player: horn, piano or whatever instrument two concecutives player presentations are different and we can detect it.
Anyway, that warmth/expression is intrinsical on what pick up the venue recording microphones and what you said is that analog preservs it and is almost losted by digital or at least analog reflects better way.
How is that? can you explain it other than that " I like it more.." ?
I´m not a player as you are but at least one day by week I attend to listen live MUSIC and I do this for several years now.
I respect to all players and I can learn on each one of them when we are talking of live MUSIC but when we are talking of the audio home room/system experiences you and me are at almost the same level and I have respect for you too as an audiophile.
Well now I will wait for your answer on my questions, we can learn from you.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R.
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Chakster, There many reasons people enter into participation on a thread, and just as many why they drop out. It would take a thread of its own to explain why, but the only constant is change, so cut everyone some slack.
I participate in the Jazz thread mainly to learn, but seem to post less now. Do I love Jazz any less? I love it more everyday, but I just don't seem to get around to writing about it. I listen instead of writing. Here we did seem to hit a period where we were just circling and questions were answered by pointing back to the pages of cartridges we had already discussed.
I would like your opinion of the cartridges we said were good, which you had a different take on, when you have some time. |
Harold, the Ultra 500 and I are doing very well. I also still have a stash of Ultra 400 and 300 stylus, but they fit a different Shure cartridge, which I am to lazy to look up right now.
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harold, I'm not an engineer but as I understand such things, everything resonates once an appropriate stimulus is applied. The question is, is that resonance at a frequency that is detrimental to the desired purpose?
I've read several references that the desired resonance of a turntable "system" is around 2-3 Hz, low enough so that it does not interfere with music playback. So a "decent headshell" would be one which does not produce sympathetic resonances within the frequency range of your playback system. |
Chakster, when you see and hold that metal frame around the Karat Nova 13D you will understand. As for headshells´ resonances as such, I have no idea. A decent headshell does not resonate, right ? Actually I bought three reasonably priced MM carts from our Russian fellow and none of them had any kind of issues, they came with no original papers nor boxes though. However, his claimed low hours use I didn´t take so seriously really. Funny guy, but I won´t spend my money in his rare "gems" again, how reasonably priced and tempting they could be :) |
when people are talking about resonance of the headshells how anyone can actually measure this resonance? |
Raul, Now I see you wasn´t happy with the original headshell that comes with the cart. It´s actually an aluminium frame for the cart to adjust on certain arms and probably source of colorations or even distortions. I fully agree, it´s no good. My sample has that too and I just removed it as seen here h ttps://www.filepicker.io/api/file/BYPcZInyT0iQzdx14uyl/convert?rotate=exifMine is a peculiar one as it has no DV logo on its body, it looks like a Karat Nova but is it really ? Is it a counterfeit ? Whatever the case, it´s an excellent performer and actually my finest sounding LOMC, balanced and very nuanced, and very smooth yet so dynamic. |
Oh, yes. If you know Victor aka "grgaudio" then you may noticed that his "70 hrs of use" or normally "200 hrs of use" along with info like "i got it from japanese reviewer" has nothing to do with reality as he stated the same for all his cartridges and seems like all those japanese sellers on yahoo are the reviewers, it’s pretty funny. I didn’t noticed he sold one, anyway, some of the carts (gladly not all) purchaced from him collapsed in the next hours much faster that buyer can expect. And after inspection at much more trustworthly SoundSmith we get the conclusion that the stylus is worn out, so the stated 200hrs was a myth. It’s a real story about Sony XL55 cart purchaced by me for my flatmate several years ago from grgaudio. No response from him since that day even when i bought another good cartrige from one of his "secret account" on ebay and tried to communicate, very strange. When the price is too low, and the deal is not on ebay, we must think twice. The last one re-tipped by Van Den Hul was 1600 euro on good Italian source, but it was HOMC version 30B, not even the LOMC 30C |
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@harold-not-the-barrel Raul, again about your sold Dynavector Karat Nova 13D... was it really the large wooden body or was it a "weaker" sample. Additionally, how would you compare it against the Dynavector Karat 17D(s) ? The Karat carts are very special designs, I´m interested in purchasing...
Let me add my 50 cent... Predecessor of the Karat and Karat Nova was Dynavector DV-30C with AIR-COIL (also headshell integrated design) with straight Boron cantilever and German Parabolic nude stylus tip. It was LOMC (0.18mV) with the same frequency response as the Karat Nova 13D. The Dynavector DV-30C was the ultimate state of the art cartridge. The combination of the poly acetal non-ferrous armature and the above mentioned cantilever and stylus assembly gives the DV-30c the previously inconceivable sound quality. Dynavector 30 series cartridges feature the very attractive headshell integrated as one piece. The headshell was designed for the ease of fixing to almost all conventional sme type tonearms in addition to careful treatment of multi resonance problems in the headshell. The effective length and the azimuth angle of the cartridge can be adjusted +/- 3mm and +/- 5 degrees. Dynavector DV-505 bi-axis, inertia controlled, dynamic balance type tonearm is recommended by the manufacturer. This low output DV-30c must be extremely rare as i have never seen one over the years, but i saw at least 5 samples of Karat 13D/17D this year. As i said earlier i have only HOMC version of this DV-30 series. I was very impressed by the sound of my DV-30A from 1978-1981. Here is another fresh picture (taken yesterday) of alluminum cantilever and Shibata Type III stylus of my DV30a: https://scontent-amt2-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/22365609_1902924109725747_622425272253141477_n.jpg?oh=... But it’s High Output MC (1.8mV). The secret lies in the micro proportions of the coil. A coil frame of mere 1,8mm square contains over 400 turns of ultra-thin 11-micron meter wire wound at 90 degrees to one other. The micron precision gives the high output type MC cartridges an output voltage of 1,8mV. I think the uber rare LOMC version of DV-30 must be better with its Boron cantilever and Paroc diamong, it must be close to Karat Nova if you will look at the specs. I think i already posted Van Den Hul's summary regarding DV-30 series earlier in this thread (he has retipped some of them). |
Dear chakster, my story about Marie Antoinette who advised her people to eat cookies instead of bread reminded me about saturation. Everybody can at present buy more bread than he needs. There are of course different kinds and gradations by saturation but it is obvious that this thread as well its ''subject'' (aka carts) may have reached saturation bondaries. You as novice may mourn about this ''natural process'' but anyway you are aware of this ''state of affairs'' as you wrote in your last post. For the ''older members'' however your implicite criteria do not apply. That is why many left this thread or even the whole forum. There is also this ''owners change'' by A'gon with introduction of a new kind of inquisition called ''moderators'' which further weakened members motivtion. Those who are still members are motivated by comradery and friendship rather than by the forum as such. |
Dear chackster, you begin to look like the Mexican oracle. You seem to even know better which MC cartridges I own then I myself. I first mentioned my recent 5 and and last my carts of ''the month''. That is to say for 11 months of the year. Those are mentioned in two of my contributions. So you exgaggerate when you say ''he keep repeating them all in every 3 post''. BTW I own about 40 MC and also about 40 MM carts. Do you really know them all? For my MC carts I got advice from Dertonarm and Syntax . Those are two persons. All the rest I have sellected by my self. That is what I meant by my statement that with MC carts I was on my own. I think that you ar also ''on your own'' in search for new carts. I certainly undertand your search because I deed the same. BTW my latest is the Phoenix S which is recently produced so obviously new. |
well, it was not a joke actually, in the end of 256 page of this wonderful thread we lost 97% of the contributors and the author of the thread turned digital. It’s a nighmare, but i hope it’s no the end.
BTW if someone will wake me up in the middle of the night and ask which MC cartridges Nandric has and who recomended them to him i can recall all of them, because he keep repeating them all in every 3 posts :) I even bought some of them. |
Ha-ha ! What a great thread this is, so much fun... and so much frustration. Like life itself, isn´t it. Chakster, your sense of humour is... dryer than an English "best buy" CD player´s sound quality :) Acman, how is your Ultra 400 doing today ?
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"Maybe they are all retired and listening to digital like Raul now."
What an ugly thing to say. ;) |
By the way, Raul. I am more or less familiar with your analog equipment. Can you describe your digital reproduction system? Thanks.
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Raul, With reference only to the few times in your recent posts when you referred to me and my last post, I did mention several times therein that I have several hours listening to the system of my neighbor, who is less than a quarter of a mile from my front door. He owns a very elaborate expensive system for both digital and vinyl reproduction. His equipment is also high on any audiophile list of "approved" components, meaning it's stuff we would all agree is "good". He's got nearly $30,000 invested in two tonearms, alone, not including his turntable and cartridges. With that, his digital equipment is also very expensive and hi-rez. He does not source digital from discrete CDs and SACDs, as I do. It's all stored on hard drives at high bit rates and wide bandwidth. He upgrades the latter so often that I cannot tell you precisely what he is listening to at this moment, but I am sure you would say that the problem is he does not own what you like, because there IS a problem. He and I agree that vinyl on his system is far more involving and enjoyable, "real", emotion-conveying, lively, engrossing, etc, etc, than is digital reproduction on his system. He listens to digital when he has other work to do or when he wants to read a book. This is pretty much exactly how I regard digital in my much less ambitious system. To those who prefer digital, no problemo. Enjoy. I will stick with what I like. I'll even come over to your house and listen.
I fully realize I am wasting my breath or needlessly wearing out my keyboard, in this case. |
@nandric
I see that you also prefer to be on your own in your search for Eldorado. Neither of your ''stuff'' is ever recommended in this forum as far as I know. Complaining then about the fact that nobody else owns ''your stuff'' is, well, very curious (grin).
Yes and No First i have no idea why do you think I'm complaining about anything? I have tried so many cartridges recommended in this forum to make my own conclusion what is good or bad. I strongly disagree with many "contributors" about "some cartridges of the month" posted here long time ago, but at least i owned them. I'm not sure how many people are still hunting for vintage cartridges, but most contributors left this forum 5 year ago or so, including people you're always talking about. Maybe they are all retired and listening to digital like Raul now. Have you discovered any "new" cartridge recently? I got many new discoveries like unknown "Grace F-14 Exellent" for example. Nobody owns it? Why should i bother? People don't know it even exists. |
"
I have several first hand experiences learning/listening near field live music, including full symphonic orchestra. No warmth. "
Wow Raul you have actually heard a symphonic orchestra several times that is hardly enough to understand what live music actually sounds like and yet you are here preaching to us to enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS and yet you obviously do not have enough experience to even know what the music sounds like! Perhaps you might be lucky and your grammar school will hold some more field trips so that you can get to the symphony a few more times and learn about the instruments of the orchestra and what they sound like and then you will be able to understand a bit more about high fidelity or even better would be to ask your mommy to take you although orchestra tickets can be expensive so it might be better to wait for a class trip. Ask your teacher maybe the school PTA will be able to contribute to the cost of the symphony for you that would be a worthy expenditure for them! |
Dear chakster, in the Koetsu thread I asked (retorical) question: ''why should anyone want more or better than Urushi Blue Sky?'' But this looks like the question Marie Antoinette asked when she was told that people protest because they have no bread to eat. ''Why then'', she asked , ''they don't eat cakes instead?'' Well in order to have (more) choices by ''edibles'' more, uh, edibles are needed. While I was on my own by my MC search I also got some help from the ''German group''. Dertonarm advised Ikeda's and Syntax (''your'') Miyabi. To love all my baby's equaly I learnd from my brother /comrade Don. I see that you also prefer to be on your own in your search for Eldorado. Neither of your ''stuff'' is ever recommended in this forum as far as I know. Complaining then about the fact that nobody else owns ''your stuff'' is, well, very curious (grin). |
Dear Raul,
**** Each audiophile can have their own system targets ****
Exactly what I said: "Not every listener wants the same things from recorded sound".
**** My target is to stay truer to the recording truer as the recording microphones pick up the MUSIC information and each time that I talk on that " should be " my opinion is based/founded on this target/premise. ****
One cannot have both the live music experience (as you claim to have) and recorded music as the ultimate reference. You assume that a recording is an accurate representation of the original event. Some get pretty close; most, not so much. Moreover, this "should be" does not apply to every listener otherwise your statement would contradict your above previous statement. In your comments you seem to be suggesting that it should apply to all listeners and you invalidate (ridicule) others’ system goals. Some may not even have a well defined "system goal", but will simply seek a sound that they find to be "better" and more enjoyable. There is no "ignorance" and certainly no "stupidity" in that. Unless, of course, their preferred sound is claimed, as you do re the digital/analog question, that it is the sound that is closest to live music.
re "warmth":
With respect, you do not understand at all what I think I made clear (perhaps not so clear). My point (again) was that, for me and most musicians, digital’s most egregious distortions occur in the areas of music’s and musicians’ expressive qualities (timing, expressive nuance and instrumental tone harmonic complexity which is manipulated by players for expressive effect). The term "warmth" as usually used by audiophiles and by you here has nothing to do with expression but with sound. Warmth in music is an expressive quality as in: "Raul has a warm personality" (maybe?) and has nothing to do with bright/dark or full/thin. Analog is consistently heard by most musicians to do a better job of capturing and replicating the expressive qualities (warmth) of music than digital. This is the reason for the often cited superior "musical involvement" many listeners experience with analog; more of the human element. Btw, I don’t know what musicians or directors you hang out with, but I assure you that the level of nuance of expression and, yes, even "sound" that accomplished musicians and directors concern themselves with are infinitely finer and more elusive than what is experienced in audiophilia since there is so much more information in live music than in recorded/reproduced music. This is one reason that some musicians are sometimes perceived as not caring about hi-fi. The other reason being that most focus almost entirely on the expressive qualities of the performance. For them expressive quality dwarfs bright, dark, soundstaging etc.
Again, not meaning any disrespect, but I must point out a couple of additional comments that you made that may explain our disagreement and our fundamentally different approaches to these questions. You continually refer to how some audiophiles do not "understand" this or that. I can’t help but ask the question: what does "understanding" have to do with any of this. Is it not about what we hear and what we feel when we listen to recorded music? I know very well what I hear and feel when I hear analog vs digital. As an audiophile also I like to understand why this may be so, but understanding is secondary to what I hear and feel. Analog GENERALLY (not always, obviously) sounds closer to what I hear and feel from live music; most musicians that perform unamplified acoustic music concur. No claim to any superiority or exclusivity from this, but simply a statement of fact. I also read many comments by you critical of others in which you assert that it should be about "the MUSIC experience", but I don’t see any comments about music. I would respectfully suggest that your "several" live music experiences should become "many" and more frequent and that you focus more on the feeling in music and less in its sound. Gracias por los commentarios dirijidos a mi, y paz.
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@nandric
1. Allaerts MC2 , 2. Magic Diamond, 3. Benz LP mr, 4. Ikeda 9 TT, 5. Urushi Sky Blue, 6. FR-7fz, 7. Ikeda 9 C, 8. Transfigurtion Poenix S, 9. ZYX Airy 3, 10. Miyaby standard, 11. Kiseki Gold Spot. There is no other place where I can ''show off'' with my riches then in this forum with the same kind of addicts (grin). The rest of the human kind thinks that one cart is sufficient.
One from this list will be enough for me, the Miyabi Standard |
Dear @frogman : """ "there are no ’shoulds’ in life". Not every listener wants the same things from recorded sound... """
well not only in audio but in other different day by day " scenarios " many times we use " something " not in the rigth way the manufacturer recomend: this is the " should be ", but we used as we " understand " how to use it or as we like when this is possible but the " should be " always exist.
Each audiophile can have their own system targets . My target is to stay truer to the recording truer as the recording microphones pick up the MUSIC information and each time that I talk on that " should be " my opinion is based/founded on this target/premise.
You said: """ the expression and musicality of the musicians and this is the area that still separates analog and digital """. and coninue telling:
"" the often cited "warmth" in analog sound as compared to digital has more to do with the more accurate rendition of the human element (expression) than with frequency response related qualities and is the reason so many listeners react so positively to analog in spite of whatever technical "distortions" it may have compared to digital. """
The microphones takes that expression and musicallity that players gave it along its rythm.
Now, that " warmth " is something that almost does not exit in the real life and almost never by microphones that can’t pick up what does not exist.
I like to listen an audio system in a near field position because that’s the way things happen in real life and where the recording microphones were set up at the venue.
Microphones are not " seated " at 30-40 m. from the overall MUSIC source as the people that attends to a concert hall.
Live MUSIC has no " warmth ", not even an essemble. You can take the instrument you like and at 2m. just does not exist that characteristic. Even a violin at that distance sounds agressive and we can " feel " the friction of the bow with the violin chords but if we take a trumpet even a 3 m. it’s just extremely agressive and " overbrigth " for say the least. A piano is no exception.
I know several players and two orchestra Directors that accept they has an anormal lost of auditive sensitivity because to many hours and years listening to those so high SPL. some are almost " deaf ".
I have several first hand experiences learning/listening near field live music, including full symphonic orchestra. No warmth.
People like warmth in the analog experience because they are accustom to by all its audio life but that does not means are rigth because the true all are wrong including your player friends that prefers analog.
From where comes that analog warmth you like that does not exist at the same level in digital and that does not exist when the microphones tooks the information?
You said that the digital " distortion " is the worst but with out explanation about as no explanation of your non-existent " warmth ". Well as a fact you said that the warmth comes from a more accurate ...... Let me tell you something: between digital and analog and everything the same the more non-accurate and for a wide margin is analog.
We all belongs to the AHEE and trained by its corrupted leaders and since we strated in audio we were and still are FOLLOWERS that’s the " easy " road.
A few years ago when I began to think " out of the box/out of the AHEE " was really when I discovery first that several MUSIC/AUDIO subjects I learned were totally wrong and second was when I really understand where MUSIC belongs in my room/audio system and since then working to stay truer to the recording. I’m not today a follower, enough is enough on that AHEE.
As you I’m a MUSIC lover and own thousands of LPs but I recognize the digital superior system source.
Regrads and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R.
@chakster I understand your " romanticism " but I’m not talking of that but the MUSIC experience and what this really means .
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Dear @harold-not-the-barrel : Sorry, I " missed " your post.
The 13 D is not a weaker sample in its body wood presentation and is a very good performer if mounted in a different headshell that the one dedicated that comes with the cartridge.
Other important subject you have to check before buy it is that the cartridge connector wires to the headshell be original. This is that these four wires came from inside the cartridge, something as the Linn cartridges. The 13D cartridge output comes through those wires and not through cartridge output pin connectors. It's not an easy cartridge to performs at its best, you have to try different headshells and different tonearms. For me it's not an user friendly cartridge and took several hours to performs at its best.
I never tested against the 17D.
Regrads and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R. |
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Raul, again about your sold Dynavector Karat Nova 13D... was it really the large wooden body or was it a "weaker" sample. Additionally, how would you compare it against the Dynavector Karat 17D(s) ? The Karat carts are very special designs, I´m interested in purchasing... Thanks in advance.
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Just a quick report on the Astatic MF 200 that I had been intermittently using since the 8th of August. I had reported earlier that the bass was rather reticent and Raul had advised me to rack up at least 30 to 40 hours. It took me longer than it should because I ended up playing with another cartridge (which is another story). Few days ago, the bass which was hidden away suddenly came in full force, as if the cartridge had crossed some invisible rubicon. It wasn't a ride down a gentle cascade either, more like a drop down a steep waterfall in the sense that it was sudden. I say this because a visiting friend and I listened to a number of records the previous night and the change in character the next day was fairly drastic. Anyway, this is not a complaint:) So with the missing bass in place, the MF 200 has become a much better cartridge. Plays very cleanly on good records but also doesn't shy away from calling a spade a spade when fed a poor record. Certainly one of the best I've ever heard. |
@roberjerman For many years I used the Ikeda-san designed Fidelity Research FR1mk3F mc along with the Mitchell Cotter Verion P transformer. Silver coils and line-contact stylus. Superb sound and no desire to change! I have never heard a MM equal this level of sound quality. I stand by my previous assertion that a MC cartridge and transformer offers the best quality of LP playback! I also have Fidelity-Research PMC-3 (recommended by Jonathan Carr of Lyra) and one of the best headamp made by Nakatsuka San (ZYX), my Luxman 8030 silver SUT on its way to try later with FR-7f purchased this year. Not to mention my experience very expensive modern LOMC cartridges in the past. I got massive collection of vintage MM cartridges and i can say that MC are not better, espesially for those of us who are not willing to pay many thousands dollars for MC + SUT to find out later that $300-700 MM cartridge from the late 70s or early 80s still outperfom it. I’m still trying to find the MC cartridge that can compete with my TOTL moving coils, i won’t give up, we will see when i will try Ortofon MC2000. |
Dear @enginedr1960: """
I know when my analog play back is sounding closer to my digital front end I am heading in the right direction . """
Yes, you are rigth because you really understand the why's about and other audiophiles just can't.
Lewm said is openmind to the digital potential but makes no single effort that confirm his " openmind ".
@chakster speaks on many things in his last post that only reflect he just does not understand the main subject. Where is the MUSIC.
Almost everyone is ready to post opinions against digital but with out a real and deep experiences in the continuous time with this format.
This analog forum is the rigth forum to speak about digital because it's, other than live music, the reference to fine tunning any audio system. When digital is rigth in the listening system experiences then everrything is fine and obviously analog will shines better than ever.
Of course that exist " audiophiles " that never will learn about, just their brain can't understand. This kind of scenario is the same when people just can't understand why tubes are not for audio or unipivots for analog. It's incredible that even today and even that some subjects already were analized really in deep exist ignorants ( for say the least ). that still speaks of load impedance with LOMC cartridges when this kind of cartriodge is no sensitive to load impedance ! !. Such is life, stupidity is all over the world in the day by day.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R. |
Roberjerman, If you have seen my collection of MC carts you can see many Fidelity Research carts among them. Assuming that you also own FR-64/66 or the new Ikeda tonearms you should try one of the FR-7 kinds. The right SUT you already own. You may believe that your FR-1mk 3 is the best but such statement can't be made without comparison with some other MC carts.
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jerman, you hear what you hear but honestly you are the first one in this decade old thread, contributed by so many intelligent and experienced audiophiles with very interesting reviews, with nothing truly constructive not to mention uplifting to say. You sound nothing but copy-paste. Your comments are load of BS
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For many years I used the Ikeda-san designed Fidelity Research FR1mk3F mc along with the Mitchell Cotter Verion P transformer. Silver coils and line-contact stylus. Superb sound and no desire to change! I have never heard a MM equal this level of sound quality. I stand by my previous assertion that a MC cartridge and transformer offers the best quality of LP playback! |
Dear Frogman, Me hard on myself? I should mention my carts 'of the month' before. I own 11 baby's which I, as a good dad, equally love. While I am not a Muslim I want one more but need to search further. The Ikeda 9 REX is difficult to find. Changing carts is a joy which probably only harem owners will recognize(grin). The name of each baby is: 1. Allaerts MC2 , 2. Magic Diamond, 3. Benz LP mr, 4. Ikeda 9 TT, 5. Urushi Sky Blue, 6. FR-7fz, 7. Ikeda 9 C, 8. Transfigurtion Poenix S, 9. ZYX Airy 3, 10. Miyaby standard, 11. Kiseki Gold Spot. There is no other place where I can ''show off'' with my riches then in this forum with the same kind of addicts (grin). The rest of the human kind thinks that one cart is sufficient. |
Hi nandric,
I assure you that there are MANY in the USA that feel just as you do.
Dave |
nandric, you have a very good memory and I share your frustration with the state of contemporary music and the young.
**** We in the West or rather Europe have an ubelievable
welth of musical tradition which is in danger by American
artificial amplified trash music which kids in the whole world
use like fast food. ****
Pretty decent English sentence, if you ask me; in more ways than one. Don't be so hard on yourself 🍷
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Digital is the only alternative that puts us nearer to the recording and is obvious the reasons why. Raul, most of my favorite music was recorded in the studio on multitrack master tape at first, then mixed by mastering engineer and cut on lathe. There is NO digital in the chain, some records are direct cut. No need to digitize analog source! Each album or single has its own story, some of them are not easy to find and this is another story about each particular find. When we pay for each record we are "selectors",
we're filling
our collection with a new records, new finds over the years. I was born in the 70s and digital never played an important role in my life when it comes to the music, i spend more time with cassette tapes and vinyl records. The CD was an awful format of digital and now digital music is free. We use enough digital in our life (computers and stuff), i wish my music to be on original records. Because digital file can’t replace the feelings, the background, the history behind each vinyl record we have. This is the way i’ve been listening music most of my life. I use low quality digital to discover more music online, but if i like some track i want it on vinyl on my recordshelfs. Despite the fat that most of my music is from the 70s era, i understand that not everything new available on vinyl, but it’s trendy to release vinyl nowadays, it’s funny, but some people release albums on limited edition compact cassetes and even on reel to reel. This is amazing how cool is the analog media even for young generation today. Digital can not replace these feelings, so i don’t care about digital even if it’s good quality. Also i don’t want a digital screen, tv, dvd or anything like that close to my analog system. Your theory just proove the fact that audiophiles are not always record collectors even if they are listening vinyl. Different strokes for different folks. |
Dear @lewm and friends: """
I've never made much of an effort to maximize my digital experience. So, I am open-minded as to its ultimate potential,... """
That is the main and critical subject with analog lovers. No real efforts in their own systems with the best digital.
With out true and real digital experiences by our self we have no facts to analize today digital vs analog.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R. |
Dear @enginedr1960: """
I had upgraded my digital front end to a point where it sounded better the my analog rig .After upgrading to a better TT ,tone arm , cartridge & phono pre I am getting closer to the quality of my digital front end. """
To understand by listening the superior digital alternative we have to have a good digital rig and that the systemstay tunned to that digital rig instead to the analog imperfections.
Several analog lovers have not a first rate digital rig in their room system.
As I said, I explein it in deep several times through this forum in the last 2-3 years. Even I posted that any one that really wants to experice by it self the superiority of the digital over analog technology whwat has to do is:
to own a first rate digital rig and day by day only listen to it with out LP sessions and do this by 3 moths in a row and then comeback to analog and compare it and please forgeret all what we learned on analog and all our biased opinions about because our brain is already conditioned to what we listen through LPs.
Digital is the only alternative that puts us nearer to the recording and is obvious the reasons why.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS, R.
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Dear frogman, I kind of ''ordered'' an musicologist or musician as theacher next to Lew my English theacher. The reason being the lack of musical vocabulary. In the context of ''should bé'' concept. But we have had an interesting dicussion before in the context of the qustion ''nurture or nature'' in our musical prefrences. My thesis being that nurture is much more important than nature. We actualy ''endure'' music in our upbringing and learn to like music kind avaiable in our cultural enviroment. I am from Balkan and influenced by Bulgarian, Romanian, Serbian and Italian folk music. The Italian ''Napolitan songs'' and Italian opera's are obviously connected. Depending on what is nurtured in each contry will show what kind of music the new generation will prefer. To make my point about nurture I mentioned Chinese opera which is '' unbearable'' for us but obviously not because of our nature but nurture. You agreed then with me and told us how much difficulties you had to ''accomodate'' to Chinese opera. We in the West or rather Europe have an ubelievable welth of musical tradition which is in danger by American artificial amplified trash music which kids in the whole world use like fast food. Each kid has on his ears those big earphones which produce deafening sounds which may sound to them as music. The question MM or MC carts looks pretty silly in this context.
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I suppose that the best way to answer nandric’s question (’what "should be" should mean’?) would be to quote what I frequently tell my sons: "there are no ’shoulds’ in life". Not every listener wants the same things from recorded sound, and I think that it would be disingenuous for any music listener to claim to be able to entirely suspend his own "likes" when trying to determine and proclaim which technology does a better job, OVERALL, of replicating the sound of music. For me, if there is no agreement that the comparison must be made to live unamplified music then the argument need go no further. Complicating the matter is the tendency to talk about the differences between the two technologies in terms of the "sound" as defined by frequency response related qualities with little consideration for the most important ingredient in music: expression and musicality. "Warmth" and the absence of frequency response related distortions is not musicality. Technology can’t have musicality; humans (musicians) can. The technology can, to varying degrees, convey the expression and musicality of the musicians and this is the area that still separates analog and digital. For me, the idea that analog playback should strive for the sound of digital seems misguided and points to how the focus stays on the "sound" more than the expression in music. Imo, the often cited "warmth" in analog sound as compared to digital has more to do with the more accurate rendition of the human element (expression) than with frequency response related qualities and is the reason so many listeners react so positively to analog in spite of whatever technical "distortions" it may have compared to digital.
Only my opinion based on personal experience, but I can offer the perspective of someone who spends several hours each and every day around the sound of live unamplified acoustic instruments playing alone or in ensembles. Imo, and that of the majority of musicians in my professional circle, the differences between the two technologies still point to the superiority of the analog medium in capturing and reproducing the most important aspects of music making: timing, nuance of expression, instrumental blend and harmonic complexity in the tone. In fairness, it would be silly to suggest that digital destroys these aspects of music making since both technologies have gotten so good; but, analog is consistently heard to capture and reproduce a more accurate rendition of what the musicians intended in those regards. So, is a lesser rendition of these performance values not a "distortion" also? For me, that is a distortion of the worst kind; it may not be for another listener.
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@roberjerman before copy-paste something that you may not really understand by yourself, please look at the specs of the Technics EPC-100c mk4 MM cartridge, then read what cutting/mastering engineers think about coloration of the most MC cartridges. Try to find out which cartridges used to compare mastertape and vinyl disc master and why. We’re speaking about exceptional MM cartridges in this thread, they are neutrial. Forget about frequency roll off (it’s not true) with top of the line vintage MM cartridges. They all got a flat frequency response from 5Hz to 60kHz or even up to 100kHz! Don’t forget about high compliance of MM cartridges, so they are tracks better with lower tracking force.
And let me ask you a question: Do you have any good MM cartridge or good MC cartridge? "Lower noise floor with MC cartridge and SUTs" - you must be kidding???
And finally if you need low output and low inductance then look at the specs of the Stanton 980LZS MM cartridge: Output .06mV / Inductance 1.mH / DC Resistance 3. ohms. Walter Stanton believed to his dying day that NO moving coil cartridge could ever be any good.
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To continue: 2. They suffer from a form of FM distortion caused by the stylus being pulled forward in the groove (known as "needle drag" distortion. This sounds inherently worse than simple harmonic distortion and is a "coloration" associated with MM types. Due to their stiffer suspensions MC types are inherently less prone to this distortion. See Mitchell Cotter's explanation in The Audio Critic (1977). 3. MC types have an inherently lower noise floor. Output voltage is low (<1 millivolt) but current is high. So a transformer (a passive device) is the BEST way to boost voltage for use with a typical phonostage - and preserve that superior noise floor (better than any tube or transistor). 4. Because of the inherently low inductance of their coils MC types are immune to capacitive loading and are wide-bandwith devices (>100k).Faster transient response than ANY MM type! Therefore capable of superior information retrieval from the groove of that rotating vinyl disc (the LP). |
MM cartridges are inherently inferior to MC types because: 1. High- inductance of the amount of coils needed to get output > 2 millivolts. This makes MM types sensitive to capacitive-loading of connecting cables and phono stage inputs. Result is rolling-off of high frequency response - limiting bandwidth and slowing transient response. .. 2. Because of the "shoelace" type of cantilever suspension found in MM types |
One can try to tune his Stradivarius with the help of an electronic vilolin. In terms of modernism the electric kind is more modern. But I am interested in the way Raul ''tunes'' his imagined authority with his so called ''concepts''. Anyway ''concepts'' are not the things which can be true or fals . Those are sentences, statements or propositions . Anyway complete sentences and not words or concepts. Since Frege the inventor of modern logic this become clear. Well Raul invented his concept of ''ignorance level'', the concept of ''learning curve'', the concept of ''distortions '' and now the concept of ''should be''. The meaning of all those concepts was/is to show his own superiority. This is in particular painful by the concept of ''learning curve'' by a person who after writting in English for more than 20 years is still not able to produce or compose one single decent English sentence. However in the country of the blind, the one- eyed man is king. |
A novice I may be . I listen to my system and hear what it is telling me . I purchased a Glanz MFG 610x cartridge on the recommendation of one of your group . Yes this cartridge sounds more accurate and closer to my digital set up . I know this church is about the worship of the poly vinyl disc .I have spent some funds and invested my time and skills to achieve better sound quality from a compromised format .I don’t care what the format is as long as it is satisfying . What I get from Raul’s statement is that good digital is more truthful to the music then vinyl analog and this reference is used for his evaluation of cartridge performance . |
My proposition is throw Lew out of our church. He is obviously not a true believer. One can't be everyone's friend . Well of course pretend to be. There is one American expression for such conduct but I love the guy and try to avoid insulting expressions. |
Raul, you sold your Dynavector Karat 13D sometime ago. Could you please explaint why ? I´d guess it had a distortion issue, was it the large wooden body ? I really would appreciate your explanation.
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I've never made much of an effort to maximize my digital experience. So, I am open-minded as to its ultimate potential, using my own amplifiers and my speakers as transducers. (Let us not forget that in the end, we are listening to speakers in real-world rooms, not cartridges or DACs or whatever.) I use an Ayre C5Xe-mp for all digital in one of my two systems, and a Sony in the other. Both are one box players; the Ayre is superior to the Sony. I own a Mac laptop computer that I once planned to make the core of a hi-rez digital source, but I never got around to it, and I don't feel deprived as a result, but I do realize that that's where Nirvana lies for digiphiles. I have heard very expensive state of the art digital reproduction in the home of my neighbor, and it is of interest to me that he listens to LPs when he really wants to concentrate on "music". If this forum was about digital, we could go on from there. My point is that I am happy for anyone who is happy with his or her system. I feel no need to be "right".
Anyway, I don't disagree with those that claim digital has lower "distortion", when the word is used in the conventional way, as would be used possibly by "enginedr1960" whose moniker suggests he is an EE. On the other hand, we love Raul, but we know he is a hopeless case on the issue of distortion. I know what Raul would say to anyone who prefers LPs to digital; you must love distortions. Nandric may be familiar with this as a form of legal argument. The joke in our country is around the question, "When did you stop beating your wife?" Impossible to answer without incriminating onesself.
On another issue, Raul, if one were to scan your posts on this thread, I don't think your contention that you only started the thread to point out that MM is an "alternative" to MC, not necessarily superior to MC in general, would hold up. But I won't do that. It's OK either way. The thread and my own subsequent explorations have now convinced me that MCs that exceed the best of MM or MI cartridges, or which can even play in the same ballpark, are the exception, rather than the rule. |
enginedr, Raul introduced his ''concept should be''. I stated that I am not able to grasp this ''concept''. As far as I know he owns more than 100 cartridges of both ''alternatives'' but never mentioned the ''should be one''. How many more will he need? The other problem is that ''concepts'' , ''terms'' etc., are expressions which belong to language . We call those ''meanings'' but reality is not linguistic . That is why we ask for the correspondence between statements (not words) and reality. There are unknown many languages but only one reality . All true statements regardles of languages should tell ''the same story''. We the ''believers'' have our own churches. You are like an Protestant who is telling us the Catholics that our believe is wrong and your and Raul's right. But you have your own church called ''digital'' . What do you want in our church? |
Hi Nandric what I am saying is that I use my accurate digital system as a reference for my analog system . Getting a analog system with all its variables to sound right takes some work . I had upgraded my digital front end to a point where it sounded better the my analog rig .After upgrading to a better TT ,tone arm , cartridge & phono pre I am getting closer to the quality of my digital front end . I thank all on this site with good information to help with my choices of components .At this point my analog rig is performing to a higher SQ . |