Who needs a MM cartridge type when we have MC?


Dear friends: who really needs an MM type phono cartridge?, well I will try to share/explain with you what are my experiences about and I hope too that many of you could enrich the topic/subject with your own experiences.

For some years ( in this forum ) and time to time I posted that the MM type cartridge quality sound is better than we know or that we think and like four months ago I start a thread about: http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1173550723&openusid&zzRauliruegas&4&5#Rauliruegas where we analyse some MM type cartridges.

Well, in the last 10-12 months I buy something like 30+ different MM type phono cartridges ( you can read in my virtual system which ones. ) and I’m still doing it. The purpose of this fact ( “ buy it “ ) is for one way to confirm or not if really those MM type cartridges are good for us ( music lovers ) and at the same time learn about MM vs MC cartridges, as a fact I learn many things other than MM/MC cartridge subject.

If we take a look to the Agon analog members at least 90% of them use ( only ) MC phono cartridges, if we take a look to the “ professional reviewers “ ( TAS, Stereophile, Positive Feedback, Enjoy the Music, etc, etc, ) 95% ( at least ) of them use only MC cartridges ( well I know that for example: REG and NG of TAS and RJR of Stereophile use only MM type cartridges!!!!!!!! ) , if we take a look to the phono cartridge manufacturers more than 90% of them build/design for MC cartridges and if you speak with audio dealers almost all will tell you that the MC cartridges is the way to go.

So, who are wrong/right, the few ( like me ) that speak that the MM type is a very good alternative or the “ whole “ cartridge industry that think and support the MC cartridge only valid alternative?

IMHO I think that both groups are not totally wrong/right and that the subject is not who is wrong/right but that the subject is : KNOW-HOW or NON KNOW-HOW about.

Many years ago when I was introduced to the “ high end “ the cartridges were almost MM type ones: Shure, Stanton, Pickering, Empire, etc, etc. In those time I remember that one dealer told me that if I really want to be nearest to the music I have to buy the Empire 4000 D ( they say for 4-channel reproduction as well. ) and this was truly my first encounter with a “ high end cartridge “, I buy the 4000D I for 70.00 dls ( I can’t pay 150.00 for the D III. ), btw the specs of these Empire cartridges were impressive even today, look: frequency response: 5-50,000Hz, channel separation: 35db, tracking force range: 0.25grs to 1.25grs!!!!!!!!, just impressive, but there are some cartridges which frequency response goes to 100,000Hz!!!!!!!!!!

I start to learn about and I follow to buying other MM type cartridges ( in those times I never imagine nothing about MC cartridges: I don’t imagine of its existence!!!. ) like AKG, Micro Acoustics, ADC, B&O, Audio Technica, Sonus, etc, etc.

Years latter the same dealer told me about the MC marvelous cartridges and he introduce me to the Denon-103 following with the 103-D and the Fulton High performance, so I start to buy and hear MC cartridges. I start to read audio magazines about either cartridge type: MM and Mc ones.

I have to make changes in my audio system ( because of the low output of the MC cartridges and because I was learning how to improve the performance of my audio system ) and I follow what the reviewers/audio dealers “ speak “ about, I was un-experienced !!!!!!!, I was learning ( well I’m yet. ).

I can tell you many good/bad histories about but I don’t want that the thread was/is boring for you, so please let me tell you what I learn and where I’m standing today about:

over the years I invested thousands of dollars on several top “ high end “ MC cartridges, from the Sumiko Celebration passing for Lyras, Koetsu, Van denHul, to Allaerts ones ( just name it and I can tell that I own or owned. ), what I already invest on MC cartridges represent almost 70-80% price of my audio system.

Suddenly I stop buying MC cartridges and decide to start again with some of the MM type cartridges that I already own and what I heard motivate me to start the search for more of those “ hidden jewels “ that are ( here and now ) the MM phono cartridges and learn why are so good and how to obtain its best quality sound reproduction ( as a fact I learn many things other than MM cartridge about. ).

I don’t start this “ finding “ like a contest between MC and MM type cartridges.
The MC cartridges are as good as we already know and this is not the subject here, the subject is about MM type quality performance and how achieve the best with those cartridges.

First than all I try to identify and understand the most important characteristics ( and what they “ means “. ) of the MM type cartridges ( something that in part I already have it because our phonolinepreamp design needs. ) and its differences with the MC ones.

Well, first than all is that are high output cartridges, very high compliance ones ( 50cu is not rare. ), low or very low tracking force ones, likes 47kOhms and up, susceptible to some capacitance changes, user stylus replacement, sometimes we can use a different replacement stylus making an improvement with out the necessity to buy the next top model in the cartridge line , low and very low weight cartridges, almost all of them are build of plastic material with aluminum cantilever and with eliptical or “ old “ line contact stylus ( shibata ) ( here we don’t find: Jade/Coral/Titanium/etc, bodies or sophisticated build material cantilevers and sophisticated stylus shape. ), very very… what I say? Extremely low prices from 40.00 to 300.00 dls!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!, well one of my cartridges I buy it for 8.99 dls ( one month ago ): WOW!!!!!!, so any one of you can/could have/buy ten to twenty MM cartridges for the price of one of the MC cartridge you own today and the good notice is that is a chance that those 10-20 MM type cartridges even the quality performance of your MC cartridge or beat it.

Other characteristics is that the builders show how proud they were/are on its MM type cartridges design, almost all those cartridges comes with a first rate box, comes with charts/diagrams of its frequency response and cartridge channel separation ( where they tell us which test recording use it, with which VTF, at which temperature, etc, etc. ), comes with a very wide explanation of the why’s and how’s of its design and the usual explanation to mount the cartridge along with a very wide list of specifications ( that were the envy of any of today MC ones where sometimes we really don’t know nothing about. ), comes with a set of screws/nuts, comes with a stylus brush and even with stylus cleaning fluid!!!!!!!!!, my GOD. Well, there are cartridges like the Supex SM 100MK2 that comes with two different stylus!!!! One with spherical and one with elliptical/shibata shape and dear friends all those in the same low low price!!!!!!!!!!!

Almost all the cartridges I own you can find it through Ebay and Agon and through cartridge dealers and don’t worry if you loose/broke the stylus cartridge or you find the cartridge but with out stylus, you always can/could find the stylus replacement, no problem about there are some stylus and cartridge sources.

When I’m talking about MM type cartridges I’m refer to different types: moving magnet, moving iron, moving flux, electret, variable reluctance, induced magnet, etc, etc. ( here is not the place to explain the differences on all those MM type cartridges. Maybe on other future thread. ).

I made all my very long ( time consuming ) cartridge tests using four different TT’s: Acoustic Signature Analog One MK2, Micro Seiki RX-5000, Luxman PD 310 and Technics SP-10 MK2, I use only removable headshell S and J shape tonearms with 15mm on overhang, I use different material build/ shape design /weight headshells. I test each cartridge in at least three different tonearms and some times in 3-4 different headshells till I find the “ right “ match where the cartridge perform the best, no I’m not saying that I already finish or that I already find the “ perfect “ match: cartridge/headshell/tonearm but I think I’m near that ideal target.

Through my testing experience I learn/ confirm that trying to find the right tonearm/headshell for any cartridge is well worth the effort and more important that be changing the TT. When I switch from a TT to another different one the changes on the quality cartridge performance were/are minimal in comparison to a change in the tonearm/headshell, this fact was consistent with any of those cartridges including MC ones.

So after the Phonolinepreamplifier IMHO the tonearm/headshell match for any cartridge is the more important subject, it is so important and complex that in the same tonearm ( with the same headshell wires ) but with different headshell ( even when the headshell weight were the same ) shape or build material headshell the quality cartridge performance can/could be way different.

All those experiences told me that chances are that the cartridge that you own ( MC or MM ) is not performing at its best because chances are that the tonearm you own is not the best match for that cartridge!!!!!!, so imagine what do you can/could hear when your cartridge is or will be on the right tonearm???!!!!!!!!, IMHO there are ( till today ) no single ( any type at any price ) perfect universal tonearm. IMHO there is no “ the best tonearm “, what exist or could exist is a “ best tonearm match for “ that “ cartridge “, but that’s all. Of course that are “ lucky “ tonearms that are very good match for more than one cartridge but don’t for every single cartridge.

I posted several times that I’m not a tonearm collector, that I own all those tonearms to have alternatives for my cartridges and with removable headshells my 15 tonearms are really like 100+ tonearms : a very wide options/alternatives for almost any cartridge!!!!!!

You can find several of these MM type cartridges new brand or NOS like: Ortofon, Nagaoka, Audio Technica, Astatic, B&O, Rega, Empire, Sonus Reson,Goldring,Clearaudio, Grado, Shelter, Garrot, etc. and all of them second hand in very good operational condition. As a fact I buy two and even three cartridges of the same model in some of the cartridges ( so right now I have some samples that I think I don’t use any more. ) to prevent that one of them arrive in non operational condition but I’m glad to say that all them arrive in very fine conditions. I buy one or two of the cartridges with no stylus or with the stylus out of work but I don’t have any trouble because I could find the stylus replacement on different sources and in some case the original new replacement.

All these buy/find cartridges was very time consuming and we have to have a lot of patience and a little lucky to obtain what we are looking for but I can asure you that is worth of it.

Ok, I think it is time to share my performance cartridge findings:

first we have to have a Phonolinepreamplifier with a very good MM phono stage ( at least at the same level that the MC stage. ). I’m lucky because my Phonolinepreamplifier has two independent phono stages, one for the MM and one for MC: both were designed for the specifics needs of each cartridge type, MM or MC that have different needs.

we need a decent TT and decent tonearm.

we have to load the MM cartridges not at 47K but at 100K ( at least 75K not less. ).

I find that using 47K ( a standard manufacture recommendation ) prevent to obtain the best quality performance, 100K make the difference. I try this with all those MM type cartridges and in all of them I achieve the best performance with 100K load impedance.

I find too that using the manufacturer capacitance advise not always is for the better, till “ the end of the day “ I find that between 100-150pf ( total capacitance including cable capacitance. ) all the cartridges performs at its best.

I start to change the load impedance on MM cartridges like a synonymous that what many of us made with MC cartridges where we try with different load impedance values, latter I read on the Empire 4000 DIII that the precise load impedance must be 100kOhms and in a white paper of some Grace F9 tests the used impedance value was 100kOhms, the same that I read on other operational MM cartridge manual and my ears tell/told me that 100kOhms is “ the value “.

Before I go on I want to remember you that several of those MM type cartridges ( almost all ) were build more than 30+ years ago!!!!!!!! and today performs at the same top quality level than today MC/MM top quality cartridges!!!!!, any brand at any price and in some ways beat it.

I use 4-5 recordings that I know very well and that give me the right answers to know that any cartridge is performing at its best or near it. Many times what I heard through those recordings were fine: everything were on target however the music don’t come “ alive “ don’t “ tell me “ nothing, I was not feeling the emotion that the music can communicate. In those cartridge cases I have to try it in other tonearm and/or with a different headshell till the “ feelings comes “ and only when this was achieved I then was satisfied.

All the tests were made with a volume level ( SPL ) where the recording “ shines “ and comes alive like in a live event. Sometimes changing the volume level by 1-1.5 db fixed everything.

Of course that the people that in a regular manner attend to hear/heard live music it will be more easy to know when something is right or wrong.

Well, Raul go on!!: one characteristic on the MM cartridges set-up was that almost all them likes to ride with a positive ( little/small ) VTA only the Grace Ruby and F9E and Sonus Gold Blue likes a negative VTA , on the other hand with the Nagaoka MP 50 Super and the Ortofon’s I use a flat VTA.

Regarding the VTF I use the manufacturer advise and sometimes 0.1+grs.
Of course that I made fine tuning through moderate changes in the Azymuth and for anti-skate I use between half/third VTF value.

I use different material build headshells: aluminum, composite aluminum, magnesium, composite magnesium, ceramic, wood and non magnetic stainless steel, these cartridges comes from Audio Technica, Denon, SAEC, Technics, Fidelity Research, Belldream, Grace, Nagaoka, Koetsu, Dynavector and Audiocraft.
All of them but the wood made ( the wood does not likes to any cartridge. ) very good job . It is here where a cartridge could seems good or very good depending of the headshell where is mounted and the tonearm.
Example, I have hard time with some of those cartridge like the Audio Technica AT 20SS where its performance was on the bright sound that sometimes was harsh till I find that the ceramic headshell was/is the right match now this cartridge perform beautiful, something similar happen with the Nagaoka ( Jeweltone in Japan ), Shelter , Grace, Garrot , AKG and B&O but when were mounted in the right headshell/tonearm all them performs great.

Other things that you have to know: I use two different cooper headshell wires, both very neutral and with similar “ sound “ and I use three different phono cables, all three very neutral too with some differences on the sound performance but nothing that “ makes the difference “ on the quality sound of any of my cartridges, either MM or MC, btw I know extremely well those phono cables: Analysis Plus, Harmonic Technologies and Kimber Kable ( all three the silver models. ), finally and don’t less important is that those phono cables were wired in balanced way to take advantage of my Phonolinepreamp fully balanced design.

What do you note the first time you put your MM cartridge on the record?, well a total absence of noise/hum or the like that you have through your MC cartridges ( and that is not a cartridge problem but a Phonolinepreamp problem due to the low output of the MC cartridges. ), a dead silent black ( beautiful ) soundstage where appear the MUSIC performance, this experience alone is worth it.

The second and maybe the most important MM cartridge characteristic is that you hear/heard the MUSIC flow/run extremely “ easy “ with no distracting sound distortions/artifacts ( I can’t explain exactly this very important subject but it is wonderful ) even you can hear/heard “ sounds/notes “ that you never before heard it and you even don’t know exist on the recording: what a experience!!!!!!!!!!!

IMHO I think that the MUSIC run so easily through a MM cartridge due ( between other facts ) to its very high compliance characteristic on almost any MM cartridge.

This very high compliance permit ( between other things like be less sensitive to out-center hole records. ) to these cartridges stay always in contact with the groove and never loose that groove contact not even on the grooves that were recorded at very high velocity, something that a low/medium cartridge compliance can’t achieve, due to this low/medium compliance characteristic the MC cartridges loose ( time to time and depending of the recorded velocity ) groove contact ( minute extremely minute loose contact, but exist. ) and the quality sound performance suffer about and we can hear it, the same pass with the MC cartridges when are playing the inner grooves on a record instead the very high compliance MM cartridges because has better tracking drive perform better than the MC ones at inner record grooves and here too we can hear it.

Btw, some Agoners ask very worried ( on more than one Agon thread ) that its cartridge can’t track ( clean ) the cannons on the 1812 Telarc recording and usually the answers that different people posted were something like this: “””” don’t worry about other than that Telarc recording no other commercial recording comes recorded at that so high velocity, if you don’t have trouble with other of your LP’s then stay calm. “””””

Well, this standard answer have some “ sense “ but the people ( like me ) that already has/have the experience to hear/heard a MM or MC ( like the Ortofon MC 2000 or the Denon DS1, high compliance Mc cartridges. ) cartridge that pass easily the 1812 Telarc test can tell us that those cartridges make a huge difference in the quality sound reproduction of any “ normal “ recording, so it is more important that what we think to have a better cartridge tracking groove drive!!!!

There are many facts around the MM cartridge subject but till we try it in the right set-up it will be ( for some people ) difficult to understand “ those beauties “. Something that I admire on the MM cartridges is how ( almost all of them ) they handle the frequency extremes: the low bass with the right pitch/heft/tight/vivid with no colorations of the kind “ organic !!” that many non know-how people speak about, the highs neutral/open/transparent/airy believable like the live music, these frequency extremes handle make that the MUSIC flow in our minds to wake up our feelings/emotions that at “ the end of the day “ is all what a music lover is looking for.
These not means that these cartridges don’t shine on the midrange because they do too and they have very good soundstage but here is more system/room dependent.

Well we have a very good alternative on the ( very low price ) MM type cartridges to achieve that music target and I’m not saying that you change your MC cartridge for a MM one: NO, what I’m trying to tell you is that it is worth to have ( as many you can buy/find ) the MM type cartridges along your MC ones

I want to tell you that I can live happy with any of those MM cartridges and I’m not saying with this that all of them perform at the same quality level NO!! what I’m saying is that all of them are very good performers, all of them approach you nearest to the music.

If you ask me which one is the best I can tell you that this will be a very hard “ call “ an almost impossible to decide, I think that I can make a difference between the very good ones and the stellar ones where IMHO the next cartridges belongs to this group:

Audio Technica ATML 170 and 180 OCC, Grado The Amber Tribute, Grace Ruby, Garrot P77, Nagaoka MP-50 Super, B&O MMC2 and MMC20CL, AKG P8ES SuperNova, Reson Reca ,Astatic MF-100 and Stanton LZS 981.

There are other ones that are really near this group: ADC Astrion, Supex MF-100 MK2, Micro Acoustics MA630/830, Empire 750 LTD and 600LAC, Sonus Dimension 5, Astatic MF-200 and 300 and the Acutex 320III.

The other ones are very good too but less refined ones.
I try too ( owned or borrowed for a friend ) the Shure IV and VMR, Music maker 2-3 and Clearaudio Virtuoso/Maestro, from these I could recommended only the Clearaudios the Shure’s and Music Maker are almost mediocre ones performers.
I forgot I try to the B&O Soundsmith versions, well this cartridges are good but are different from the original B&O ( that I prefer. ) due that the Sounsmith ones use ruby cantilevers instead the original B&O sapphire ones that for what I tested sounds more natural and less hi-fi like the ruby ones.

What I learn other that the importance on the quality sound reproduction through MM type cartridges?, well that unfortunately the advance in the design looking for a better quality cartridge performers advance almost nothing either on MM and MC cartridges.

Yes, today we have different/advanced body cartridge materials, different cantilever build materials, different stylus shape/profile, different, different,,,,different, but the quality sound reproduction is almost the same with cartridges build 30+ years ago and this is a fact. The same occur with TT’s and tonearms. Is sad to speak in this way but it is what we have today. Please, I’m not saying that some cartridges designs don’t grow up because they did it, example: Koetsu they today Koetsu’s are better performers that the old ones but against other cartridges the Koetsu ones don’t advance and many old and today cartridges MM/MC beat them easily.

Where I think the audio industry grow-up for the better are in electronic audio items ( like the Phonolinepreamps ), speakers and room treatment, but this is only my HO.

I know that there are many things that I forgot and many other things that we have to think about but what you can read here is IMHO a good point to start.

Regards and enjoy the music.
Raul.
Ag insider logo xs@2xrauliruegas
@jpjones3318 

oh man, congrads! 
If it doesn't lay down after 3 minutes then it's a great find, so they are exists with no issues with suspension @nandric 

p.s. I just sold all my 205mk4 and 100mk3 this year. 

Dear chakster, You won the dispute with Nandric, congratulation!

That is to say according to the modern logic of quantification.

I stated that ALL 205 versions have defective suspension. Well

according to logic if one sample is ok than the whole statement is

false. I  should use the quantifier MOST instead for which there is

no logical rule. However the fact that you sold all your 205mk4 and

100mk3 is suspect because those belong to the best MM carts

ever made. If you are sporty you should mention the real reason

why you sold them.

I'd say nearly all.  From preliminary measurement this is the only well-performing suspension I have out of a bit over a dozen examples.  

Dear jpjones3318, Nice way out but alas. ''Most'' and ''nearly all''

are like two eggs. Anyway logicaly there is no diffrence between

them. But I think that ''our quantifiers'' (most and nearly all ) are

sufficient warning  for our co members. Except for chakster ?

@nandric 

However the fact that you sold all your 205mk4 and 100mk3 is suspect because those belong to the best MM carts ever made. If you are sporty you should mention the real reason why you sold them.

Just to earn money for some other top MM cartridges to try (such as Grado XTZ for example), it's an addiction. Anyway, most of my Technics were Axel's treated/rebuild versions, except for the last one (mint original) we have discussed here, the buyer (retired dealer of JVC in Europe) is happy with lower tracking of my 205 mk4. And i'm still happy with my Stanton CS100 WOS with spare nos stylus for the future (it does all the magic to my ears in my system now with 100k ohms load). 

Dear chakater, I use the same method since I become member in

2007. So how could I  blame  you for the same sin? However with MM carts I usually made some profit while with MC carts the situation is very different. I need to accommodate to losing money instead of making profit (grin). My personal tragedy is that I prefer MC carts.

I wish I was like you and Halcro (?) . My other probem is that I got

used to the MC prices and have serious difficulty to sell my best

MM carts for prices bellow $500.  So I am ''forced'' to keep them despite the fact that I don't use them. What a hobby do we have?

This looks more like suffering than enjoyment (grin).

@pryso

I’ve intended to change the circuit loading resistors from 47K to at least 100K but have not done so yet. I have utilized the second pair of input RCAs to lower R for MC cartridges with good success.

This is David’s webpage and you will find his article about Parallel Resistive Loading, very interesting: http://daveyw.edsstuff.org/vinyl/loading/

I just checked with Joe Rasmussen of JLTi (Australia) and he said 500k oms or even 1M ohms (according to David’s theory) is also possible. He can use Beyschlang resistors for these needs. Beyschlang used by AudioNote. There are no capacitors in the signal path.

Now i have to think what i need to start with JLTi (100k, 500k or 1 million ohms). Anyone can help?

I’m gonna buy JLTi, the pice is great and shipping is free from Oz. 
To each his own, nandric. It’s a venture I certainly don’t recommend.

The ones with bad suspensions exhibit some real troublesome behavior, not that any elastomer even approaching this age is what it once was. Though, I know some prefer the sound this way.

I’ve never understood rebuilds that change the cantilever. The low inductance motor certainly is a benefit, but it should be abundantly clear the secret sauce is the stiffness of the tapered pipe and low effective tip mass.
@pryso oops, i have to make it clear:  
the website link i have posted is not David Dlaloum's page. I've noticed later that site was created by another person (Davey W from England).

But in case you want to read original @dlaloum comments about JLTi it's here: http://audiokarma.org/forums/index.php?threads/fully-adjustable-phono-stage.397152/ 

Chakster,

David's web site is here:

https://sites.google.com/site/zevaudio/david-s-audio-site

If you order it with the native resistance of 1 M ohm, then any value of resistance you put in parallel results in the preamp resistance becoming virtually that of the loading plug.

Regards,

jpjones, I retipped more as 20 MC carts and just one MM cart.

All of them by my friend Axel. Why just one MM cart? Well I

checked how this is done. A new cantilever/stylus combo is glued

on the remainder of the original cantilever and that is all. I have

no idea how the suspension of the MM carts can be fixed. Look

at the thing and imagine how this can be done. So my strategy

by MM carts was either a new stylus or don't bother. This is

different by the MC carts. All of them have the so called ''joint

pipe'' on which coils , suspension and cantilever are fastened

(aka ''glued''). One can see that behind those ''exotic cantilevers'''

an ''aluminum tube'' is connected with this ''joint pipe''. Anyway

the whole ''generator'' can be disassembled and put together

afterwards. The only problem are the coils. If those are defective

it is very difficult to fix them. That is why the most retippers refuse

to repair them. My, say ''chakster strategy'' was to buy defective

MC carts for cheap and then post them to Axel for retip. Afterwards

I was able to chose either to keep them or sell them . Or so I

thought. That is how I got +40 MC carts and have no idea what to

do with them. Selling those carts is not as easy a I thought. Besides

those retips become shameless expensive at present.  

chakster and fleib, many thanks for the links to David's information.  As soon as I have time I'll read through that.  It may even inspire me to finally change the internal loading to facilitate a wider range with the external RCAs.

I've had my JLTi for several years now and feel no urge to upgrade.  Instead I may look for a second phono stage if I add a second tonearm (more flexibility with multiple cartridges).

I wish Merry Christmas and Happy new Year
to all the contributers in this thread.

I’d like to mention some of the best finds that impressed me the most (in 2016), non of my MC cartridges including ZYX Airy or ZYX Premium 4D with dedicated headamps etc gave me so much fun as those cheaper, but still rare vintage MM/MI alternatives...

Here we go (those 3 are clearly my favorites):
-Grado XTZ (Joseph Grado signature model).
-Stanton CS100 W.O.S. (Walter O. Stanton signature model).
-Pioneer PC1000 mk2 (Top of the line Pioneer model).

...and Glanz MF61 still my favorite from 2015

Luxman PD444 became my favorite turntable this year, and tonearms for vintage MM carts are Victor UA-7045 and low mass Luxman TA-1. Lustre GST-801 waiting in line. P.S. Reed 3P on SP10mk2 as alternative for MC carts.

100k Ohms Vishay Naked Foil resistors made huge upgrade in the MM phono stage. I’m so curious about correct loading of MM cartridges that i even bougth JLTi mm/mc phono stage with custom 500k resistors and a bunch of parallel RCA plug resistors (wich makes loading so easy). The formula for parallel resistors is: R = (R1*R2) / (R1+R2). If R1 is 500K and R2 is 100K, then multiply the two. You will get a large value. Next step, add R1 and R2. You will get a much smaller value. Now divide the larger value with the smaller value to get the final value. Pretty easy. I’m looking forward to find the beast loading for my Grace F9-F and F9-U, AT-ML170 OFC, AT-ML180 OFC, Garrott P77, FR-5E, VICTOR X1, VICTOR X1II etc.

Joe Rasmussen of the JLTi recommends as follow:
"Start listening with a high value and then gradually, step by step, go lower in values. It may seems only to make little or no difference (maybe even perceived as worse), but just keeping going lower and likely as you get closer to the DC resistance of the cartridge, then something may happen. If so, at this point fine tune... Find the resistance of the cartridge’s coil, multiply that with about 1.6x (sometimes 1.5x lowest and 3-5x with higher impedance cartridges) and find the resistor value near that. Rather than unloading by going high, this in fact causes the coil to produce more current and hence this introduces electromechanical damping - the output will be lower, so keep that in mind, and explore the final value, deciding by listening... To choose a very high default load 47K and above, then you are ’unloading’ the cartridge, causing it to produce less current and in that way you are reducing electromechanical damping to almost zero. Some may like that sound, but let your ears decide. The other option is the opposite and increase electromechanical damping, but this may mean it sounds worse as you go lower in resistor values, but as you get closer to the resistance of the coil inside the cartridge, damping then can increase suddenly - even to the point where it is over-damped and then go back up in value. "

I’m looking forward to 2017, so many things to try and learn more...

Happy New Year!













I worship at both alters (MM and MC) when it comes to phono cartridges.  In my vintage system, I swear by the Shure V15 IV and V carts mounted on a Grace 707 arm.  The TT is either a Denon DP1250 or Technics SP25.  They sound wonderful played through the phono section of an Advent 300 feeding a Fisher 500 C receiver and AR3a speakers.  This is what I listen to when I want the sound of my youth, the sound of the music as I remember it back then.  In my big rig, I tend toward LOMCs, either the Denon DL-S1 or Audio Technica AT ART7.  Either work beautifully on the VPI HRX/12' 3D arm I use in that system.  The only MM cart I have used on that table is the Clearaudio Maestro Wood v1.  It was quite good.  Dynamic, lovely instrumental and vocal timbres, but perhaps a bit lacking in the audiophile stuff like sound staging and depth.  Detail was somewhat lacking in comparison to the LOMCs as well.  Just my experience, take it for the $.02 its worth.

Dear chakster, learning from experience or rather from our errors

imply not to repeat the same faults. You are probably not aware

that you are repeating Raul's ''carts of the year''. Searching for

those was an frustrating experience. I needed two years to find

this damn JVC , X1 . The curious thing is the fact, or rather despite

this fact that I collected + 40 MM carts while I always prefered the

MC kind. Not to stay behind was the obvious reason. The common

curiousity of all those ''carts of the year'' was the (nearly) imposibility

to find them. If we understand your post as recommendation then

you should also inform us where those carts can be find. "Us''

is meant as the way of speaking. I am busy to get rid of my MM

carts.

@nandric i'm pretty sure that without this thread i would never try cheaper vintage MM cartridges and cheaper vintage tonearms, it took a year (everyday reading) of all the posts and much more to mess around finding mega rare vintage MMs, not all of them impressed me much, but some of them remains unbeatable in my opinion. When vintage $300-700 MM cartridges sounds better than new $3000-5000 MC with dedicated headamps in my system i would rathern buy more MMs as they are still much more affordable. I only trust my ears, it is true that we have to try maybe 20 cartridges to find the best one, but it worth it. Actually most of the carts from Raul's list (that i have tried) are truly amazing, but it's system dependent, personal taste and they way we're hearing being people of different age, so those few little gems we are selected as the best can be different for each of us. I can only speak for myself and my own experience.

I can recall MC cartridges that are definitely not my cup of tea, those cartridges belongs to two different groups of cartridges and i don't like non of them compared to my top vintage MMs now.
 
those two people call the most musical, warm, oldschool: 
Ortofon SPU Classic Conical
Ortofon SPU Spirit Ltd (8N copper coil, elliptical stylus)
tried both on thomas schick tonearm which is one of the best arm for those SPU cartridges, but this is just not my kind of sound, some people love it, so i decided to sell my shick tonearm.  

those carts often describea as analytical hi-end or the best and neutrial:  
Zyx Airy (Silver Coil, Micro Ridge stylus)
Zyx Premium 4D SB2 (Copper Coil, Micro Ridge stylus) 
tried both on my epa-100 tonearm and later on reed 3p, i was much more impressed, but not as much as with my Glanz MF 61 or Stanton CS100 WOS or Joseph Grado XTZ. 

I still like my Argent MC500 High Output MC cartridge with sapphire cantilever and line contact stylus, this is is virtually unknown low compliance cartidge. I was so curious about this brand that i managed to find Argent MC110 which is not far from Argent Ruby and the rarest Argend Diamond. I wonder if anyone knows anything about Argent MC cartridges?

Limited edition dual coil AT-ART2000 OCC was very good MC cartridge in my system and even after some time of using Zyx i was very happy to get back to Audio-Technica ART-2000 (now i'm more happy with my MM cartrs).    


Searching for those was an frustrating experience. I needed two years to find this damn JVC , X1.

Really? I have two of them and selling one (back up) if anyone need it. Nice cartridge, but i also have NOS X1II to keep. 




  




@zachteich 

In my big rig, I tend toward LOMCs, either the Denon DL-S1 or Audio Technica AT ART7.  Either work beautifully on the VPI HRX/12' 3D arm I use in that system.  The only MM cart I have used on that table is the Clearaudio Maestro Wood v1.  It was quite good.  Dynamic, lovely instrumental and vocal timbres, but perhaps a bit lacking in the audiophile stuff like sound staging and depth.  Detail was somewhat lacking in comparison to the LOMCs as well.  Just my experience, take it for the $.02 its worth.

Strange, i don't think those top MMs such as Victor X1 or X1II, Audio-Technica AT-ML180 or AT-ML170, Glanz MF61 or Technics EPC205 mk4 have any lack of audiophile stuff (soundstage and depth). I'm pretty sure some other users can vote for them instead.  
Chakster, Just so you know that life is not so simple, MM cartridges respond to load capacitance as well as to load resistance.  Sometimes you can can compensate for the lack of one by using more of the other.  Anyway, I don't recall where I picked up this tidbit of information, maybe on Vinyl Engine, but as I recall, the Grace cartridges like a low-ish resistance (47K or a little lower, not 100K) and a high-ish capacitance, maybe as much as 400pF.  Most phono stages of routine construction will per se have about 100pF to 150pF of input capacitance due to the C of the interconnect and the Miller capacitance of the tube, if the phono stage is a tube type.  Solid state phono stages will also have an inherent input capacitance but generally lower than that of a typical 12AX7 based phono.  So, if you like the Grace at 100K, maybe you are compensating for C by adding a little R.
@lewm

That’s why i just bought JLTi phono stage, there is no added internal "C load", all capacitances are at user control, via what is in the cable and what user can add in the load plug Resistance. JLTi avoid all capacitance other than the cable!

btw: which inexpensive device would you recomment to measure cable capacitance correctly?  

 King of the thread.

Chakster, Here Here !!

You're a bastion of sanity while Raul's away.  I have a feeling he'll be back.

Nandric, you know what they say. If you have to ask, you can't afford it. Now, go cry in your beer for all the money you spent. Did Raul give you a bum steer?

Regards,

Post removed 

Dear Chakster &Fleib, One need some running start in order

to jump. We all learned from Raul's thread by imitation but

after some time when we ''grasped'' all the involved skills we started

our own ''hunting''. You are the typical example while you already

got my compliment of being the fastest student in our forum. As

you know Raul hardly recommended any MC cart so I was on

my own in search for those. The MM adventure was (nearly) for

free if one was fast with ''jumping'' (grin). Actually I made some

profit by (re)selling MM carts and needed to accept ''some loss''

with my MC adventure. So (Fleib) I obviously can afford something

or other. How about you and Raul? Raul, say, nr. 1 spend huge

amount of money for those ''carts of the week'' but we have seen

hardly any from Raul nr.2 (the one who come back). So Chakster

is his legitimate succesor. However one need to invest for the glory

as both Raul and Chakster demonstrate(d). I don't believe that

Chakster's ''hunting'' is over so we will see more discoveries.

''The king is dead long live the King!''


Dear Chakster, Do you mean to say that the JLTi has an inherent input capacitance equal to zero?  Even if it's solid state, I doubt that that is the case, but perhaps if it uses a differential cascode input topology, the capacitance can be very very low.  Allen Wright liked that topology, so maybe that's what you've got there, because in a cascode the bottom device, which is driven, is shielded from the top device which outputs the amplified signal to the rest of the circuit.  You can measure the capacitance of your cable if you have a very high quality VOM with a capacitance mode or if you have a dedicated capacitance meter.  I have both, but I would recommend that you consult with the manufacturer of the cable to get a number.  Also, the longer the cable, the higher will be its capacitance.  If it's about one meter long, then the ballpark figure would be around 100pF or as little as 50pF for most well made cables.  If it's a ribbon type where the two legs (hot and ground) are back to back, the C will be higher.

By the way, I credit Raul with addressing his audience as "Dear" so and so, and I think it is a nice custom, even if Raul would then go on to say some seemingly insulting things, also directed to his "dear" comrade.  In Raul's case, I do not think there was (usually) any malice intended; it's more a matter of the language barrier.

Echoing Chakster (his post of 12.26.16 11:22am), I too never would have discovered the beauty of MM/MI if not for Raul's epic thread. Thanks Raul.

I've used LOMCs almost exclusively since the mid-1980s. I acquired a few MM/MIs during that time, mostly buying them NOS if a) I knew it had a good reputation, and b) the price was irresistible. And I got a couple when buying turntables equipped with them. But I rarely if ever tried them (I was using higher-mass, fixed-headshell tonearms and it was a hassle to mount them/align them, and I didn't think I'd like them so it wasn't worth the effort, etc) so they just sat in a drawer.

My very small collection includes:

Grace F8L NOS / AKG P8ES NOS / Empire 2000/III and 2000/Z both NOS / SHURE V15ivHE NOS /SHURE V15vMR barely used / NAGAOKA MP-14 boron barely used / ADC PSX-40 barely used / TECHNICS 205CMk4 (needs stylus) / AT-ML150occ (with new original stylus) / STANTON 881S (used but original stylus good)... a couple of others I don't recall... and some Ortofon OMs and miscellaneous ATs which I gave to friends in need.

Now I'm amazed at what I was missing, caused by my own hubris and the snobbish propaganda of the "high end" magazines.

Most of my other gear is vintage, so my phono preamps are not designed for MCs (one of Raul's big complaints); they're also quality units, so I figure I'm hearing these old gems at or near their best.

The only one that disappoints is the Stanton; might be something wrong with it.

I have several very nice LOMCs which are still quite thrilling, but the joy of discovering the unique voices of the "obsolete" designs is intoxicating.

The last thing this endless thread needs is more words, without new insights, so I'll cut it short.

Again, thanks Raul, and all the others who've educated me.

PS: Can anyone recommend an acceptable 3rd-party stylus for the Technics 205Mk4?


@bimasta
Stanton 881s is a bother of Pickering XSV3000 or vise versa, those two cartridges are identical. Not sure what is wrong with your sample, but there was an improved version of 881s called 881s mk2 which comes with Stereohedron II stylus tip. 

Do not underrate this cartridge, better read this article:

"Confirmed in conversation with Doug Sax (RIP), the Stanton 881 mkII was the usual monitoring cartridge of Doug Sax's legendary disc Mastering Lab. Doug Sax could buy any cartridge for his studio, but Stanton 881 mkII was his choice according to an old TAS review you read here."   

Doug Sax was mastering engineer from L.A. He mastered three of The Doors' albums, including their 1967 debut; six of Pink Floyd's albums, including The Wall. Doug also mastered albums for Miles Davis, Bob James, The Rolling Stones, The Who, Frank Zappa and many others. His Mastering Lab uses analog equipment designed by Sherwood. That, combined with his ears and expertise, helped Sax forge a long and successful career at The Mastering Lab. In 1970, Sax and Mayorga founded Sheffield Lab Recordings, an audiophile label which produced direct-to-disc albums.

P.S. His latest reissues of The Doors (remastered from the mastertapes) looks promising, here is a video about it.  

For your Technics 205c mk4 just wait for Neo Sas stylus with sapphire cantilever from Jico (Japan).   
 @lewm 

Do you mean to say that the JLTi has an inherent input capacitance equal to zero?  Even if it's solid state, I doubt that that is the case, but perhaps if it uses a differential cascode input topology, the capacitance can be very very low.  Allen Wright liked that topology...  

Joe Rasmussen is Allen Wright (RIP) partner since 1975 and the designer of JLTi phono stage. Let me reassure you, there is no added internal "C load" from JLTi phono stage. I will get back to my Grace cartridges when i will get the parcel from Joe, then i can try lower resistors with my F9-F, but to my ears they are sounding better at 100k compared to 47k. My phono cable is Zu Audio Mission mk2 ( capacitance  67pF ), the Grace was better at 100k also at friend's system with very short phono cable. But who knows, we must try the lower loading, even manufacturer recommendations is 30k - 100k ohms range.   


Chakster, We may be talking past each other.  There is a semantic difference between "no ADDED capacitance" and "no capacitance".  The former term might imply that there is no actual capacitor placed across the input, to "add" to the capacitance seen by the cartridge as a load. The latter term implies that the load capacitance is zero, which I doubt. However, I would bet it is very low. With your cable (67pF) and your phono stage input, it is reasonable to think you have around 100pF total, which is low. If you really want to fine tune your Grace, you might consider trying to increase C by adding 300pF and reducing R to 47K or less, this is assuming that my faulty memory is correct about what I read on Vinyl Engine as regards loading of the Grace F9 cartridges. Yes, with no added C, your Grace might well sound better at 100K than it does at 47K, and perhaps that is good enough.

Hello Lew,

The Grace F9 owner’s manual states "operating conditions" of 100K loading and 80pF capacitance. Whether these conditions are optimal or not I cannot say. It’s been awhile since I ran the cartridge on my ARC MM phono stage at 100K loading, but I do recall that I preferred it that way over 47K.

Thanks Chakster. I'd already read the Doug Sax interview, which is one reason I was so disappointed in my 881s (it's not MkII but has the Stereohedron stylus). You inspired me to re-examine the cartridge. I must've been blind: the output pins were BLACK with tarnish: I cleaned them to reveal gleaming gold (thought gold resisted tarnish?). I also saw that the stylus assembly was not inserted fully, by at least 1mm.

They say Football is a game of inches; well, Audio is a game of microns, so a millimeter is as good as a mile. Of course the stylus may have loosened when I removed the cart months ago, and thus didn't influence my initial bad impression, no way to know.

With these problems fixed, I mounted it in a low-mass NOS headshell with shiny new leads/gold clips. Doug Sax (and you) were right — it sounds pretty damn great! The stylus looks very good under 60X (I spent a lot of time cleaning it first time around) so with luck it will last awhile.

As chance would have it, I have a Pickering XSV3000 body, san stylus... but no idea what shape it's in. Any point trying it with the Stanton stylus, besides mere curiosity?

Thanks again

 
Dave and Chakster, In that case (optimal load = 100K and 80pF) , my memory of what I read in VE is indeed faulty. I’ve been listening to my Ruby at 47K with no added capacitance, lately through a Manley Steelhead, which I think has a hybrid cascode input stage and so also ought to have low input capacitance. I have yet to open up the Manley, but I do have some tweaks planned for it. Regardless, the Ruby is sounding superb, as is.

Thanks for the correction.
bimista, I own both a Pickering XSV3000 and Stanton 881S mk2, also.  I haven't looked at them in forever (in fact the 881S is NOS, and I've never opened the box since purchase), but as I recall, Stanton and Pickering stylus assemblies are not cross-compatible.  Let us know.
Dear @bimasta: Like you many of us owned and still own MM/MI cartridges that we bougth 30+ years ago and that was on " rest " for manuy many years because we were " directed " by the  audio high hend establishment to the LOMC alternative that indeed is very good/excellent too but " diferent ".

As you many people " revived/discovered " again that the MM/MI alternative is not so bad as the corrupted audio establishment told us.

Good that your 881 is playing at its best. 

Btw, yes there is compatibility between Stanton/Pickering stylus assembly. At least that was I experienced with my 981 and 5000/7500. Where for no sure reasons my 981 performs better with the Pickering  assembly when both stylus are exactly the same.
The only thing that changes is that the Pickering stylus overall assembly is more solid than the Stanton one and this could means lower resonances/vibrations down there.

The 981 HZ is an extraordinary performer.

@lewm , jus from the begining of my MM/MI journey 100K is the way to go. David ( Dlaloum. ) told us that is not that way and I respect all his knowledge and skills that are very high but there are " things " that goes against the theory and that function outstanding that's like the 100K on our beloved gems.

Regards and enjoy the music,
R.


Dear friends: I think that maybe the first LOMC cartridge advantage against the MM/MI alternative is that LOMC ones has no interchangeable stylus/cantilever  assembly and avoid at 100% those vibrations/resonances generated in that assembly and it's really critical issue.

I think too that some MM/MI manufacturers thougth about trying to have better way to fix that criticalcartridge assembly.

We can remember Technics EPC 100MK4, AT/Signet, Grado, Clearaudio, ADC or B&O.

All of them designed cartridge models where that assembkly almost disappears and with the B/O disappears 100%.

Yes, I think that that is perhaps the most important  " Aquilles heel  and unfortunatelly we can't do nothing about other than ix the assebly in some way like glued it.

I did it with one of my ADC Astrion and I can tell you it works. Yes, there is a trade off but what in analog audio has not?

Regards and enjoy the music,
R.

It seems the Stantering 881/3000 are the same, just as the 981LZ = 7500. Wasn't this posted previously?  They will take any Pickering D3000 on up.

Critically damped loading makes the most sense to me. Rules don't necessarily apply to all carts and preamps.  Load some 690mH carts @ 100K and look at the jagged, peaky response.  A cart designed for 4-ch will be low inductance - extended response potential usually with a rising high end (w/100K load) mimicking an MC. 

Adding capacitance will lower high frequency resonance - a good thing?

It might be in order to fill in dips, especially in mid/top range, but use as little as possible..

rauliruegas
As you many people " revived/discovered " again that the MM/MI alternative is not so bad as the corrupted audio establishment told us.
The audio establishment is hardly corrupt. That you may sometimes differ with it doesn't make it corrupt any more than it makes you corrupt. Is that something you can comprehend?

Hey cleeds,
Have you ever think your brain storm and comprehend it's origin?
Lewm -- I'll check if the 881 stylus fits the 3000 body. But it will be awhile. I mentioned that my stylus wasn't fully inserted, which obviously affected the sound. Well, despite pushing it all the way in, after playing two sides I noticed it was slipping out again -- not by much, but visibly. So I put two tiny dabs of glue on the plastic stylus assembly. The whole cartridge is currently in a clamp while the glue sets.

Raul notes above that some people used glue for sonic reasons -- mine are purely practical: the damn thing just pulls out from the drag of playing a record.

No, I'm not saying it's a drag to play records: I doubt cartridges have feelings -- but who knows, some of them definitely have soul. I wish there were a "spec" for that...
Fleib et al, My mistake regarding the compatibility of Pick and Stant styli.
I think Raul raises a great point about the relative lack of stability and damping between the stylus assembly and the body of the cartridge that uniquely plagues MM cartridges as compared to MC types.  I think this is very important.  What I did with my 981LZS was to place a very small elastic band around the cartridge and stylus, running from front to back, so as to "squeeze" the stylus assembly up against the body of the cartridge. This also does some damping.  Unfortunately a similar strategy is not always possible because of how cartridges are constructed.  Also, I immediately removed the brush, for whatever that's worth.

I own an NOS B&O MMC1 and have nearly sold it many times, because I consider it to be flawed in its physical structure: you have an adapter with an unstable linkage to the cartridge body which has an unstable linkage to the stylus assembly.

Forgot to mention that I agree with Fleib about loading an MM.  It does not make sense to think that 100K would be optimal for all MMs, because there is variation in their inductance and other parameters, from one to the other.  We know this just by looking at manufacturer's spec sheets and at their own recommendations for loading, which sometimes advocate <47K and adding capacitance, for examples.  On the other hand, 100k was definitely better than 47K for my old Grado TLZ and I will try it with my Grace Ruby as well per the experiences of others.
It seems to me the mechanical integrity of the stylus/body connection is less critical with MM than MC because their high compliance puts far less stress on the connection. My 881 is very compliant according to VE, so I was really surprised that the assembly slipped out. Must be something wrong with my individual unit, maybe a tolerance mismatch made it too loose a fit to begin with, or the suspension has hardened over time, making it less compliant. Sounds wonderful even so.

The industry seems aware of the issue. Only my older MMs rely on the simple slide-it-in design. Newer models use more complex assemblies that "snap" on quite securely. Indeed some of them are hard to remove, and if I don't have the instructions, which in many cases I don't, I have to figure it out, which can be a little nerve-racking for fear of damaging the cantilever.

Perhaps manufacturers who make both MM and MC took some lessons from their fixed-stylus MC designs and applied them to their MMs. I believe Grado did away completely with replaceable styli on some models.

I also think there's as much guesswork/trial-and-error as there is exact science in cartridge design. Suspensions, for example: I think it's a fallacy to believe they always got it "perfectly right" at the factory.

Some suspensions harden or soften over time, and it changes the compliance. In extreme cases, the cartridge becomes useless.

But if the change is more moderate, the cartridge still plays -- and might even sound better -- because they didn't get it "perfectly right". A little more, or less, compliance (being "out of spec" caused by aging) might actually be beneficial. And they would have done it that way at the factory, if they'd known.

The only way to prove this hypothesis would a scientific study of several cartridges over a 20-year period. That ain't gonna happen. So it's in the realm of guesswork again...

That applies to many things in this "hobby". Some people hate the Uncertainty Principle. They want things "just so," black or white, right or wrong. They read a lot, they know a lot, it becomes a rigid belief system -- and they pontificate with unshakable certainty in these fora. That approach closes the door on new discoveries.

What I really like in this amazing thread Raul started, is his foundational first principle -- "Maybe... just maybe..." -- and that's probably why this thread now has a zillion contributions, and still counting...

 
Dear @lewm: Yes, that's in theory: not for all cartridges that 100k because each cartridge diferent electrical design values.

Now, please let me know for sure which of your MM cartridges sounds better at 47k than at 100k.

I own or owned " hundreds " of cartridges and that I remember no one performs better at 47k. We have to take in count here that the phono stage design characterisitcs count too.

The interaction between cartridge ad phono stage: inductance, impedance and capacitance is real complex to determine in easy way what is happening there.

Now, same question I do to @fleib maybe he has a recent experience where a cartridge performs better at 47k and if is that way I really am interested to know it.

Analog audio is not an exact " science " as are not our ears.


Regards and enjoy the music,
R.
Dear @cleeds : The corruption is not an issue that if some one differ of " someting " because in the mean time you learn you don't differ with.

When over time you learned that what you learned before coming from the audio establishment was totally wrong then you know that those establishment information was corrupted by audio market business, was totally biased and this convert that information in: corrupted one.

There are several examples over the audio history about not only in cartridges but on tonearms, TTs, electronics and the way.

No, I'm not corrupted but have to live inside the AHEE corruption. All of us are part of it but this fact does not means that like me other unbiased audiophiles are corrupts.

Are you a corrupted gentleman?

Regards and enjoy the music,
R.
Dear @bimasta: """  It seems to me the mechanical integrity of the stylus/body connection is less critical with MM than MC because their high compliance puts far less stress on the connection """


I think that no one here or elsewhere can proved that level of stress and its contribution to higher or lower vibrations/resonances/distortions in the cartridge performance.

For me and for the cartridge builders I neme it all is common sense and @lewm proved with his 981 and me with my Astrion and even with the change in stylus between the Stanton and Pickering I mentioned. There is no doubt that the improvement we have putting at minimum the vibrations generated down there is a big reward on the quality performance. Here LOMC designa are lot better than MM alternative.

I think that we can't diminish that fact, at the end we are talking of a cartridge signal  degraded for that stylus assembly against the same cartridge with non degraded signal ( at least for that issue. ).

Which one do you prefer?, answer is obvious.

The overall problem on cartridge quality performance is that exist not only one source of signal degradation but several and we have to try to have those degradation sources at minimum to increment MUSIC enjoyment.

Regards and enjoy the music,
R.


Dear Raul,
At this point in time, I cannot say what cartridges sound "better" at 47K than at 100K, which anyway is a subjective judgement.  But also, as we have been saying, it's an equation with many variables, including load capacitance.  A given cartridge that may sound better at 100K than at 47K with no added load C might change character if more load C were applied such that 47K for R would be superior.
With some of the vintage cartridges it is not easy to pull out the stylus even when you have to, for example with Victor X1, X1II it was the most difficult. The stylus fits extremely tight on Grago XTZ (and all related grado models). It is also fine on Grace F9, Glanz cartridges in my experience. But i do agree about the Stanton, when you pull it out first time the connection loose. It was a good idea of the manufacturer to add screw to tightened connection on those Technics 100 (mk1 - mk4) or even Denon 107 from the 60s. However, i have no problem with Stanton CS100 WOS in everyday use (my favorite cartridge), there is something special in the upper midrange of CS100 that make the sound so attractive and later makes you addicted.

A bunch of RCAs plug resistors supplied with my JLTi which makes this phono stage so flexible for experiment with different loading with MM/MC cartridges: 10R, 22R, 47R, 100R, 220R, 470R, 1K, 2K2, 4K7, 10K, 22K, 47K, 100K

And with low inductance carts we can go as low as the cartridge (dc resistance) x1,6 to find the nearest load resistance value.

David (i wish he could return to this theead with his thoughts) posted somewhere: "The R values I find most usefull are (roughly) 35k, 47k, 72k, 100k.... if I have more slots I would perhaps add 30k, 40k, 62k." He used the same JLTi, but we don't know which cartridges:( 

Hi Raul, About MM loading - It's preamp and system dependent.

Although people will often agree about a load for a particular cart, others might get different results. I think it has a lot to do with preamp topology, bandwidth and that sort of thing. Something like your preferring different kinds of transistors for gain stages.  What if you had a tube RIAA stage, think you might have different results?

Regards,

rauliruegas
When over time you learned that what you learned before coming from the audio establishment was totally wrong then you know that those establishment information was corrupted by audio market business, was totally biased and this convert that information in: corrupted one.

There are several examples over the audio history about not only in cartridges but on tonearms, TTs, electronics and the way.

No, I'm not corrupted but have to live inside the AHEE corruption. All of us are part of it but this fact does not means that like me other unbiased audiophiles are corrupts.

Are you a corrupted gentleman?
You sound like a conspiracy theorist. Evidently, much of what you previously thought was wrong, and you now blame that on an entire industry that you conclude is corrupt. And it's not a person or two or a company or two that you accuse of being corrupt, but but an entire industry???

It's time to take ownership of your own folly Raul, rather than blame all the others around you.


Dear cleeds,
It's not a conspiracy more than it's the way of life. Every one's life.

Existence is a stage on which we pass
a sleepwalk trick for mind and heart:
it's hopeless, I know,
but onward I must go
and try to make a start
at seeing something more than day to day
survival, chased by final death
if I believed this the sum
of the life to which we've come,
I wouldn't waste my breath
Somehow, there must be more. There was a time
when more was felt than known
but now, entrenched inside my sett,
in light more mundane,
thought rattles round my brain:
we live, we die...and yet?

In the beginning there was order and destiny
but now that path has reached the border,
and on our knees
is no way to face the future, whatever it be.
Though the forces which hold us in place
last through eons in unruffled grace
we, too, wear the face of creation.

As anti-matter sucks and pulses periodically
the bud unfolds, the bloom is dead,
all space is living history.
It seems as though time must betray us,
yet we're alive
and though I see no God to save us,
yetl we survive
through the centuries of progress
which don't get us very far.
All illusion! All is bogus -
we don't yet know what we are...
Laughing, hoping, praying, joking, Son of Man!
with lowered eyes but lifting hearts,
we're grains of sand
and though, in time, the sea
may claim us for its own
we are the rocks which root the future -
on us it grows!

We might not be there to share it
if eternity's a jest
but I think that I can bear it
if the next life is the best.
Even if there is a heaven when we die,
endless bliss would be as meaningless as the lie
that always comes as answer to the question,
"Why do we see through the eyes of creation?"

Adrift without a course,
it's very lonely here,
our only conjecture
what lies behind the dark.
Still, I find I can cling to a lifeline,
think of a lifetime which means more
than my own one -
dreams of a grander thing than we are.
Time and Space hang heavy on my shoulders:
when all life is over who can say
no mutated force shall remain?
Though the towers of the city are denied
to we men of clay
still we know we shall scale
the heights some day.
Frightened in the silence -
frightened, but thinking very hard,
let us make computations of the stars.

Older, wiser, sadder, blinder, watch us run:
faster, longer, harder, stronger, now it comes:
colour blisters, image splinters gravitate
towards the centre, in final splendour disintegrate,
The universe now beckons
and Man, too, must take His place...
just a few last fleeting seconds
to wander in the waste,
and the children who were ourselves move on,
reincarnation stills its now perfected song,
and at last we are free of the bonds of creation.

All the jokers and gaolers, all the junkies
and slavers too,
all the throng who have danced a merry tune -
human we can all be,
but Humanity we must rise above,
in the name of all faith and hope and love.
There's a time for all pilgrims,
and a time for the fakers too,
there's a time when we all will stand alone
and nude,
naked to the galaxies -
naked, but clothed in the overview...
as we reach Childhood's End we must start anew.

And though dark is the highway,
and the peak's distance breaks my heart,
for I never shall see it, still I play my part,
believing that what waits for us
is the cosmos compared to the dust of the past...
In the death of mere humans life shall start



 Van Der Graaf Generator - "Childlike Faith In Childhood's End" 
Report on Stanton 881s, with glued-in stylus.

First obvious improvement was the elimination of surface noise. It's a record I use for testing with all my cartridges: it's very quiet, whether using a simple elliptical or fancy stylus, aluminum or ruby cantilever and everything in between.

Not so with the 881, before the glue: lots of little pops and clicks. Very unimpressive.

After the glue: silent.

I can't say I really hear a dramatic improvement with music, but those are much more complex waveforms. And my ears are not what they used to be. But the transformation of those simple clicks and pops says a lot, and the improvement must extend to the music, though perhaps less readily discernible.

Glue works. Two tiny drops is all it took, and a small clamp to seat it firmly. And I can easily break the bond later if I wish to change the stylus.