Dear Raul, I don't think you would have the albums which best illustrate the distortions I hear with the rubber gasket. The most demanding and realistic concert grand piano music I have ever heard recorded is the Liszt Sonata h-Moll in B Minor by Daniel Barenboim on DG 2531 271. When played at realistic volume levels (90-95 dB) this disc has had my neighbours leaning over their side and back fences applauding at the conclusion. The lower bass octaves are so powerful, deep and resonant that this disc will reveal any weaknesses in the analogue chain. With the rubber in place, I can hear distortion in the lower bass notes which are not there without the rubber gasket.
The most convincing large-scale orchestral recording I have ever heard is The World of Borodin-Symphony No 2 on Decca SPA.281. This disc is more realistic and dynamic IMO than even the RCA Royal Ballet with Ansermet. Again, on the massive lower fortissimo themes, there is distortion audible which is not there without the rubber gasket in place.
With the infamous Respighi Pines of Rome on RCA LSC-2436, the piercing violin crescendos at the end of side 1, become brittle and screechy with the rubber (much like the performance of most LOMC cartridges) whilst without, they are clean and listenable.
Similarly on Harvest by Neil Young, the tracks Alabama and Words on side 2 become muddied and annoying on the upper treble overloaded overdubs with the rubber whereas without, they are bearable and understandable. And bear in mind that all these results are with high-compliance MM cartridges which do not put nearly as much energy into the headshells as low-compliance LOMCs?
Hope this is of some help? Cheers Henry |
Regards, Timeltel - while I don't share D. Rumsfeld's political points of view, I nevertheless absolutely agree that his summary was indeed brilliant. IMHO everything - every minor sonic change and effect - in audio can be related to physical circumstances and explained by careful scientific research and measuring. After all - this is physics. Fact is, that so far we know a few things which should give certain figures for sure. Problem is, that we still don't know all the tiny distributors to sound in audio reproduction - i.e. we still don't know all what we have to measure and are unsure about how to judge a few measuring results (regarding reception and reflection in the human brain and that strange complex thing we call "hearing"). But - apparently we know that we don't know. Which is kind of progress ....... Cheers, D. |
Regards, Lewm: "In the end, you just have to listen. There's too much conflicting scientific theory to make a decision based on it."
Lew, with selective effort one can find references to "prove" nearly anything desired, but let's keep this under our hats. I'm having too much fun doing it ;-).
Meanwhile, those hearing the difference with either the o-ring present/removed or different headshell leadwire configurations and interested enough to do so are surely justified in seeking information as to why?
One of my favorites, (on terrorism) from former Sec. of St., Donald Rumsfeld:
“There are things we know we know about. There are things we know we don’t know. And there are things that are unknown unknowns. We don’t know that we don’t know.”
He got a lot of grief for that. When read carefully, it's absolutely brilliant.
Peace, |
Dear Halcro: If you don't have time to tell us the whole " history " behind those distortions using the O-ring as I asked you I appreciate at last that you can post in which LPs/tracks you heard those distortions, could you?. Of course that if you could post the whole " history " that's will great!.
Thank you in advance.
Henry, no other subject that make the same tests than you and see what happen.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Timel, In the end, you just have to listen. There's too much conflicting scientific theory to make a decision based on it. |
Regards, Henry: Sorry my friend, the cat is more easily let out of the bag than put back in.
Lew made some good observations about reflected resonance, the paper quoted above dealt with the intensification of resonance consequent to two undamped (similar) materials in association. The logic of both situations is obvious, proof of both are readily available with a little research, as is the probability that increased resistance from the fine gauge wire necessary for Litz configured headshell tags results in a noticeable effect on cartridge performance.
"The fraction of the window area occupied by copper in a litz-wire winding will be less than it could be with a solidwire winding. This leads to higher dc resistance than that of a solid wire of the same outside diameter." From IEEE Transactions on Power Electronics, vol. 14, no. 2.
Litz wire.com-applications: "Simple twisted bunched conductor wire can accomplish this adequately where proximity effect would be the only significant problem with solid wire." And: From a table of application to DC frequencies, from "10 KHZ - 20 KHZ, 33 AWG" is sufficient to avoid skin effect, from "20 KHZ - 50 KHZ, 36 AWG."
Trusty ol' Wikipedia: "At 60 Hz, the skin depth of a copper wire is about 1⁄3 inches (8.5 mm). At 60 kHz, the skin depth of copper is about 0.01 inches (0.25 mm). With Litz bundling, the magnetic fields generated by current flowing in the strands are in directions such that they have a reduced tendency to generate an opposing e.m.f. in the other strands. The ratio of distributed inductance to distributed resistance is increased, relative to a solid conductor, resulting in a higher Q factor at these frequencies." In this example, critical damping (loading) is needed to ensure the fastest response (approach to the final value) possible without overshoot. For your reflection, a bell that rings forever has an infinite Q factor.
The boring details: In the past several years numerous headshells focusing on low mass magnesium designs have been obtained. Various replacment leads tried resulted in a preference for twisted (bunched) silver or thick copper tags. Curiousity led to a bit of research, the clips above reflect the gist.
No desire to become involved in a lengthy debate but this seems a matter deserving consideration. IMHO, antique gear, ears, etc. Emf, eddy currents and proximity effects in tonearm wiring are not being addressed.
Peace, |
Does anyone know where one could find a Line Contact / Shibata stylus for an Azden YM-P20/P50 cartridge? (an original P50VL would be lovely...)
thanks |
Dear Timeltel, I know better than to argue with your ears.....or Raul's? So I accept your conclusions without question :-) Cheers Henry |
Regards, Halcro: O-ring "Nuded" headshells:
1: EPA-250 TA, magnesium headshell, yes. 1: three unidentified arms/headshells, no. 1: A strong first impression but more information needed. 1: In theory---. 1: Alternatives.
Situational or universal improvment, looks like a definite maybe.
Peace, |
Dear Timeltel: Unfortunately I was busy the last 2-3 weeks with a " new " subject " that IMHO is a very happy discovery for me, I'm preparing a the information to start a new thread.
Due to that I don't test again that Shure one but as fast I can I will do it and report about.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Halcro: As I posted mines were frist impressions.
I have in deeep interest about those distortions you talked and I would like that you can tell me ( appreciate that. I will try to duplicate as near is possible your experiences on the subject. ) with which cartridges/headshells and tracks on the LPs you experienced that distortions and if you can which kind of distortions ( I mean what you heard about that consider a distortion. ).
Thank you in advance.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Raul and Professor, I tried rubber gaskets on 3 of my arms with 3 different cartridges. Little difference was found on most 'easy-listening' music but never did the rubber 'add' anything of value to my enjoyment. However on the most demanding material.....fortissimo orchestral climaxes and well recorded forte bass notes of a concert grand piano, the 'rubber' equipped headshells simply distorted. And it weren't pretty :-( I'm glad for you both that you find the rubber 'damping' attractive.......but this little camper is happy to find 'theory' and 'practice' coinciding in this instance. Regards Henry |
Guys, I have never done any experimentation with headshells. It is only a year or so that I have owned any tonearm with detachable headshell, which i used to consider an anathema and now consider a convenience. So, if the headshell came to me with a rubber gasket, I am using the rubber gasket. If not, not. I am using Dynavector headshells on the DV505, Kenwood L07J headshell on its tonearm. The Denon headshell also has a very thin gasket of some kind, probably not a rigid one. |
Regards, Lew(m): Quite a quandry, isn't it. Apparently your previous post and mine were on the moderators' desk simultaneously. Your points precisely illustrate the source of my curiosity. Please try the comparison, you're an experienced listener and your input would be appreciated. I do entertain the concept that with various materials (or the absence of) interfacing the collet one might "fine tune" the headshell/cart to the tonearm.
Again, agree with Raul, it dosn't take long to decide. I too prefer the gasket in place. Will have the silver solder and wire this wknd, what an interesting investigation.
Grinned at your depiction of Sorbo. Squooshy it definitely is but it does do a good job of raising my isolation "device".
How goes your preamp rebuild?
Peace, |
Dear Lewm: Yesterday I gave a try to one of my SAEC headshells that comes with a metal O-ring and I made some tests against the same headshell but with rubber O-ring. These was not an " in deep " tests with different cartridges but even that I prefer the rubber over the metal one, of course that this could change with other cartridges but at this time I don't have the time to go on.
As you said always there are trade-offs and each one of us choose or choosed what is near or what match our targets.
I assume you are not using any O-ring with your headshells, can I ask you if you can try the rubber O-ring and share with us your experiences about?
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Timeltel, But for whatever reason there are lots of audiophiles who despise the "sound" of sorbothane used as a footer or as a gasket. The usual indictment is "muddy". I have no opinion but have stayed away from sorbo for that reason. I have some very old big squooshy sorbothane feet that I have never used, in fact. |
Regards, Raul: The most effective means of reducing boundary resonances were determined to be fibered materials arranged in non-parallel biases.
Perhaps OT but relevent to the subject of resonance, for an isolation platform I find merit in laminated bamboo supported by sorbothane pucks. The material fits the above description and is extremely rigid while remaining relatively acoustically inert. Most cabinetry shops will be able to provide and cut to size, constrained layer or mass loaded/spiked designs might also be given some consideration.
Anyway, back to MM carts. I'm finding much to appreciate with the Shure ML 140HE, might you find time to comment?
Peace, |
But here's the thing, Raul: The o-ring is made of a material that is dissimilar from the apposing metal surfaces. When the vibrational energy put into the headshell reaches the boundary between two dissimilar materials, a large fraction of it is reflected backwards, in this case back into the headshell. That might not be a good thing. This is why J Carr's suggestion of a metallic washer or ring seems better to me than rubber, altho the issue could be mitigated in the case of the headshell/tonearm interface, because there IS the underlying firm link between the two that constitutes also a partial metal to metal contact, which would permit some drainage of energy to the tonearm. As in all audio things, it's a trade-off, I think. |
Dear Timeltel/all: As more listening time I take with this rubber O-ring inn as more makes sense that this " coupling " O-ring main target is to damp connection between two metal surfaces ( headshell and tonearm wand ) avoiding " boundary resonances " that at the end IMHO means : lower distortions.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Regards, Halcro (& Raul): Henry, you may find this interesting: "boundary resonance --- is of the same nature as a resonance in a system without damping: an increase is observed in the amplitudes of the characteristics of the wave --- unlike the conventional form of a resonance with finite amplitudes". Journal of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics, Volume 55, Issue 6, 1991.
Peace, |
Dear friends: I forgot: the other headshell I owned with a non-rubber O-ring was the Victor LH-1000 that's a beautiful dark grey ( shiny top plate. ) 18grs ceramic one that comes with a metal O-ring this time rounded O-ring and not flat one like the SAECs one.
Btw, the " crazy " Japanese people are willing to pay over 1K for this vintage headshell, crazy!!!!
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Jcarr: SAEC headshells comes with a non-rubber O-ring, instead the SAECs have a thin metal made O-ring that are fited to the headshell through a tiny screw.
It works?, well I never readed through the SAEC tonearms manuals I own nothing on the whys ( advantages or whatever. ) of that metal O-ring instead rubber one: yes it works but I can't say if better than with out it or than a rubber one, I will try to give me time to make some tests about.
Jonathan, your " thin sheet of lead " advise is the first time I " heard " about other than the SAEC metal one. I would like that you could share with us your first hand experiences on the subject, it is really interesting.
In the other side you are just right, we have to take care ( deep care ) on those headshell and tonearms little " points " of contact where the cartridge signal must pass: as you point out these connections must be always in pristine condition. I want to add that the cartridge own pin connectors must be always in pristine condition too so time to time it is good to make a clean " self " service alond the headshell own pin connectors and the headshell lead wires connectors at both extremes.
In many ways and IMHO this kind of clean task always pay high rewards.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Regards, Henry: Consider mechanically induced harmonics. These can be constructive or destructive. Raul's identification of a damping factor has the right "ring" to it, without the needed equipment for lab testing I think he's on to something. Boundary resonances are an influence not to be dismissed, cartridge isolation devices might also be productive in addressing this in a case by case manner. I've played with a few "home brew" applications to good effect in several instances. Years ago, Grado offered an aluminum plate with three raised dimples, essentially "tip-toes" for your cartridge. This was in the late '70's, there were many positive comments about it, and some negatives from the "purist" faction. Coloration, they said. The most sensible was to the effect that it did make a discernable difference, "use it if you like it".
Jcarr: always a treat to read your comments. An aquaintence of mine, a watchmaker by trade, recommends a pencil eraser for removing contaminates from soft metals. I'm sure you're already aware of this. The next time I visit my friend, I'll ask for a length of small dia. silver solder for a headshell join, thanks for the insight.
Peace, |
Dear Halcro: Mines are only " first " impressions and things could change over time to listening.
Yes, you have to tight the locking collar with " fierce ".
Btw, with the 20SS ( the others too but at differnt level. ) the O-ring makes the sound with more definition, everything is more clear ( not transparent ). It seems to me that with out O-ring " minute " distoretions there are higher and we can detect at frequency extremes where in the higher ones we could think that with out O-ring the sound is brigther and with more openess.
As I said we have " to play " more time around to be sure.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
replacement gaskets which (AFAIR) were a three-layer laminate of lead-copper-lead. Oh how I wish these were still available? The problem with rubber gaskets is that rubber, of course, allows movement....or as Raul calls it....."damping"???? But 'movement' is the last thing one wants in the cartridge/arm/table interface as this means 'lost information'. Where else in the cartridge/tonearm/table coupling would anyone expect to see rubber? The only way to minimise this 'movement' with the rubber, is to tighten the locking collar with enough torque to compress the rubber almost entirely. The lead gasket would allow this compression without the 'movement' inherent in the rubber? Normally my answer to those who like the rubber gasket would be the same as Raul's in other situations......"You probably like the colourations and distortions produced by this 'damping', but it doesn't make it right?" However I respect Raul and the Professor too much to make light of their preferences so I will indeed conduct listening comparisons with and without the gasket as Timeltel suggests :-) |
Why don't you try replacing the headshell gasket with a thin sheet of lead, or a short piece of wire solder (not of the lead-free type) formed into a ring of suitable dimensions. Likewise worthwhile is a short piece of copper wire (not of the tough-pitch type, and preferably soft-annealed). In fact, audiophiles in Japan during the late 70s ~ early 80s could buy replacement gaskets which (AFAIR) were a three-layer laminate of lead-copper-lead.
Another weak point to address with universal headshells is the electrical contact between headshell and tonearm. Since these contacts are non-wiping, oxides and contamination can and will build up on the contact surfaces. Periodically lightly buffing the contact points on both the headshell and inside the tonearm (Supex used to sell a tool specifically for the purpose) will give the sound more vividness, dynamic contrast and resolution.
You don't want to buff the contacts of your vintage tonearm/headshell too hard, however, since the vast majority are plated with gold (at best), rather than harder and more durable materials like rhodium or platinum.
IME, however, degraded contact quality affects cartridges with high output voltages less than cartridges with low output voltages (the same can be said about multiple contacts in series, like those in universal headshell tonearms).
hth, jonathan carr |
Dear Timeltel: Not only glassy but less natural overall presentation but you only be aware when compare it because if not then with out O-ring things " can be fine ".
Now, that's what I experienced through: AT 20SS, Micro Acoutics MA-630, Azden P50VL, Empire 750LTD and ADC 25. I can't be sure if that is true with other cartridges. Things are that time ago I decided to go " naked " and only a few weeks ago I return to the O-ring.
Headshell dependent?, I can't be sure either but all those cartridges I named are mounted in different headshells so ?!?!???
We need to test each time and decide about.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Regards, Raul: Thank you for the follow-up. Your previous "depends" statement still stands but in my experience (ancient rig/ears etc.) response without the o-ring seems to gain a glassy quality. Psychoacoustic? I really don't think so. Headshell dependent? Perhaps Henry would be so obliging as to comment on differences when tried both ways with his Yama. wooden shell.
Perhaps Will Rogers' observation applies: "There are three kinds of men. The one who learns by reading, the few who learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence for themselves". In this instance it may be best to suggest the experiment. Removing the o-ring, that is.
Peace, |
Dear Timeltel: What a hell!. From the very first time you mentioned the headshell O-ring I start to testing some cartridges with and with out that rubber O-ring and at least with the ones I did it the veredict is: leave the O-ring in place where belongs, with the headshell as an important and critical link with the tonearm.
I think Iwill follow making tests on the subject a see what experiences could achieve.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Dgarretson/Lewm: Do you already have the time to test again the AT 20SS and the Azden one?, thank you in advance for share your experiences.
Btw, I'm testing the 20SS ( again ) loaded with 350pf, very promising.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Raul, If I could resurrect the Azden from the crumpled mess left by my steel-capped hunting boots, it would be more miraculous than the resurrection of Lazarus? :-)) |
Dear Halcro: IMHO it is worth that you try some way to bring your Azden to work. It is a facinating performer and I'm sure you will include it in the cartridges you MOVE.
I'm testing it in the G-940 with Grace headshell and I'm doing not in direct-connection fashion but using the adaptor pin connectors.
I would like that other Azden P50LV owners could test again this cartridge and share " new " experiences about ( if any. ) because with my cartridge sample everything improved over the first time I tested, that if I remember was with the same tonearm.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Will do Dgob, But probably best to do it on the new thread Removable Headshells 101? |
Regards, Nandric: "Certianty": There are those who contend that in order to adequately describe events one must take into consideration the context of the social conditions at the time of the occurance. This seems to be a matter of convenience rather than consistency. Another free-thinker, Thomas Jefferson, also experienced the confusions of contradictory moral dilemas.
Dgob: "Ay, there's the rub". Thank you for your generous restraint. The consequences of "cherry picking" the thoughts of great men can be used to justify such as the Commitee of Public Safety, Robespierre and a certain Austrian painter. Having committed the same offence, I hope to not suffer their (or Hamlet's) fate at the hands of yourself and Nandric the Terrible. The question was put forth by another, I've still not been able to determine the extent of Kant's influence on Ricky Nelson and the author of that post isn't elaborating. To do so would probably require considerable effort for little purpose. None the less, of the two quotations offered, the implications of one I find frightening, the other absurd. Your responses and positions have been immaculate and precisely to the point. Please consider anything I've written as intentionally controversal. Bad dog!
Raul, regards: I've tried both ways (with/without o-ring), you've described it perfectly. I see (Halcro) Henry has opened a thread on the subject of headshells, this should be informative.
While still on the subject of headshells, I have a vauge rememberence of an article from the mid '70's, a comparison of straight vs. "J" or "S" shaped arms. I wish I could retrieve it but (IIRC) the conclusion was that although there might be a negative consequence from the added connection with a detachable headshell, the curved tonearms were offered after research showed such a shape resulted in lowered distortion across the recording. Would you or any other mathmatically gifted person have any information/opinion about this?
From the few stolden glimpses of your tonearm, it appears to be a thing of beauty.
Peace, |
Halcro,
Please feed back on the performance of the Yamamoto once you've fully familiarised yourself with it. I have always avoided wooden headshells (and equipment in general) due to fears about potential natural and climate induced anomalies. |
As MC is mentioned at the same time as MM in the subject of this ubiquitous thread, I think it is fair enough to compare some of the great MC cartridges to those newly discovered wonders of the vintage MM era? It certainly could give some 'reference' to those who have not heard (or cannot hear) the vintage and somewhat scarce MM cartridges that some of us have been fortunate enough to acquire? Let me begin with the legendary Fidelity Research FR-7f LOMC cartridge first designed by Ikeda San as the FR-7 in 1978. FR-7fI was fortunate enough to recently acquire one of these rare and expensive cartridges albeit without a usable stylus. With the help of Dertonarm and his man in Tokyo who originally worked with Ikeda San, I have a brand new spherical stylus. Now over the last 12 years I've had about 9 or 10 of the best LOMC cartridges including the Koetsu Urishi, Lyra Helikon and Titan i, Clearaudio Insider Gold and Dynavector XV1s. I found the ZYX Universe to be the most satisfying and 'realistic' of all those I heard in my system but compared to all the 'new' MM cartridges I've acquired in the last 9 months, the majority of these LOMCs seemed to have a serious deficiency in handling complex orchestral fortissimi and poorly recorded electronic overloads, whereby a peculiar 'distortion' on such passages often rendered them unlistenable or at least painful? The FR-7f is the first LOMC I've heard in my system to suffer none of those affects and in many ways is far more akin to the very best MMs in that respect. After allowing nearly 30 hours of listening time for the new stylus to 'break-in', the sound of the FR-7f in the FR-66s tonearm on the Raven AC-3 is as neutral and 'realistic' in my system, as the infamous Technics EPC100Mk3 MM cartridge in my Grace 940G on my 'nude' Victor TT-81. As such, it may be called a 'reference' and for the life of me, I can find little to criticize in any of its performance. But just as the Technics can be admired for ITS reference-standard performance..........I don't really LOVE the EPC100Mk3? And so I can't really LOVE the FR-7f. Admire?........absolutely. But you really need a cartridge that 'MOVES' you as well IMO. One that makes you forget you're listening to a collection of electronics and simply reaches within to a place where reality is suspended and emotion takes hold. And for me, that is in the realm of the Empires 1000ZE/X and D4000/III, the FR-5 and FR-6SE, the AT-155LC and the Signets TK-3, TK5 and TK-7. That's at least 8 MM cartridges that I put ahead of the finest LOMC I have ever heard? YMMV |
Amidst all the philosophy, Timeltel does a nice segue into headshell 'O' rings? I know Fidelity Research supplies none with their headshells and tonearms and even go to lengths to advise users of other headshells with FR arms to remove the 'O' rings. I have just received a Yamamoto HS-1AS African Wood headshell which surprisingly also does not include an 'O' ring? I have my views based on science and engineering principles but I am willing to believe that some will have experiences with tonearms and cartridges that appear to benefit from the 'O' ring? Perhaps a new thread is warranted to discuss our experiences with various headshells........not limited to 'O' rings alone? |
Dear Timeltel: That headshell O-ring can give you some kind of " damping " when you need it. It works?, this is something that only you can tell when you try it in your system because sometimes can works and sometimes don't/did not.
Other than " damping " you could use it to make minute/tiny changes on overhang even you can use more than one O-ring in the same headshell.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Timeltel,
"There are those who would presume to ignore Kant's position".
Without a doubt true and Kant would maintain that these presumptions hold no sway as universal - his Groundwork clearly set against such presumptions. |
Dear Timeltel, The 'moral duty' seems to be time dependant. 'Your' Aristoteles wrote an editorial about the question 'how should we treat our slaves'. If you read not some but the most statements of Kant about woman you will not believe your own eyes. So much for his moral. Regarding the logic of quantification I don't believe you got this right. It is not about 'certainty' but about condidions and those are usuly preceded with the hypothetical 'if'. This small expression is usualy overlooked so I got a reprimand from Lew in connection with the tubes. My quess precluded with 'if' was that they may be not practical. And then I was so glad to pass the first control...
Regards, |
Regards, all and thanks for your comments. Pleased to see movement in the thread as Lew's reference to Ricky Nelson has resulted in the verse running constantly through my mind.
Dgob: As I remember, Kant was a believer in moral duty. The refered to "maxim" implies external compulsion whereas absolute imperatives are internal, such as food, water, music. "This is what I want and to gain my objective, I must perform these acts". The presupposition is that all rational humans should be able to conclude the same moral laws. The difficulty with the application of categorical imperatives relates to the circumstance that there are those who would presume to ignore Kant's position that human beings are not to be used as a means to an ends. Kant makes a distinction between duty and inclination, there are those who, historically, seek to assert their "will" on others and impose "universal law" regardless of the consideration of contradictory moral dilemas. Rousseau takes a different tact, that of the social contract and "volunte' generale", which meets it's own demise in excessive application resulting in a "popular totalarianism". From "Discourse On Inequality": "From how many crimes, wars, and murders, from how many horrors and misfortunes might not any one have saved mankind, by pulling up the stakes, or filling up the ditch,----the fruits of the earth belong to us all---." I prefer Aristotle's company. Unfortunately the sage is also not currently in vouge.
Most esteemed Nikola: Regarding universalities, I can only say that in my humble and limited existence, I've yet to encounter a recognized example. Permit my refuge in another of Voltaire's observations: "Doubt is not a pleasant condition, but certainty is absurd". I have a cat named Schrödinger.
A matter of curiosity provoked by communication with another. Most headshells are provided with a rubber o-ring where the shell joins the collet, some recommend it's removal. Would doing so result in a "universal" improvment, or is it a situational condition?
Peace, |
Dear Lewm: I can see your point. I have 10+ cartridges that " float my boat " and counting.
Lewm, as your system quality performance improve and your ASLFL goes down as more cartridges you will find " float your boat ". Maybe your first " move " could be to achieve that quality performance level before you put on sale any of the cartridges you own.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Addendum, Those satisfaction conditions may need some illustration. If, say, Dertonarm is the only German with the sence for humour then you are not allowed to 'claim' the universal statement 'all Germans lack the sence for humour' as true. Ie the condition 'all' is not satisfied. Exactly the same method is used by Sir Karl (Popper) in order to explain his theory of refutation. At some phylosopher congress he first pronunced the universal statemet 'all swans are white' and then pulled a single black swan from his hat wich he brought from Australia for the occasion. The phylosopher are very suspicious in particular against each other so the most of them wanted to check and see with their own eye if this swan was not painted black. Even some from Australia. The Dertonarm case may seem somhow enbarrassing for the Dutch but they invented their own 'deviant logic' called intuitionist logic. Invented by Brouwer obvously because he had something against Kant and Frege (both of them Germans).
Regards, |
Dear Timeltel, I am not sure what you mean by 'universal claims' but to my mind those are not different from the so called 'universal quantification' in the logic of quantification. Even Tarskis theory of truth is in terms of satisfaction conditions. BTW Kant was an ordinary sitezen so not realy in the position to prescribe anything to anyone. Ie all kinds of prescriptions were Kings prerogitive while his autority was firmly grounded by appointment by the Allmighty. But I agree reg. Voltaire. |
Timeltel,
Sorry to place my own uncertainties here but I feel that a statement such as: "universal claims can 'never' be verified" would form a starting point for the exploration that Kant develops across the three Critiques and associated writings.
Just thought I might follow out of context for a final time to share my uncertainties here. |
Timeltel,
Does your interpretation of the categorical imperative (vis, Totalitarianism) hold and, if so, how does that sit with its role in Kant's critique of the Wolffians?
I would imagine that that form of political atemporal rationalism is rather anti-Kant! Not sure. |
Lew(m): Good ol' Rick. "You see, you can't please everyone, so you got to please yourself". I think you've got this out of context. When this was written Nelson was somewhat bitter regarding the reception given his new work when presented in concert at Madison Square Garden. The audience in attendance had expected his teen idol hits, Nelson was booed because he didn't accede. The song "Garden Party" was his response, it was intended as a condemnation of his audience's failure to progress with his artistic maturation. This went over the heads of most, millions bought the very record that castigated them for their own anachronisms.
"If you gotta' play at garden parties, I wish you a'lot of luck, but if memories were all I sang, I'd rather drive a truck".
Catagorical imperative: "Act only according to that maxim whereby you can, at the same time, will that it should become a universal law." Totalitarianism is just not my cup o' tea. I also seem to be somewhat allergic to universalities or absolutes as universal claims can never be verified. Absolute imperatives are a different concern. Otherwise, Kant is not currently fashionable.
The rougish Voltaire is my man: "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it". Hence, in extrapolation and in support of the archaic notion that a rational (important qualifier) man has the right to surround himself with articles of his own choosing and according to his own taste, I'll repeat: YMMV.
Thanks for providing an opportunity to improve the quality of discourse.
Peace. |
Yeah, the Azden was never quite happy with me. I was about to sell it, in fact. My long term goal is to whittle down this "collection" of MM/MI cartridges to 3 or 4 that really float my boat the most. |
Dear Lewm: Like you I'm im´ressed by the Acutex but this does not means that the Azden is a winner too.
For what I remember you always had some kind of " problems " with your Azden, I mean not a real problem but things not goes fine with the Azden in your system. Anyway, like you say a re-visit is in order and maybe this time you will have a better " luck " with.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Timeltel, I think you are channeling the great Ricky Nelson who famously sang, "Ya can't please ev'ry-one so ya... got to pleeze your-self."
Nandric will recognize Ricky Nelson's lament in relation to Kant's categorical imperative.
Raul, Could be I misjudged the Azden due to lack of capacitance. I will re-visit it with my "new" old pre-amp. But I am still quite happy with Acutex and Stanton. |