This thread is really too long, and I have read it in its entirety!
Depending on your budget, buy a Soundsmith moving iron cartridge and laugh all the way to the bank! |
Thank you for your answer… So, I set up the phono preamplifier Dynavector P75MKII for moving iron: -input sensitivity 2.0Mv; -gain 40Db; -loading 47k(47,000)ohm With other cartridge MM Shure M7D and MC Lyra Helikon SL wasn’t any problem. Today I went to the dealer and I asked for help. He will check the cartridge and I will see …if it is necessary to return the cartridge. How is it possible that with the Lyra Helikon SL(output 0,3mV) set up to MC the level of sound to be ok , in comparison with the set up of MM for Ortofon M20FL”super ‘(output 4,0mV) that is so very weak? I asked the seller from eBay and he answered me: “Hello Robert, thank you for the email. I suppose that there is a problem in grounding. In that case check the tonearm, headshell, turntable-grounding etc. please. Greetings from Bottrop, Alexander”
Thank you for taking the time to answer me Robert |
Gaugain, if you had problems with the Ortofon, removed it, installed another pickup without changing anything and had no problems, then you certainly have a broken Ortofon. |
Gaugain, what you described sounded to me like incorrectly attached cart wires. I had this twice with an EEI 500 and an 1000ZE/X until I figured that the connecting pins where in very different positions to all my MC carts. I somehow had just taken it for granted that they where all in the same places --- the are not! An incorrect connection will EXACTLY produce the effect you described. Greetings, Axel |
LewM,
My personal favorite of the HOMC cartridges was the Sumiko Talisman line. Of this line, the best was the Talisman Virtuoso D, or Virtuoso Dti, and there was also and Talisman B which was Boron I think. Anyway, these were my very favorite, and best sounding High Output Coils. Even today, they are highly regarded, I saw 2 of them sell here within the past 10 months or so, and both went quickly for $675.00....In the 1980's these cartridges sold new for $1200.00...I could never really afford one. But the place where I bought all my gear, were very nice in the way that they would let me take alot of different demo peices home for various amounts of time, hoping Id buy one. And thats how I got alot of my listens. After this line was done by Sumiko, the Blue Point came into the picture. But really was nowhere near as good as the Talisman line in the High Output Moving Coils. Just my opinion. Ray |
Ray, I agree. I always read and heard great things about the Talisman and Virtuosos cartridges. I think that the ones I happened to buy and use, the Blue Point Special and the Glider in particular, were possibly not good examples of the type. The Glider did everything OK, but there was never any excitement (goose-bumps, if you will). I know there have been many revisions of it by Benz, so maybe the newest ones are better. The Esprit was actually not bad (better than the original Glider, IMO), but could not cut the mustard in comparison to my Koetsu Urushi, which succeeded it. |
Those still exploring or searching for the very top end in MC's might want to look into the "Ultra Eminent BC" cartridge. Not too much noise on this in the West yet but for all intents and purpose, meant to be very special. While staunchy against absolute statements, this might even surpass the most recent bestsss!
I've recently bought a Grace G-660P tonearm for my beloved Dynavector XV-1s and look forward to giving this apparent marriage made in Japan a run-out soon.
Enjoy |
Hi all and sundry, having received my MP-50 today, the first thing to say: if this is not original I'm not! :-) It is a most beautifully packaged and preciously manufactured cart. They just don't bother to make stuff like that anymore, never mind for $500!
Now to the sound. Straight out of the box it sounds slightly better then the best MCs I heard in my system, but just a tad brittle which may go away after a few hours of play. We shall see. BTW this "brittleness" is what (I this far) could always attribute to boron cantilevers, and well yes, you guessed it --- that one is blessed with boron also. I had said enough about my perceived influence on sound by this material, I'll see if this one will break the mould. Lastly, right now I shall be surprised if it will out-class my M20FL, if so it would be by a very small margin --- but some more playing time will settle this also and I will report back. Greetings, Axel |
Axel, keep us posted on the comparison with the M20--the M50 is a second choice for me!
Thanks! |
Axel
the MP-50 should settle down after 10 or so hours. changing the cap loading has obvious changes in the sound opf the upper frequencies. I found 100pf a little too detailed and have settled on either 200 or 250pf depending on how my ears are sounding. I have found the MP-50 has great detail, yet the upper frequencies seem to be in row F compared to some MC's where the treble is row A or B - this gives in my system excellent detail, but not forward or in your face.
I would beg to differ with boron cantilever as my dyna XV-1 is not briitle or bright, same with SPU Royal & A90.
all system dependant thou.
look forward to your views when the MP-50 is run in. |
Dear Jasper: From the same Robert's seller in Germany?
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Kristian85: Thanks to bring it here.
The cartridge degradation due to many years on " stock " and especially the cartridge suspension is a inetersting subject and not ( mainly ) because the vintage NOS/second hand cartridges comes with suspension problems because normally there are no issues about but because I just wonder which was or is the original quality performance of the MM/MIs named in this thread in " fresh " status: two-three months after cartridge building!
Even if we own these very old cartridges and that does not shows signs of deterioration/problems due to aging IMHO certainly through so many years ( one way or the other ) these cartrridges already " suffer " some degradation level ( some where. ) that preclude 100% performance as when the cartridge was new .
These thoughts means to me that these old cartridges ( MC/MM/MI ) were better that what we can hear today on it!!!!
So, my question is: why that very high performance cartridge quality level can't improve or at least not comes down over all these years?, I don't have a precise answer for it, do you? any one else?
regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Vladimir: Yes the Soundsmith MI is a good option but if you read over this thread you can find other great alternatives that you can enjoy at least at the same levl than the SS ones and maybe with some other cartridges in best way.
regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Robert: Please let us know what the dealer say after checking the cartridge.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
"So, my question is: why that very high performance cartridge quality level can't improve or at least not comes down over all these years?, I don't have a precise answer for it, do you? any one else?"
Let's assume for the sake of the argument that this statement is correct. I think the answer is relatively simple but I think has in fact two parts.
Firstly there is CD- this changed analog forever as we all know. Before CD and now computer files the LP was the dominant music form and MM's the dominant method of extracting the data on those grooves. This meant millions of units were being sold with commensurate levels of investments by the major producers in plant and R&D. In this environment statement products could be produced with little regard for the return on investment as the economies of scale for these manufacturers bread and butter lower priced units had such a positive impact on the companies' bottom lines that they could produce relatively small runs of high performance products and not worry about the effect on their bottom lines. They would have been more concerned with image marketing.
I guess the Ortofon MCA90 is a classic modern example. A small run to create an image product but they make their money from relatively high volume and low cost DJ cartridges. Having a statement product like the MCA90 will hopefully mean people will look at the Ortofon range and attach attributes from the MCA90 to these lesser products. Whether they actually deserve these attributes is another matter. Today I would think Ortofon is the only company that would not be considered niche is this product category but years ago there were many. Just that the technology of the time revolved around MM's and not MC's.
With the advent of the MC this technology then took up most of the R&D money and most of the creative energy of the relatively few individuals who sought to eek a living out of a dying medium. They thought it was the way to extract ultimate performance from the medium (and possibly the only way to actually make a profitable livelihood). I think they were correct in this assessment, others think they were not. Consequently, we have a few people with comparatively limited resources attempting to make a living selling product to what was at one time a rapidly declining and is nowadays a stable to slightly improving market and it's no wonder the MM almost got lost to the world. The MC products the majority of today's cartridge makers produce are highly labor intensive and ultimately low volume and therefore command very high prices. Economies of scale don't exist in my view for anyone other than Ortofon. I would add, however that a $400 MM cartridge of the 1980's would cost a few thousand in today's dollars.
NOS cartridges, the like of which we buy today will eventually just fade away until we discover that these recently produced MC's really were fantastic. My son will probably start a thread on Audiogon in 2025 entitled "Why didn't we appreciate just how great these MC's were?"
Sorry, couldn't help myself. |
Hi all, early feedback on my MP-50, --- Houston we have a problem! This cart seems by more the 20dB RF sensitive than anything I had in my system. The result is, that my SME 10 TT motor controller kicks up too much noise for comfort (or a relevant listening comparison).
That seems a $500 learning experience. Nothing wrong with the cart I think, after checking with all my other carts it's not an issue (the controller noise).
It is something to watch out for if someone has a similar set-up. Greetings, Axel |
I was lucky to score NOS Stanton 881s (stereohedron stylus) on e-bay inspired by this thread. Here is my take of the MM/LOMC battle after living with 881 for two months. My TT allows to play with two tonearms (even simultaneously), so it was a non-stop back to back contest between it and my so far reference cart Sumiko Celebration (K&K phono stage has switchable MM/MC inputs). Staight from the box I really liked 881: something seductive was in its sound which made me to like it more than Sumiko sometimes. It took me a while to decide what do I really prefer; I changed my mind every other day. To the bottom line: Sumiko wins in the end but not by far. Stanton stays unsurpassed in some areas: solo violin and when is comes to "reanimate" digital records. Its strongest point is invaluable coherence of sonic tissue: every single note is melted into the big sound amalgam, like separate brush strokes in impressionistic picture. But this luxury comes at some expense: string goups in the orchestra become indistinguishable, soundboard takes over strings on grand piano, cellos sound darker than life and bass notes generally sound less pronounced and somewhat boomy. Surprisingly, highs are clear and silky with good extension. I've played with VTA and ended with the arm tail slightly up. Overall, I prefer the Sumiko sound on 8 of every 10 records. I had to choose: one arm is for stereo and other for mono records. I wish I would have third arm dedicated for stereo MM carts (and third input in the phono stage), but in my case finally Stanton is strapped for mono and Sumiko deals with stereo records. BTW, mono strapped Stanton wins hand down over Ortofon SPU mono. |
Axel, You might consider buying some shielding so you can audition the MP50 without interference. Michael Percy sells some stuff made by Texas Instruments (TI Shield) that should work fine. The TI shield blocks both RFI and EMI. Of course there are many other similar products that you may be able to buy locally. If you succeed in eliminating the EMI, I will be interested to hear your take on M20FL vs MP50.
By the way, I am using the solid-state Ayre phono stage for the MMs, but after that my system is all tubes all the way, so this business about MMs being for solid-state electronics and MCs being for tube systems does not hold water for me. |
Livemusic, your description of Stanton dove tails with my experience of Empire 888E. My Astatic MF-100 and Andante P-76 have better control over bass and low midrange, and thus better separation and a more open soundstage. But the warm ones like Empire and Stanton impress insofar as their exaggerated LF does not drag down HF detail. For me their particular strength is the unexpected combination of warm embodiment with HF detail. They are not "perfect" engines, but are seductive and possibly even the more so for having forgivable sins. As a generalization, is it possible that MC sins less often but unforgivably so?
While perpetuating cliches with respect to the MC vs. MM debate, I am with Lewm in rejecting the stereotypical views of SS phono. The modded SS ARC PH-2 that I'm using for MM/MI has none of the thinness or grain commonly attributed to SS, and is actually a bit warmer than my modded Atma MP-1 tube phono section. Medium output MC and MM both sound great through SS PH-2 into tubes downstream. |
Lewm, Changing the mounting hardware 'miraculously' solved the problem. I think it was a hex-nut touching the metal body and in this case of the SME V arm causing a very slight shorting between the RF screen and the arm's ground...
Not a day with learning, I say. Axel |
is anybody knows if ADC TRX-1 and TRX-2 have same bodies? I know that stylus mount is the same. But are the bodies electrically and construction wise are the same as well? |
OK, MP-50; some first impressions now. 1) dynamics = good LOMC type impression i.e. maybe less "natural" than M20FL but very *dynamic*, thunderous bass when its on the vinyl! 2) setting a more dense stage but very interestingly also a noticeably HIGHER stage, yet not as voluptuous as M20FL. 3) very MC like presentation but still with more pleasant type of "flow" to the music, but definitely more compact and "on the point" type presentation. 4) clearly noticeably: less forgiving when vinyl gets hot e.g. "Fountains of Rome" Philadelphia SO with Ormandy 5) more noticeable "deep" detail presentation, moving more into A or B row compared to F or G row with M20FL. (I'm not sure this is great for full classic orchestra some of this vastness gets lost...) 6) "Tonality" or tone, M20FL got that beautifully taped, yet when it gets very busy, the MP-50 has less tendency to smear but still does some smearing (my system starts pegging by then, sorry :-) 7) presentations are happening in a different setting, as mentioned more compact, more detailed, more forward. 8) tone is more natural with M20FL but this is early yet and may change with MP-50. 9) seems a very good tracker, as good as I've heard it
Lewm, it sure is one very good cart and having to decide for this one or my Windfeld I jump for the MP-50, the comparison to the M20FL is like comparing two orchestras in two different halls, that is what I can tell at best right now. Greetings, Axel |
There are answers to all of the problems that are occuring with the MP50 - if you care to read back in this thread |
In researching cartridges on the Vinyl Engine, I came across a couple of old references that may be of interest to all. There is a large "Cartridge Comparison Chart" listing near 100 cartridges with grades and technical info. The Ortofon M20fl Super was one of the few to receive the top "excellent" overall grade. I'm not sure where this chart originated but it reflects a lot of work.
The second interesting reference is from a 1982 review of "Nine exotic cartridges" by Martin Colloms. I learned a lot about cartridges in general reading this in-depth review.
If you're not yet a member you'll need to register to download these. Below is a link, but if it doesn't work just go to the Vinyl Engine Forum and look for "Reviews" under the Member section. These two are on page 7.
http://www.vinylengine.com/phpBB2/viewforum.php?f=29&topicdays=0&start=150 |
Rizl, thanks for the tip on Vinyl Engine, but your directions are not good enough for me. I'm a member and I tried to find this stuff... no find.
Dagob, I don't exactly recall where and when these "solutions to MP-50 problems" where mentioned, and I was present most of the time during these 1000 + posts... Any clue for me?
Not that I have any problem now, aber bitte mein Herr! :-) that MOUNTING HARDWARE can screw up your earth / screen arrangement (creating some sort of earth loop) that's a brand new one for me --- also I NEVER ever read about such ANYWHERE either! Yet that's what clearly can be the case (with a SME V at least), and I had the prove :-) Greetings, Axel |
Hi Lewm, Dgarreston
I too don't believe in the cliche's of SS v tubes either.
To clarify what I said thou " If anyone's tonal balance is ultra neutral (tube or SS, however generally it may be SS) using a highly detailed/transparent MC or MM would probably sound lean and bright on a lot of recordings. Your preference to MM's is totally understandable"
I think your experiences adds some credence to that, as Atmosphere amps are very detailed and fast and don't have a lot if any typical tube warmth/weight. that an audio research phono stage is warmer than the Atmosphere phono is interesting.
cheers cheers |
Axel,
Look to my various points on set-up and to numerous other references on this cartridge above in this thread. Key features already expressed include:
The burn in time is considerably longer than 10 hours; cartridge needs to be isolated from fixing bolts; slightly positive VTA (just under 1mm); magnesium headshell (I use the Nagoaka or a Denon); top grade headshell connector leads (high quality OCC litz or silver); medium mass tonearm (the Audiocraft AC3300 is a magnificent accompaniment), real attention to set (I use the Fleikert protractor set, Geodisc and, then, my DB Protractor), and a top of the range moving magnet phonostage (of course, I'm using the Essential 3160). Set up in this way, it can show strengths that you might not find elsewhere. Similar to all of the top rated MM's that I have tried from this thread: not perfect but, aye, what is?
Enjoy |
Axel,
Btw, I applaud and concur with your description: "like comparing tow orchestras in two different halls".
Again, I tried to make clear earlier in this thread how important I feel this factor is when determining what is "best": even though I was more concerned in large with the same orchestra in different halls and/or when percieved from different positions within the same hall (a useful feature that is often engaged in the appraisals by our oft-maligned - and sometimes malignent - hifi journalists). I also sited a couple of seminal books that take this issue beyond subjective opinion to the doorsteps of science.
Enjoy |
Raul, my Grace Ruby is getting some inner groove distortion on some records, what's the best way to solve this problem? I have a VPI Scoutmaster with the JMW9 arm. Thanks. |
Dagob, thanks 1) burn-in > 10hrs --- good to recall (I'm still some hours to go) 2)isolated from fixing bolts, aye!!!! --- just learned that one the hard way. 3) slightly positive VTA, yes I agree 4) magnesium headshell -- hm, SME V is just that, but fixed of course 5) top grade headshell connector leads -- aye, SME V is pure silver as it the arm AND phono-cable. 6)medium mass tonearm --- aye, SME V is just that with ~ 11g mass 7) real attention to setup --- well, SME V has it's own thingie and fine by me right now 8)a top of the range moving magnet phonostage ---- hm, using ML-326S phono-modules (inside this pre) with the 60dB input, about as good as it gets.
>>> Set up in this way, it can show strengths that you might not find elsewhere<<< I DO AGREE! Thanks again for the "TOTAL RECALL" :-), very kind and caring of you. Best regards, Axel |
Axel,
From the home page go to the Forum (link at the top); page down to the "members area" section; and click onto "reviews."
I spent some more time going thru all of them last night and there are some real interesting reviews covering the last 20+ years that members have shared. |
Rizl, been there, no "reviews" there !? only "articles"...and then only up to page 5 and not 7, as you suggested, once in "articles" ?! Are talking about the same thing? That's why I asked again... Axel |
Rizl, Re Martin Colloms. Altho he is/was one of the most highly respected of British audio reviewers, was he not at one point associated with a mini-scandal where he was said to have been unduly "influenced" by certain manufacturers or his editor to give a favorable review? As I recall I stopped paying attention to his opinions at that point. If I am incorrect, my apologies to Mr. Colloms.
On the M20FL Super. I only have less than 10 hours on mine. After hour 2 or 3 it clearly got even better than it was initially. This is to be expected with any cartridge but especially with one that has been sitting in a box unused for many years. On some (good) recordings, I am hearing things in a way that I never heard them before. I can only imagine what might happen were I to cave in to my urge to "tweak" the Ayre P5Xe. Could use better coupling caps and could try 100K load. However, the only cartridge that I personally can say sounds better at 100K than at 47K, given no change in capacitance, is the Grado TLZ. Reluctant to mess with the Ayre for fear of violating the warranty.
Dgob, Was it you that made the remark about the AR phono stage vs the Atma-sphere? If so, I don't know where you got the ideas from me and Axel. First, I am not using the Atma for MM cartridges; as noted above, I am using the Ayre. And since Axel's and my systems are so different downstream from the phono stage, I would be reluctant to compare the two phono stages based on his and my separate and subjective impressions of them. Heck, I am not even sure how the Ayre would compare to my own Atma-sphere phono stage, which has been highly and extensively tweaked. I need to physically move the Atma closer to my Lenco so the tonearm leads will reach it and enable me to make such a comparison. Then too I would need to reduce the inherent gain of the Atma phono. |
Axel,
I don't know what to tell you -- when I go to the Forum page and look at the members area section, there are two listings. The first is Articles and the second is Reviews. Reviews has 7 pages of listings. |
Hi, something came up for me after listening, comparing, and the reading what J. Carr had to say about his new cart --making better "distinctions". You may look it up on this thread: http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1258844370 it is about his new MC cart, but an interesting insight into sonic distinctions. He is explaining about most carts "homogenising" details and I have to agree with him. Since the MP-50 is closer in presentation to my Windfeld I did a quick cross-check between those two and the MP-50 clearly makes much better "distinctions". This is what Lewm is also talking about when reviewing the M20FL, yet those two carts have a rather different presentation as mentioned earlier.
At that level the more "distinctions" a cart can produce, the more life-like the reproduction, where I completly agree with J. Carr. Greetings, Axel |
Dear Phaser: make sense what you posted.
Btw, I appreciate what MCs do and appreciate its merits: the subject here is that my top MM/MIs put me ( in my system ) nearest to recording/live event: are " truer " than the best MCs, I'm not talking of " day and night " differences but tiny and important ones.
I have to say that through the Phonolinepreamp that I'm using either cartridge signal ( MC and MM/MI ) pass through two phono/gain stages, both carrtridges are even on this regard where in other electronic designs the MC signal pass at least for one additional gain stage.
Anyway, thank you for your answer.
regards and enjoy the music, raul. |
Dear Livemusic: I like the Celebration ( especially with the SME IV/V. ).
+++++ " But this luxury comes at some expense: string goups in the orchestra become indistinguishable, soundboard takes over strings on grand piano, cellos sound darker than life and bass notes generally sound less pronounced and somewhat boomy. " +++++
I can be wrong but IMHO this kind of cartridge performance seems to that it is more a tonearm/matching issue than a cartridge characteristic. I don't know which of your tonearms you used with the Stanton: LT with wood arm wand can makes what you are talking about especially that " boomy " in the bass, in the other side if you mounted in your Acos then I think could be worth to try it again with a differnt headshell and in both cases with a more pronounce positive VTA/SRA.
If I recall the 881/981 Stanton series were designed for CD-4 too where Stanton recomended 100K on load impedance.
Anyway, nice to see that the 881 likes to you.
regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Dgarretson: I'm with you and Lewm on that " stereotypical views of SS phono ". IMHO, today is only a myth, a today misunderstood, a wrong way to inform the people and an unfair " road " to continue with that untrue myth.
Downunder, things on SS design already improve in the last five years enough to " kill " once and for ever that false " myth ".
regards and enjoy the music, raul. |
Dear Siniy123: The main differences are two: different cantilever build material ( saphire for the TX-2 instead the berylium on the Tx-1. ) and different stylus shape, same body.
regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Toufu: are those records very demanding / high velocity recorded at inner grooves? or nothing especial about.
There are some factors that " help " to produce that inner groove distortion. The cartridge it self could be one of those factors because it could occur that there is a mistracking due to not the right VTF ( you can go a little higher and see what happen. ) and/or anti skate, not the best tonearm/cartridge match, a wrong cartridge and tonearm set up, etc, etc., sometimes help to make the set up through Lofgren instead Baerwald due that the former set up put the inner distortion at minimum.
If all these does not help then you have to try with other tonearm even in a frind's system to see how the Ruby perform there and if this does not help either then maybe the Ruby has a suspension problem.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Toufu, you're getting very audible inner groove distortion on all your records with a pivoting arm except for a brief moment twice per side; you need an airbearing linear tracker to get rid of it and to really cut down on vinyl playback distortion ;-) |
Thanks guys, I will try the suggestions. This only happens on a few records so might not be such a big deal.
By the way, what's the best load capacitance for the Grace Ruby? |
Dear Siniy123: The information I posted about the ADC TRX-1/2 comes from a Stereo Review magazine but latter I found this that is a different one on the same cantilever build materials subject:
http://www.gramophone.net/Issue/Page/June%201984/90/780011/ADC+cartridges
so we can't be sure about.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
my TRX-1 stylus (marked as TRX-1) definitely looks like one made from beryllium, not from titanium.
TRX-2 is clearly a sapphire, you can see here: http://www.hifido.co.jp/KWadc+trx/G0303/E/0-10/C09-43281-22487-00/ |
Garrott P77 is back in production.
Here you go boys, step up and order one.
"This new version of the popular Garrott P77 phono cartridge has slightly different suspension and the MicroScanner II diamond. This has resulted in a flatter frequency response right across the spectrum but it still retains the full sounding characteristic of the original P77"
http://www.decibelhifi.com.au/category35_1.htm |
>>> Garrott P77 is back in production <<< Anyone ready to go for a test, comparing e.g. to M20FL and MP-50?! Tell me it betters those two and I'll be VERY tempted in deed :-) (or are we getting a bit reckless here?) |
Axel, can you please tell me how MP-50 diamond is mounted in cantilever? |
Axel,
"isolated from fixing bolts, aye!!!! --- just learned that one the hard way... about as good as it gets."
Quite!
Enjoy |
Dear Siniy123: Yes, you are right. Btw, that Technics is good opportunity.
Regards and enjoy the music, raul. |
Dear Axelwahl: The original P-77 is a good cartridge but IMHO the M20FL or E are better performers.
Anyway, I will wait to have the opportunity to hear this new cartridge version. Btw, good to know Garrot is on the road agin with the 77.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |