Dear Nandric, you will forgive me this question: is philosophy helpful in understanding and describing the world and it's functioning giving explanations for daily life? and if you decided to go for a certain model does it give you answers on psychological implications? or does a philosophical model only allow you to avoid facing the pure and hard reality, the facts while circeling around...? I know this is provoking... subjective vs. objective is a good field approaching it from a philosophical perspective. sharing preferences is more or less a matter of aesthetical mind or of having made real experiences (or not).
I do understand that you cannot cope with "my old stuff" and you need not to understand or to like it. I remember very well when I was in a state of mind not being prepared to understand or to value something the way I later did.
dealing with a certain field means you have to dig into it. many people stop here fearing to be drawn into "dark or misleading territory". And not necessarily one has to enter the so called "vintage field". It is in the end a matter of experience, no philosophical model, no exchanging of preferences on a platform like this will substitute the listening experience to a master copy on a C37 or a wonderful piece of vinyl on a big Micro Seiki or EMT. I know I will not convince you by words. I only will give you the idea it is worth a try listening to some old (and good) stuff in a fine chain.
But this means you have to leave "your world". No philosophical model will allow you justifying your resistance doing so cause you need to explore the world (outside), the real truth. Bringing down your cognitive dissonance in this conflict you might end up in believing it is better staying at home. So it's up to you: staying at home or step a little outside the door. Whatever you decide going for you may get answers from your philosophical model when integrating and maybe Frege is of help...
best & today: fun only with old stuff - Thuchan |
Regards, Lewm: So, you're still listening to your Acutex with the 320 stylus and have not yet tried the 315?
Peace, |
Dear Raul, I agree with you on stylus shape, except for one shape, spherical. Nearly every report or review I have ever read on cartridges with spherical styli suggests that spherical styli can do great midrange but not so great bass or treble. This is not to say that one could not be happy with "just" a fabulous midrange sound and only so-so bass and treble. |
Dear Timeltel: I know he asked you not me but IMHO I think ( that almost always in the forum. ) any one could add something about and this time I decided to do it: just for the newcomers, as you said.
Btw, all the audio links in the audio chain are important and " delicate " but perhaps the phono cartridge ( the source. ) is the most one because works at the " microscopic " world and interact with so strong/hard " forces " down there that we can't even imagine where even 1-2 degrees on temperature difference makes a difference. Almost everything could alter the critical relationship between cartridge and tonearm/LP grooves. IMHO we can't try to make or try to appear things " simple " around cartridge subjects because are way complex and IMHO till today no one has the Bible on the whole subject. Certainly we amateurs did not.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Regards, Raul: Did you get up on the wrong side of the bed this morning? The gentleman asked a good question of me and I'm fairly sure it was slightly more complex than it appeared on the surface, or perhaps I read it to be so. I hope the answer was to his satisfaction. Just reporting the facts, Cap'n.
Peace, |
Dear Timeltel: That " common listening reference " ( as you name it. ) is for the moment out of my " front desk " ( other that is the process I use day by day. ) till people want it be prepare for and feel the necessity about. Sooner or latter this will be..As an example: Halcro tooks more than a year after readed my subwoofer thread to take action and this was after readed and confirmed about with a " pro " opinion and some of the ones that " die for their top BD TTs " took more than three years ( after I posted about. ) to go with the DD TTs like the SP-10s.
+++++ " concerned with the issue of distortion. Once identified it should become objectionable. It is difficult to believe there are those .... who would deliberately introduce such into their musical experience. " +++++
problem is that normally they don't identify. That Common listening reference process help to avoid it.
Anyway, maybe next time!!!!
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Stltrains: The ones I know ( a priori. ) in this thread is: Lewm and out of the thread I think Dougdeacon.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Waynefia: I know that you ask by curiosity and that you certainly are not a " rockie " on audio analog subjects, so my post is taking in count that.
I'm with Halcro when he said: " I personally don't care what shape the stylus is if it does the job. ", :
IMHO a cartridge is a integrated set of sub-sets cartridge parts where the stylus shape is only one of those cartridge parts and that IMHO even that has influence in the cartridge quality performance level it is not the one that define the overall cartridge performance.
A cartridge designer choose the cartridge different " places " build materials, stylus shape, coil type and material, size on cantilever or cartridge body, cartridge compliance, etc, etc. and tunned the cartridge to achieve the designer targets. He will choose the different cartridge parts ( including stylus shape. ) that be near or match those quality performance targets.
Elipthical or not, sperical or not line contact or not is only an important link ( as all the others. ) in the cartridge build chain.
What Timeltel posted on the stylus shape subject has IMHO no real meaning and IMHO is a misunderstood on the whole cartridge quality performance subject. Example of what he posted:
++++ " A minature .2 x .7 elliptical on micromass cantilever offered really solid bass, the kind that impacts the solar plexus. Good bass, as in the controlled kind. Visceral.... " +++++
well the same can be achieved with any kind of stylus shape depending on the designer targets and how good the cartridge was voiced.
The same for: ++++ " The nude .3 x .7 ellipt. sounded distant, as " +++++, that's the way those cartridges were tunned/voiced and nothing more.
The stylus shape question is for " rockies " in similar way when some one ask for different cartridge cantilever build materials. We can't aisle one single cartridge part ( stylus shape, cantilever, coils, etc, etc ) and say that the cartridge quality performance comes mainly from there.
Through this thread we already used almost every stylus shape made it and almost any cantilever type. We know what each one of those tested cartridges performs but we can't say that its performance level and characteristics is because the stylus shape or the cantilever. Even when we are changing different stylus replacement ( even from different cartridge models. ) we know what we are hearing but certainly we can't know with certainty why because we don't know if an aluminum cartridge cantilever in two-three different cartridge models are build exactly the same: hollowed, tapered, same size, same aluminum type ( blended? ), same walls cantilever thickness, real same compliance, etc, etc.
As I said we know what we heard and almost nothing more. So it is not only a misunderstood that post but useless.
Now, a cartridge designer can in very specific way to know the precise influence of stylus shape because during the cartridge build process and everything the same he can test different stylus shape and know for sure its individual " impact " on that design.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
hello i am looking a giving MM cartridges a listen to on my triplaner setup. ive been MC since returning to vinyl and presently using a zyx universe on my TP. back in the day i was a happy music lover listening to decca, audio technica and ortofon cartridges. i believe the last was a ortofon fl20 super. i have an ear 834p for phono amp dutys. classic rock and roll/blues are my most listened to music. if any of you MM users are spinning vinyl with a TP which MM cartridges match up best. thanks |
Dear Thuchan, I am sorry but I can only respond in 'philosophical' way. Starting with the 3 worlds of Frege. We all use this division implicit. When we refer to, say, the FR-64s, we are refering to an physical object (aka the physical world). When someone state that he values Mozart above any other composer he states something about his own psychology or mind (aka the world of psychology). When we refer to the 'skate force', VTF, FTA, compliance, etc. we refer to 'objective knowledge' and not to our own mind, brain or psychology (aka the world of objective knowledge). So it seems that our subjective preferences mean 'everyone for himslef'. But what about learning? Can you explain my admiration for Schubert's 'Wintereise' without my understanding of the German languge and the German influence in my intellectual development? Any influence is a function of time. So no a priori assumptions are possible. But what is more important we can discuss our preferences with others and try to share our love for music. Ie learning from aech other. BTW ,as you know, I share with you some interest in some 'trumpet'in an abstract way already. This would be not possible without mutual empathy and understanding. However I am not impressed by your 'old stuff' at all.
With German regards,
|
Nandric,
You leave me with nothing to say except repetition and to acknowledge that you obviously hold a faith (concerning Kant, Hegel, Frege and logic) that I do not possess.
Not a pressing concern for me, I must confess! Maybe, time will bring new reflections for us all. |
Dear Nandric,
I was tempted by older Audio Physic designs but never went for them. They are still a good buy even today. When I am in the US i am always surprised how many German designs are positively rewarded ( of course there are good ones, among many e.g. Blumenhofer). It is the same way when you look on US products in Germany. Maybe the distributors do a better job than the magazines (???).
and you are right I am not very patriotric in this kind of understanding. But as you know I am a fan of EMT and STUDER and NEUMANN, so you will at least find some German or German related products on my inventary list. You even bring some more money into our economy which is good...!
You mentioned this great record of Miles Davis. I was able to organize a master tape copy of "Kind of Blue" playing it on the Studer C 37. I have to admit I never heard the trumpet of Miles in such a lively way. And this is how music makes our life different than with background noise in the supermarket...
best & fun only - Thuchan |
Dear Raul & Timetel & Nandric,
regarding finding a joint testing ground, more explicitely a joint listening experience on the bases of comparable preconditions, I do think that it might be the most simple way to build up your own Assessment Scheme when following some recommendations on carts and testing it on your own system.
If a recommeded cart is fine you know you may follow recommendations of this guy the next time too, if not you will not do so. Of course you need to invest a little and also go for some risk but most of all it is one's own experience and assessment in front of the home system which counts in the end. You may use your favourite LPs not a standard collection - in the end it is all subjective, you will never reach an objective point of view.
This platform might be a more reliable bases than the industry driven reports in magazines ( which are only good for images of the product and maybe the manufacturer's address - not more!).
best & fun only - thuchan |
Regards, Raul: There is no reason any of those who visit this thread would not be extremely concerned with the issue of distortion. Once identified it should become objectionable. It is difficult to believe there are those (other than the famously distorted guitar work of such as Carlos Santana or Joe Bonamassa) who would deliberately introduce such into their musical experience.
Possibly some insight into the difficulties experienced when trying to communicate the properties of a cartridge could be explained by this snip from a published work by Tom Holman:
While attempting to measure the transient response of preamplifiers, some rather surprising results were found. Many preamplifiers did poorly on a test which was not thought to be particularly severe-the reproduction of a 1-kHz square-wave spectrum. Square waves were chosen over other kinds of nonsinusoidal test signals as they were found to correlate perfectly with asymmetrical signals, and the resultant spectrum is easy to analyze. As a test source, a fast square-wave generator with good symmetry was used. This square-wave signal was passed through a signal-pole 30-kHz RC low-pass filter to an accurate RIAA preemphasis network which incorporated rolloff in addition to the single 30-kHz real pole beyond 50 kHz. The signal, now at an rms level equivalent to the 3.54 cm/sec “0” VU sinewave test signal, but containing the sharp transients associated with the RIAA preemphasis, was applied to the input of the device under test. The output from the preamplifier should be a reconstructed square wave with only odd harmonics present. In fact, the preamplifiers had very different output spectra, ranging from identical to the input spectrum to a unit in which the second harmonic is down only 13 dB representing 22% second harmonic.---of fifteen currently available phonograph preamplifiers tested, all but one exhibited anomalous high-frequency behavior when fed a test signal from an actual phonograph cartridge. Several sources are possible for this kind of distortion--.
Establishing a "common listening reference" would be a useful tool but the implementation a difficult task and might be equally descritive of components downstream from the cartridge. Still, watching with interest and appreciative of the intent.
Your last post on the matter is strong evidence that the well voiced and informed observations of an individual can be meaningful.
Peace, |
Dear Raul, The next day I bought 2 MM carts that you recommended and was not in the position to participate in the (next) poker play. My poker partners should be angry at you but I am grateful. The paradox in my case was: buy some MM carts to save the money.
Kind regards, |
Dear nandric: ++++ " I was friendly invited for the next day. " +++
of course they did it!$!$!$!
regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Raul, Think of this learning proces as a teacher. You will need of course some programme and can develope what ever you think is necessary. I don't agree with Lew about his assumption about the 'cultural bias'. I do believe that anything can be teached and I am very interested in his explanation of ,say, Miles Davis 'Kind of Blue'. I know that he is the right person to do this because he is a jazz singer and an admirer of Davis. From my own experience I know that a good teacher is 'priceless'. In the same way I think about other kind of music. One can learn from others about a new or different insight in, say, some composition of Mozart , Mahler or whowever. I am an old man but still eager to learn.
Regards, |
I forgot. Maybe I'm wrong but seems to me that some of you are not " prepared " to take action/first step on that subject in a similar way that people in this Analog forum were not prepared when years ago: I posted that DD TTs like the SP-10s or DP80s can beats top BD TTs or when I posted of the necessity of two subwoofers on true stereo fashion or when I posted on the signal SUTs degradation or when I talked about the tonearm/cartridge " unity ( when no one talkes about before. ) or when I posted about the critical importance of the phono stages ( when no one talked about ) when I posted on DD naked fashion TTs or even when I started this thread on MM/MI source alternative.
As always everything is about " time ". Today many persons on Agon ( some of you in this thread. ) already took ( years after. ) some of my posted audio alternatives and I know they are really happy with!!!
So, that time will comes with out doubt.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Nandric, Lewm and friends: Like the Dertonarm first great opportunity almost all of you diminish it again or at least don't think could help you or just you think you are " done ".
I'm not entilted to this Dertonarm idea because is a hard work especially for me.
+++++ " LP's which each of us should own as a 'common reference' in our discussion about MM carts. This to me looks like an fantastic idea and I also assume that each of us can afford those 5 LP's so the most members can participate................................................ we all can check and listen to the same piece and hopefully will grasp what the other member means with his statement. Anyway we will then listen to the same music. " +++++
this Nandric is only one of the targets on the whole process. There are other interesting subjects/targets like: to be certain/aware not only how good a cartridge track but understand the differences on different cartridge traking distortion levels ( not with test tones but with real LP music. ) and how we perceive it: today many of you can't know for sure the " content " of distortion you are hearing due to cartridge traking distortion due that the stylus lose minute contact with the LP track grooves. Today many of you can't identify how a cartridge microphony affect its quality performance level and how that microphony is percieved by our ears.
These are only two examples of what we can attain when we are " inside " a precise and simple listening test process.
In my case the overall process is designed to look for ( mainly in a very precise way. ) what we are loosing with " that " audio item under test ( errors included ) and what I'm listening with that audio item. The process is not oriented to " what I like it or not " but for what is happening or not looking for lower distortions.
I know that all of you have its own process but as Dertonarm thinked and I agree a Common one is IMHO what we need.
Yes, almost always we are " safe " of scrutiny through our today subjective process attitude: " Its wrong but I like it " " It's distorted but I like it ".
Certainly that for people of that " caliber " that process is out of question.
The process is for the persons that think they know where are seated but that they want to confirm it.
IMHO and due to my self on purpose training I know for sure where I seated and this fact permit me to know several times where some of you are seated and why you posted what you posted.
Anyway, thank's to read these posts, fun hast to go on!!!!
regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Dgob, My advice to you was to read the correspondence between Frege and Wittgenstein about the 'idealistic' (aka psychologic or subjective) approach of science. You deed not read this correspondence but only assumed that this must be about Wittgenstein. This however is not the case. Frege was fighting against psychologist approach in logic and science his whole life. To explain the issue he proposed a division in 3 worlds: 1. the physical world 2 the world of our minds or our psychology and 3 the world of our knowledge. As soon as anybody publish some theory this theory become 'public ownership'. Ie each individual is in principle able to read and contemplete about the statements of the theory. The 'subjective' approach imply that each of us will have his own mathematics, physics, biology, etc. Ie there is no way that we can establish identity relation between two individual brains. In some sence the statement made and published by a individual are no more part of his brain. All the teachers are supposed to transfer some (part) of knowledge to the next generation. What are thy transfering to the next generation according to your Hegelian approach? Frege was a phylosopher (of science), the logician who invented the modern logic and a mathematician who produced the fundation of mathematics (see Booles correction of the so called paradox). While Frege thought about science and mathematics in the 'spirit' of Kant he never mentioned Hegel in his whole work. Very strange if you know that Hegel produced 600 pages about the 'Science of logic'.
Regards, |
Regards, Waynefia: Too early to say with certainty. A minature .2 x .7 elliptical on micromass cantilever offered really solid bass, the kind that impacts the solar plexus. Good bass, as in the controlled kind. Visceral, I think they call it. Soundstage was very good, perhaps 5th row seating? Hf's may not be to everyone's preference with the minature ellipt., they seemed slightly brittle, as do (to my ears) most of the "minature" styli. YMMV. Keep in mind, gear is all SS, ancient but maintained every two years to spec. It will not do a cart any "favors".
The nude .3 x .7 ellipt. (tapered but not micro-mass cantilever. comp. to AT120e) sounded distant, as though seated in the "heavens". The insturments stayed in place but localized between and in front of the speakers, fairly good in height but lacking in both depth and width. With an ATN140lc, I suspect a dropout in the midrange is due to a controlled/damped cantilever resonance, all indications are the 7V is 650 Ohm output imped. (again, the Japaneese language), the 140LC cart is a bright 3200 Ohm (VE database). FYI, all loading has been 50k & shunted cap. 100pF, EPA-250 TA wiring & cableing factory spec'ed at 62pF, 12gm eff. mass.
Five styli in a week, any opinion is a premature opinion so remember you asked. The OEM stylus is, as is, good to go. A .2 x .7 mini ellipt/micromass cant. is also good (comparable to a Signet TK5ea stylus, TurnTableNeedles, $110.00, no association). The one I auditioned is a NOS Signet AM 20 stylus, aprox. 10 hrs. use. Much more responsive than the .3 x .7 "distant" ellipt., definition/layering is also much better. The ATN140lc, someone else may find differently but on my example the mids-upper mids tend to drop out. The AT 440MLa stylus, when tried, I hope does well. The 7v needs more time with the 155LC stylus. The six hours I've given the N155LC on the cart isn't enough to say much more than "Oh that's nice!".
A note: Henry observed the OEM stylus on the cart is louder. For what it's worth, the vu meters on a tape recorder indicate a 2db increase. Examination of the cartridge shows the magnets are closer to the front coil pole peices than those at the rear, other styli are more equally spaced in this area. Considering the 2gm VTF+/- and higher inertial forces (warped lp, etc.) the cartridge might encounter on some of the more massy arms, in this case and with the equiped stylus, this seems a benefit, not a fault.
Peace, |
Dear Thuchan, The Virgo II was the first $5000 speaker to get A class recommendation from Sterophile. One can't cheat Fremer and Atkinson at the same time. But I was even more impressed by Gerhards Calderas and bought them for my son. I am familiar with some German HI-FI Magazines for years. So I noticed that Germans are not able to rightly value German products. No wonder then that H. Pearson 'discovered' ASR Emitter II and the Basis Exclusive while I owned both 10 years before. The same apply for many other German products and among them Audio Physic designs by Gerhard. I am, I think, a more 'patriotic German' then you are.
Regarding the poker game. I got some 'introduction' to this game for 5 minute and lost 500 Euro. But as some kind of 'compensation' I was friendly invited for the next day.
Regards, |
Wayne, I will let the Professor speak for himself. With cartridges, I personally don't care what shape the stylus is if it does the job? I've had spherical styli ( particularly on MMs) which have sounded sublime. I've also had Shibata and Line Contacts which haven't floated my boat. I'm happy to admit that I couldn't tell you in a 'blind' listening test, what shape the stylus is? I think perhaps the Professor could? For myself, it's the bottom line that counts and I've certainly learnt over the past 5 years, that 'dogma' in audio, is generally untenable. |
Dear Nandric,
you told us only half of the story, so what happened when you played poker with those guys. In what condition did you leave the house...
best & win only - Thuchan |
Dear Nandric,
I have heard the story of JG on other brands and models as well. At every time a manufacturer is "caught in the act" that his price tag may be not totally in congruence with the material built in he comes with such an explanation. Should he say: Dear customer, we used the cheapest material we got, when we finished building the unit we thought this is a good piece, wonderful, it is even one level higher than we used to position it, let`s think about a nice price tag. No, manufacturers don`t do that...
best & fun in Serbia... |
Addendum, The story I told caused by association some other. That is probable how our brain works. I was invited by an acquaitance for a poker game at his home and was very suprised with his reaction when I told him that I was not familiar with this game. He said: 'excellent , just what we need.' I assumne that the producers of those 'expensive wire' reason in a similar way.
Regards, |
Dear Raul, regarding the Ortofon headshell 10000 the only thing to get an opinion is buying it, testing it and return with a final judgement. Maybe we then get a clue if it is worth the heavy price or if it is just nonsense investing so much money just in a headshell
best & fun only - Thuchan |
Dear Thuchan, There is a very strong suggestion entailed in the expressions 'cheap' versus 'expensive' (wire). Herewith a real story . When Virgo II from Joachim Gerhard got A class recomendation by Sterophile some American audiophile was not fully convinced and wanted to 'see' for him self. So he inspected the inside of the speaker and, probable, announced: Heureka! He discovered 'cheap wire' in there. He then bought some expensive wire and claimed 'fantastic results'. Some other audiophile, who was obviously more cautious, decided to investigate the issue first and asked Joachim himself , avoiding the rude expression 'cheap': ''Why deed you use 'those' wire?'' Joachim's answer: 'Well we compared some 20 kinds of wire and thought, after 2 years of experimenting, that those were the best.'
German regards, |
Halcro / Timeltel, on the AT-7V, do you consider the stylus profile at all ? This being an elliptical and all the rage is the varied versions of line contact etc... ? You are not concerned about the lesser stylus ? Just curious on your thoughts.
Thanks,
Wayne |
Dear Timetel,
you are right there are many oberservations possible on copper litz as well as on silver litz. I' m also using copper litz but in very special applications: I soldered the A 90 cart into the EMT J shell by using very fine and just 15 mm long copper litz. The silver and the copper camps are still fighting (wonderful picture you "painted") which is nonse.
You may go for good (!) copper or for good (!) silver and you will have in both cases extraordinary results. But you have to secure that your tonearm litz is of adequate quality. This most people forget and they don't care. They run their arms - even the expensive ones - with cheap ( 1,50 Dollar the meter) and inadequate copper litz of some manufacturers. Maybe they will never know what brilliant sound their tonearm might be able to transport.
What I am saying is, when you have achieved selecting a good tonearm wiring and a good phono cable why not keeping an eye on the headshell's quality as well as on the connectors?
Yes the TK3E is an exceptional cart!!!
best and fun only -Thuchan |
Raul,
That's the insanity of the market in a nutshell, IMO. |
Timeltel,
Thanks for asking, there might be news on the Technics Mk4 and (fingers crossed) I'll get back if things move in a positive direction.
I do miss it so |
Dear Banquo363: +++++ " Empire 4000diii. I tried and tried to make it work for me, but to no avail. I gave up because life is short and there are many other MM carts to try and have fun with and learn from. " +++++
yes, life is to short. This kind of experience already happened to me with some cartridges and due that I have to " go on " I just left them for a " better time " but I normally don't gave up like you, only if my best efforts are not enough for.
Btw, you posted on the Empire subject:
+++++ " Worst of all, it could be I had a 'fake' stylus (even though I bought it as genuine NOS). It looks exactly like the others that are judged authentic, but evidently Empire had some unscrupulous practices in their day, so who knows. This last reason is why I'm not keen on replacing the stylus even though there's a shop in the Netherlands that purports to carry the 'cross my heart, hope to die' authentic stylus. " +++++
certainly you did not change that stylus, that stylus source till today is one I recommend: I bought 3-4 stylus replacements ( original ) with out any single " reserve ".
In the other side, in the Montepilot Reed tonearm review I posted:
++++ " I own two sample stylus too and in my case I found out ( remember that the Empire cartridges are a 30+ years old design: not a " fresh " one. ) that are differences on quality performance in between, small ones but differences you can discern. I don't know if you already try your both samples but you can try and see what happen.
Other subject is that many of these MM/MI cartridges came a little loose in between the cartridge and the stylus plastic body, well I improve the cartridge quality performance when I glued the stylus plastic body to the cartridge it self in a way that there is almost no movement in between when on playback. " +++++
so, through my 4000D3 experiences there exist differences even with " true " original two stylus in between.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear friends: What's goes on? whre this comes from? why? what could justify it against quality performance level?.
Why are we seating here seen this?:
http://cgi.ebay.com/Ortofon-LH-10000-Limited-Edition-Headshell-/200618135918?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item2eb5c5d16e#ht_3509wt_905
there are other headshells for 600.00-800.00 and 900.00, so right now is starting a " trend " on this subject.
why some one is trying to" punish " us with? what do you think about?
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear friends: Just great,
http://cgi.ebay.com/Bang-Olufsen-MMC1-Cartridge-Excellent-Condition-/290575122507?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item43a7a0804b#ht_542wt_1139
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Regards, Dgob: A concern that's been debated for millenium. Absolutes exist but perfection remains a concept. Consequently there is a scale of evaluation, for validity it should be based on classic values and grounded in knowledge and experience.
In Aristotle's view the "good" is opposed to Protagoras' subjective relativism, according to which good and evil is defined by whatever human beings happened to desire. The ideal can be viewed as objective and independent of human wishes. However, the ideal is in a way relative to the individual, that is, to one's natural end. Relating this to the pursuit of excellence, in spite of it's current popularity, the charms of "Rap" (music?) elude me, no matter how closely it obtains to the "ideal" expression of the form. Aristotle says that's ok.
Your post (and perspective), as always, is appreciated. Do I remember a failed EPC-100C cart, a MK4? Progress?
Peace, |
Dear Chris, You are only pretending to be 'innocent' of any knowledge regarding the kinds of Balkan brandys. Is there in Canada some kind of prohibition? While you deed forget your native language your Balkan vocabulary regarding those brandys is suspiciously rich. Wel the 'true Sliwowitz' is made from blue plums which grow only in Serbia. That is why the Polish need to import them before they can produce any.'Rakija' is made from any fruit that is available while 'prepecenica' is any kind which is twice distiled (aka >40%). As is the case with other things the more labour and time is spend in the production, the better the 'stuff' is.
Regards, |
Dear Timeltel Per your last post I pulled my Court and Spark lp and enjoyed last night. Regarding the “Raised on Robbery” track – of note any money wagered on the "Maple Leafs" hockey team that Joni references, ever since this lp came out - would still have got you not one stinkin’ dime. The sport is a religion here. Her reference to the “Empire” hotel was also kind of funny considering.
Dear Nikola
When an uncle of mine came to Canada from the Balkans he brought me a 1 litre clear corked bottle with something in it – I still have half of it – this is not plum brandy – it cant be - if you could call water fire - this is it. I remember it being called Rakia. I think it comes closer to the Prepecenica definition.
Anyway
If you are sipping this stuff while listening to music and perusing Ebay its no wonder you have bought so many MM cartridges. :^) Cheers Chris |
Lewm,
I respect your views. However, we do rank cartridges and (Timeltel) that poses problems for any relativism that does not seek grounding: such grounding seeming to pose the traditional challenges of truth/value (at an obvious remove - historically - from retreating into either side of some subjective/objective dichotomy). Maybe as difficult as Hegel's speculative proposition. I don't know but I try to keep an open mind to the explorations of other, more qualified researchers. |
Dear Halcro, I am really, really sorry. This must be the influnce of the Dutch who are considered (like the Germans) to be very 'modest'(aka stingy). My own father would never forgive me such an lack of hospitality of which the Serbians are so proud. You can get as many meals as you like under proviso that you make your own breakfast. I need my 'beauty sleep'. I assume that you was confused reg. Sliwowitz and Wodka. I was teached at the age of 14 that Polish Wodka is the best. Despite the fact that Russian are considered to be our 'old friends' and Polish 'old enemy'. There is however something strange in the relationship between those 'Slavic brothers'. There is no way to predict if they will embrace or kill each other.
With Slavic regards, |
Banquo363,
The Analysis Plus Silver sound as neutral as any cable I have tried. It does not emphasise the midranges (as many generations of the Siltech cables I tried did) nor produce the same sound as the Kubala Sosna Emotions did at astronomical prices. I know many question the value of square wave reproduction but the scientific claims of APS do seem to stand up in practise. My statements about their cost was in different times: they could easily be found second hand for less that we pay for our MM/MI cartridges (and the economic downturn had not hit me as it now has). Raul also assisted me in getting some cheap sets of them and online searches (say Used Cables for example) furnished the rest.
On Hegel and relativism, I would not seek to impose anything... but for those who are searching anyway I felt that he stands far more scrutiny than is often imposed through various reductive caricatures of his thinking. Granted, regarding relativist approaches, he did (for better and worse) seek universal groundings and oppose intellectual, cultural and political anarchy - while placing subjectivism at the heart of his thinking. |
Regards, Banquo363: Bravo! Relativism remains an open question. If there are no subjective criteria of evaluation, nothing distinguishes a Shakespeare play from a comic strip. The equalizing of all hierarchies might be viewed as the end of all culture and lamented as a failure to reach beyond individual particularities.
There are works of such signifigance the many will find it good, but only the sophisticate will know why. As there is yet to be one cartridge identified that all can agree upon as just right in all aspects, we should be pleased to identify those possesing commendable qualities while committing the fewest recognized errors and find pleasure in sharing that knowledge. Or of gear, or sometimes philosophies. Of persons, Donald Rumsfeld is an always acceptable but not neccessarialy agreeable subject.
Peace, |
Dear Nandric, Only 3 meals a day!? I have a friend (also of Polish lineage), whose chief claim to fame was discovering a meal that slotted seamlessly between breakfast and brunch :^) You realise also, that the Poles claim the Russians stole vodka from them?........vodka, as you know, being the Polish word for 'water' which possibly explains the demeanor of their citizens? Cheers |
Dear Dgob, My point was merely that there is no absolute truth or value to a phono cartridge, or as Santayanna wrote, history teaches us that history teaches us nothing. (This is completely irrelevant, but I love it.) I should think that any great philosophe has more to offer than does a phono cartridge and therefore is more worth the effort required to reach a common understanding. |
I did not mean to divert this thread any further from its original path with my brief response on Hegel. It just seems to me that the issues raised have a direct parallel to the issue about cartridges.
To argue that something - Hegel - is difficult is one (acceptable) thing. However, to consequently suggest that difficulty means that we should or could not gain great truth from that thing - Hegel - is another (unacceptable) thing.
Similarly, to argue that evaluating the quality of a cartridge or other piece of hifi is difficult (as we all more or less accept) is not sufficient grounds for the increasingly presented argument that the search for such truth or value should be dismissed. I draw a different parallel with carts. In this thread somewhere above I described my disappointing experience with the Empire 4000diii. I tried and tried to make it work for me, but to no avail. I gave up because life is short and there are many other MM carts to try and have fun with and learn from. I don't conclude that therefore no one should or could find heaven with that cart--Chris appears to have found a bit of just that with it. More power to him. Nor did my difficulty achieving success with it deter me from trying to find heaven with other carts. It would strike most of us as unreasonable, non?, to insist that I keep banging on with the Empire (try a different tonearm!, different vta!, etc..) until I find it satisfactory and illuminating. Why should I when there's an AT 7v in my future? Mutatis mutandis, if a man spends a considerable amount of his free time trying to understand Hegel, then his failure to gain anything from it is not necessarily his fault. Perhaps the author is just impenetrable; perhaps the man didn't try hard enough. Is it reasonable though to tell the man to spend even more time trying to figure out which is correct? Perhaps, but probably not, given that life is short and there is so much Frege to read. That's not to say Hegel is worthless--but it is a fact that he was so to that man. And given that, it could even justify his animosity towards said author. On a different note, Dgob: I see from your system profile that you use analysis plus silver cables. I'm considering the interconnects if only I could find them at, as you put it, 'unbelievably low prices'. I assume you mean 'relatively speaking' low prices compared to other ridiculously priced cables. Where did you get yours? |
Nandric,
I have said that I do not think this thread is a suitable place but I must be wrong.
By way of conclusion, I have not aimed to claim status but simply tried to suggest a way into understanding Hegel's logic following your statements. He also acknowledged the difficulties of comprehending said logic - this also made explicit in his ongoing correspondence with Niethammer: "For as you know, it is easier to be unintelligible in a sublime way than intelligible in a down-to-earth way." (8 July 1807).
I therefore suggested the Phenomenology of Spirit as a way into his Science of Logic, which was intended for young gymnasium students. That was the approach that I undertook in my postgraduate studies in trying to make sense of his Science of Logic. The links and comprehension offered through this approach seem enhanced by the notes from his relevant lectures that are now available as the 'Encycopedia of the Philosophical Sciences in Outline and Critical Writings'(1990). An approach that can be extended across his Science(s) of Religion/History and Rights. Maybe a glorious failure in acknowledging the grounds of its own failure.
Burning straw men (Wittginstein's not having read Hegel etc) rarely helps and if we must leave past failures, we need to review that terrain critically or seem destined to tread those same swamps that we'd swear we had left.
I am not a philosopher but a simple man with interests. More I cannot claim. |
Nandric,
You do seem keen on reducing things (be it to categories or assumptions): as is undoubtedly your right! That remains the point of our correspondence. |
Dear Dgob, My advice is to read the correspondence between Frege and Wittgenstein about the so called 'idealistic German philosophy' to which Hegel belongs (see Google: G. Frege). I hope you will get the picture.
Regards, |
Dear Halcro: In regard to the AT 7V you said you preferred it above your Zyx Universe. Since you own the Phantom tonearm I am sure you likely have listened to this combination in your system. HP reviewed the Phantom/Atmos combination in TAS a few issues back. I have pasted his review below. Would you say that your experience with the AT 7V resembles his desription of the Phantom/Atmos combination? Even if it is close or in the ballpark this is an incredible bargain when you compare the prices of each.
Kind Regards,
The ZYX Omega
The first thing, and I mean first in the sense of immediate, you’ll notice about this cartridge is how very different it sounds from all the other cartridges on the market (and in this survey). It has to be carefully installed in the pickup arm (and that means it has to be just so). Then you’ll hear how precisely rendered are any of the sounds it decodes; this it does with a purity and low distortion that elude everyone else’s designs, and that means virtually all of the competition.
In a way, it eludes even the cartridge I’d rather live with over the long run, particularly in “purity.” It has the widest soundstage of all the cartridges we evaluated, and, thus, the very best separation figures (and even makes sonic “sense” of that wide separation). And because of its crazy-glue-like way of sticking to a groove, it has the lowest audible distortion, thus the purity and the sense of sparkle aplenty. In fact, it is so smooth that you find yourself wanting to play it louder. And that you will. [Though we didn’t include Dusty’s rendition of “The Look of Love” in the last run of tests, we did listen to hear what happened and maybe to appreciate just how delicate some of her vocal shadings are (call out the goosebumps), so beautifully rendered was her voice here.]
So what are we missing? For one thing, an extended sense of front-to-back depth on the soundstage—stretching the sound wide has foreshortened three-dimensional space. The perspective is up close, thus the sense of aliveness. Needless to say, the depth—the placement of instruments on its reproduced stage—is quite specific and focused. Reproduction of the Weaver’s voices is well nigh impeccable, as is the transient pop of their acoustic instruments, sometimes subdued by some of the other cartridges.
And things sure do sound alive with the ZYX. So what is it about this high-tech design that I just can’t wrap my ears around (even as I well know it will be the cartridge of choice for the high-resolution folks)? Could it behind there is a soullessness behind all this “perfection”? Is there such a thing as “purer than life” (in art that is, certainly not politics)? (End of review) |
Nandric,
When charm accompanies wit... I do try to understand you and will continue to do so.
Such are the things of memory |