"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. |
Dear Robert: Please let us know what the dealer say after checking the cartridge.
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 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 Jasper: From the same Robert's seller in Germany?
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
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. |
Axel, keep us posted on the comparison with the M20--the M50 is a second choice for me!
Thanks! |
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 |
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 |
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. |
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 |
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 |
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. |
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 |
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! |
Pryso just condensed down all my more long-winded posts. I agree completely. One of the dichotomies of the internet is that it can be used as a tool to broaden our horizons or to fortify our prejudices. Lets choose the former. |
The only consensus I ever found in audio is that there is no consensus. Looking at the big picture - tube VS SS, analog VS digital, dynamic VS electrostatic, belt VS direct/rim drive, chocolate VS vanilla; come on people, let's celebrate our diversity!
If we come to this site for information, how does finger-pointing and name-calling help? We all have different backgrounds that developed our personal tastes in music and music reproduction. If anyone posts what they've tried and what they prefer, that should help serve the information purpose. If someone posts an experience that is different from my own, I should either accept and respect that or look more closely at my own to see why differences might be observed. To belittle that person for seeing (hearing) things differently than I do only reflects back on myself.
Shouldn't all this be so obvious that it does not need to be said? |
Dear Downunder: For years you, some way or the other, do not like what normally I posted/post and don't like my answers to you. When your arguments are exhausted/finishised then your attitude is ( like your last post to me. ) to attack personally.
I know that I'm not your " cup of tee " ( ever ) but even that you already attack me over the time I'm not against you and in some ways I try to understand your frustration and that's why I always give you an answer.
I don't want that the thread goes on with personal attacks/offense or the like but that goes on in the clear attitude to learn each one of us.
There is no " worst deaf that the one that does not want to hear ". My last post to you ( the long one. ) give you a very specific answer on almost all the subjects/question you ask or that bring in this thread.
I'm not flipping nothing but given you my honest knowledge about, you can like it or not ( maybe even you could not understand it. ) but if you don't like/understand it this fact can't give you the right to answer in the way you did.
In the future I will post to you if your posts are honest ones and with the mature that you don't show in your latest posts even to other thread contributors.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Rayr2, y.s.: ...but challenge him on what he says... :-) aye.
Being a rebel has it's rewards, no? Yet, when I look back at my contributions to those early parts of this thread I have to admit: I just didn't get it, and the subject seemingly so off the wall :-)
All that changed since then really, are some cross-over modifications to my Burmester speakers, nothing else. They now are a lot more revealing since these earlier times and boy can I hear what doesn't work now! (not so good with a lesser cart for sure). But I can CLEARLY hear that the M20FL is superior to the Windfeld in MUSIC MAKING i.e. the points mentioned earlier by Lewm. We have VERY different systems yet come to the same findings, that should be telling. Axel |
Ray, If you read thru this thread, you will see that Raul has been "challenged" over and over again by me and by many others as well. In some cases he has conceded points; in many other cases, not. But he has always been gracious and kind, even when delivering one of his withering diatribes. You raise an interesting question as to where to fit HOMC cartridges in the pantheon of choices. I myself have owned a Sumiko Blue Point Special (a few decades ago), a Benz Glider, and a Transfiguration Esprit, in that chronological order. I thought the Transfig was by far the best, but none of them come close to either the Ortofon MC20FL Super (MI) or the best of my LOMCs. I consider now that I wasted my time with them. How do you rate the HOMCs you've experienced as compared to the best of your MMs? As my two sons say, it's all good. |
Axel.
I didn't limit my favorites to LOMC carts. I dont have the proper preamp for true LOMC carts. I do say that as much as I too enjoy, and own, very top flight MM/MI carts. like the Shure V15VMR....AT20SS...GRADO Signature TLZ...GOLDRING 1022GX...etc....But I have also most enjoyed Sumiko Talisman Virtuoso S, D, Sti...2 of these are HOMC carts, and have sound thats amazing, again classics, High Output, but MC, not MM/MI. I have also enjoyed the ATOC9ML/II....Denon DL-110 for $100.00 a real steal HOMC cart. So, Im not limited. I do believe that LOMC cartridges are the best, I just cannot afford most of them. I dont spend more than $500.00 for a Cartridge. As for the Loading, this is something more new to me, that I feel needs playing with, not resorting to one value. Im not jealous of Raul, I agree he has much better cartridges than I do, Better Preamp than I do, and better equipment in General than I do. He created a thread that has gotten more attention than any of my threads, but Im not jealous. I learn alot from all this. But I enjoy hearing from others that do not just agree with what Raul says, but challenge him on what he says. That way I learn far more. I dont claim to be more knowledgeable than Raul in any way. So you have that all wrong. And for my budget, I like High Output MC cartridges....and also some better MM/MI Cartridges. Ray |
Downunder and Rayr2, Who put the burr under your saddles? If you are disgusted with this thread, just go away. Raul inspired the rest of us to experience some new and fresh sounds from old vinyl with MM and MI cartridges, and for that I, for one, am grateful. As I have indicated several times, I am not yet prepared to dump my wonderful sounding MC cartridges (one of which I bought from Raul) as a result, nor do I know yet whether I agree with Raul's global conclusions on this subject, but I have experienced a new higher level of excitement with vinyl reproduction. I would never have even thought of "the MM alternative" without Raul's bringing these cartridges to my attention.
By the way, the repeated assertions that Raul ever categorically recommended 100K loading for all of these cartridges in all systems, and that he ever said 100K was the only way to go, is just plain wrong and unfair. In fact, he made a valuable contribution by in essence noting that there is no gospel truth associated with the 47K load. Go enjoy your LOMC cartridges. Peace. Out. |
Robert (Gaugin). I had another thought which almost got me up at 1:30 AM to post this, but I waited til morning. You don't specify which Lyra cartridge you own, but if it is an MC cartridge, your phono stage may be set up with a low load resistance. (Typically MC cartridges, especially LOMC types, are loaded at 100 to 1000 ohms.) If you load an MI or MM cartridge with such values, you would get the exact phenomenon you describe, loss of gain, dull sonics, possibly also the hum you are hearing. Check the load resistor on your Dynavector phono stage. You need 47K ohms for the Ortofon, or variations around that value as discussed here, but to start with, 47K would work fine. |
Rayr2, I thought I only had some miscommunications with my current girl friend, and now THIS? (I am obviously not one of your famous 3, hm :-)
If you like LOMCs better then good MM/MIs what's your gripe, just enjoy the music, or?
This is funny I say, Axel |
Rayr2, if you see this fine debate this way, you're a pretty funny guy. Are you the little knight in shining armour coming in to rescue the poor Stepford Wives? The lone cry of sanity in the wilderness? Sorry, you're not....
Raul's thread is one of the most fun I've ever read in audio, and his opinion is entitled to a great deal of weight given his asserted massive experience with all pickups, something I'm sure you cannot match. I sense jealousy that you a) haven't ever started a thread containing a relatively original idea like this one, and b) discombobulation over not having the ability, like Raul, to play with top pickups regardless of costs and actually have opinions. |
On Pickups and Aging: I repost this in this thread as I thought it pertinent. I wrote Ortofon in Danish in Denmark and asked them whether pickups age by sitting re my possible use of a NOS M20FL, and received the following answer from an engineer:
"There's nothing that ages if the pickup isn't used, we have examples of 20 and 30 year old pickups that work. The parts that wear are the diamond and suspension system when used, and dust is another factor that ruins pickups, but again mostly during use. You can comfortably use your M20, the only thing to be aware of is the .5 mm free height between the pickup and the record."
If Ortofon says it isn't so, it isn't so. |
Where were you guys 3 weeks ago. It was me against Raul, and his cult full of Stepford Wives, afraid to say anything that doesnt agree with their King. Its actually pathetic. Your posts of late have been the only things that actually make sense, and put Raul and Company in their proper place. Im so glad that you have come along to do so. Yes, a WACO Cult they are, ready to jump on anyone with differing opinions. Ray |
Downunder, so let's agree my system is really whacked out and that is why MCs don't sound closer to the real thing as this MI cart does.
The difference is BY NO SMALL margin! I use 47k straight into my ML-326S phono-modules and the 60dB input which sounds by far more clearer then the 40dB input. Done many a test and I guess it's the better OP-amp responsible, food for thought i.e. MM = cheap so use some cheap OP-amp to boot, and then go do some comparative testing, right?
I have listened to SUT (with and with loading), and any MC loading imaginable, the M20FL just beats the lot. Every LP (I have a good sound memory) just has that bit more "there-ness, live-ness" to offer. Plus all MCs I listened to in some other dang good systems just do not have this either. So I come from a point of MY KNOWING, and that's all.
I do not have 5 'tables and arms to make this some scientifically relevant thing, it simply just IS - with my set-up, WACKO or no WACKO, period. Now if MCs sound best to you in your set-up that's just great. Maybe spending $20k on a Platinum this or the next might even sound greater yet, and will be something to look forward to then :-) BTW, I had heard some of my LPs on some not so good system with not so good set-up with some good MM tho' (where I bought them 2nd hand). Listing to them at home afterwards I was slightly disappointed (using one of my MCs then). Now, they sound right e.g. Sarah Vaughan "Copacabana" see: http://www.amazon.com/Copacabana-Sarah-Vaughan/dp/B000000XLM I now can tell why I bought them :-)
Thank you for sharing, Axel |
Hi Raul
Good to see we agree
Raul said " here are some: needs additional gain stages where added distortions that in the MM's does not exist, additional cables for the SUT's, normally the MM/MI's are better trackers than the MC: here too the MC add distortions on the tracking, etc, etc."
Nice to see you have quoted real measured data rather than Raul b/s.
It must be by no small miracle with all these distortions and gain stages that MC's can still sound better than MM's. Imagine how good MC's would sound without these added distortions if someone could actually design an additional gain stage without all these Raul quoted distortions.
See, very easy to flip around what people say to suit your argument -
what does this prove?
I think the proof is here for everyone to see Raul.
I think you need to step off your podium and listen to some music, rather than countless cartridges
cheers
|
Hi Axel " on the one side you speak of tolerance, on the other of WACO :-) Funny, is it just me, but I have absolutely no issue(s) with Raul's contributions what ever. In fact he often mediated when things got a bit hot, and I truly appreciate THAT. If he tells you *his truth* about system colouration, well some will not like to hear such, and some would know it anyway and be fine by it." Yeah, good analogy I thought :-)
Luckily you did not think your Windfeld actually sounded better in your system than MM's, otherwise Raul would have been saying that your system was setup to suit MC's, you can't setup a cartridge correctly, you don't have the right loading on your MM's etc etc
Get the picture??
Sounds like you are part of the WACO cult no - or is it just that your system and musical preferences are more suited to MM's?
you will like the Nagaoka MP-50 - just don't load it at 47k right, must be 100k so you are now doing your own equalization - even thou Nagaoka have designed the cartridge to work correctly into a 47k load.
that right - Nagaoka are idiot's per Raul.
cheers |
Also, Robert, you remark that your other cartridge sounds fine in the same tonearm and with the same phono stage. Is this correct? If so, check to see whether somehow the stylus assembly in the Ortofon was jarred loose in shipping. If that's not the problem, and if you can verify that you are following the color code in hookup, as per Raul's suggestion, AND if you can see that the connections are all firm with no broken wires, etc, try adding another ground to the system, e.g., if the tonearm body is not now grounded to the phono stage, try adding a wire between a screw on the tonearm to the chassis of the phono stage. I don't poor grounding can account for the remarkable lack of gain that you report but it would be of interest to know whether it affects the hum level. I suppose it is possible that you received a defective sample, but if so it would be the first (or maybe the second based on jaspert's post) among contributors to this thread. One hopes that Thakker would replace it for you in that case. Whether or not you prefer an MC ultimately, the M20FL Super is a great performer for very little money. You did not make a mistake in purchasing it. And I own three highly regarded and expensive MC cartridges to which I can compare the M20FL. |
Dear Robert: Be sure that the tonearm wires ( color ) makes good connection to the cartridge pin connectors and that are right wired: red to red, blue to blue, etc. etc.
regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Robert said I bought a new cartridge ortofon m20fl super from eBay. The problems are: high hum , no volume,no clarity in audition. I set up my dynavector p-75 mk II, the tonearm rega rb300 OL and no change.When they are working with my lira cartridge the sound is good. What can I do? Hmm..I bought an Ortofon M20FL from the ebay seller a few months ago, it sounded undynamic, veiled and later on one channel dropped out before it went dead. I had sent it back to the seller for check up and still waiting for his response. In the mean time, i have some joy with a Garrott P77. Jasper |
Dear Downunder: Please read what Hickory posted in this thread:
http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1259375932
+++++ The biggest differentiation was only a modest level of retreiving detail for the Nagaoka ..." ++++
this is exactly what I'm refering in my last post to you and about the 100K subject.
Here the MM/MI was against two top LOMC performers.
regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Kristian85: One trouble with a long thread is that the " new " people can't read it all.
I posted the same link you bring here about load impedance ( thank you to bring it again. )/capacitance and his importance.
What we read through the link is not what is happening it is only a very simple matemhatics/physics model that does not take in count all the factors that are involve in the cartridge frequency response.
There are many mechanical/electro-mechanical factors that affect the cartridge response: cartridge/LP feedback ( during tracking and due to the VTF applied and the friction on the disc ), the tonearm/cartridge frequency resonance frequency, the headshell own resonances and its response with an specific cartridge, the tonearm behavior that affect the cartridge response, the tonearm internal wiring, not ideal VTA/SRA set up, airborne feedback, TT own resonances/vibrations, etc, etc.. All these and many more factors affect the cartridge frequency response well not the cartridge frequency response but that alter the signal quality performance ( where the FR is one characteristic of that performance. ).
When you take in count all those related cartridge factors IMHO that model is useless or at least can't tell us the reality of what is happenning.
So, IMHO the 100K is a good option like could be 47K or 26K or 75K.
What is important to me is that using what any one is using on impedance/capacitance values the sound performance be nearer to the recording/live event. If 15K or 47K or 100K works in your system that's fine.
Till today no one can prove for sure that 100K/100pf is wrong and many of the persons that already test these values are satisfied with, of course with the cartridge they own.
THere are cartridges that works very well at 47K in my system like the Nagaoka and one or two AT's.
Now, the 100K/100pf could do harm as the system has higher system distortion but as lower is the system overall distortion as better works the 100K figure.
Anyway, as I told Downunder I already posted more than three times that the impedance/capacitance subject is system dependent.
Kristian, at least these manufacturers recomended 100K: Empire, Grace, Technics, Stanton, Pickering,etc. and if you read somewhere the manufacturers that recomended 47K they do it along high capacitance and as you go high in capacitance as you put emphasis in the high frequency. With 100K you put emphasis in that frequency range but in some ways compensate with the low 100pf on total capacitance.
As I posted somewhere: it is not all writing on load impedance/capacitance and IMHO we are learning about in this " new " MM/MI analog source.
Kristian, after 20+ years with the MC alternative today we still have severe controversies on MC load impedance!!!, so the subject is not different on MM/MI's.
How do you know which is the right load impedance for a LOMC cartridge?, I think testing with different load impedance values and this is exactly what you have to do with MM/MI cartridges and here adding the capacitance factor too.
Again, that's why Dgarretson already have what seems a very good answer to.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Downunder: +++++ " - our systems are colored and biased towards MC distortions ... " +++++
this is a fact because all of us for the last ten years only heard MC cartridges: our electronics, analog rig, cables, speaker set up, room treatment were a choose voicing MC cartridges not MM/MI ones. Today we add a " new " source in this " MC environment ": the MM/MI alternative, making almost no other main change that switching the phono stage to MM position.
It is obvious that that system environment is biased towards what we normaly heard/hear: MC cartridges. You can disagree with but IMHO that fact is conclusive on that biased subject towards MC's.
IMHO it is of paramount importance to baware that even in that " hostile " environment the MM/MI cartridges performs so well: great merit, to say the least.
+++++ " last I noticed my system is setup towards my listening, which is a little warmth in the upper bass, a little laid back,tonal meat on the musical notes but still with good dynamics and transparency ... " +++++
maybe here is where reside our differences because IMHO either: live music and recorded music through microphones are not warmth or laid back per se, these two characteristics has nothing to see with live music/recorded music but whith what you like and this is not of what I'm talking about. Remember?: truer to the recording ( with micros at 1-3m of source distance. ) trying to add and lose the less? This kind of quality performance is what I'm talking about and it is truly different of what you like. What you, me or other persons likes is totally a different subject against what the music/recording is or must be.
In a serious comaprison we can't talk of what likes each person because then there is no comparison conlusions when each one has a different opinion but when we are talking on how the music sounds this bring ( at least ) one critical characteristic: the knowledge level on the live music/recording subject.
Downunder, I'm talking of music not what you, me or other persons likes to hear in our systems.
+++++ " when listening to music. there is no absolut " +++++
maybe the only area where IMHO exist the absolute is precisely when listening music: live music.
+++++ " 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'm not against MC's and certainly not because are overbright or highly detailed, the subject is more in deep and is related with the MC overall presentation of the music against overall presentation of the MM/MI's where IMHO these ones are nearer to the live event, has the magic of the live music where the MC's already lose the music context.
I respect what you like but that is not what I'm talking about.
+++++ " - All MM phono stages MUST be loaded at 100k to sound at its best, otherwise you are intentially incorrectly loading your MM cart. " +++++
this is what I posted several times when start this thread but if you read between the last 4 pages you can find at least two post where I leave very clear that not necessary 100K is an " absolute value " and that we have to find the right value in our each one system. I posted there that due that I own so many cartridges and that I?m continue testing on it and that several of them prefer 100K I use this value as " average " because I don't have the time to be making a precise set up ( load impedance>/capacitance. ) with each single cartridge.
Dgarretsson that know about already take/design what is a very usefull tool on this load impedance subject that will help everyone of us about.
Why I made emphasis on the 100K ( between other things. )/100pf?, well many of you coment that the MC has more detail/transparency and the like: well when you load your MM/MI at 100K/100pf you improve the performance in those characteristics.
+++++ " - last time I looked, ALL MM manufacturers design and voice their cartridges at a standard load of 47K .." +++
this is only non-know how that you have because the higher number of vintage MM/MIs cartridge specs speaks of 100K, even Technics speaks on 100KK!!
+++++ " - Where are the facts that MC's have much higher distortions than MM? " +++++
here are some: needs additional gain stages where added distortions that in the MM's does not exist, additional cables for the SUT's, normally the MM/MI's are better trackers than the MC: here too the MC add distortions on the tracking, etc, etc.
Yes I heard the Soundsmith and the blue/black Ortofon's, the latest Clearaudio even I own one Clearaudio. The subject with that review is that MF don't give the opportunity that the Black was handled/matched with a better phono stage like the MC's.
Maybe I'm too dogmatic when I speak about comparison but what I like is that comparisons have to be fair: oranges against oranges, I mean similar conditions for both oranges.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Hello, I have a problem…
I bought a new cartridge ortofon m20fl super from eBay. The problems are: high hum , no volume,no clarity in audition. I set up my dynavector p-75 mk II, the tonearm rega rb300 OL and no change.When they are working with my lira cartridge the sound is good. What can I do? Thank you, Robert |
Siniy 23, you're completely missing the boat and the point. REG's article is completely against the grain of the strong MC bias in high end journalism; if you'd read the article you'd know that.
VdH is one of the world's great top 5 audio designers. Period. |
That TNT article is really great. Makes a lot of sense. Thanks for linking to it. I think one of the arguments I could not buy is the universal 100K loading, especially as I've met several MM users (esp. AKG P8ES users) who were using less than 47K loading, as P8ES has a rising treble. I think the key is to advocate different loading for subjective tastes, and optimized to individual cartridges, which that TNT article recommends. |
Downunder, on the one side you speak of tolerance, on the other of WACO :-) Funny, is it just me, but I have absolutely no issue(s) with Raul's contributions what ever. In fact he often mediated when things got a bit hot, and I truly appreciate THAT. If he tells you *his truth* about system colouration, well some will not like to hear such, and some would know it anyway and be fine by it.
The man has a deep motivation to beautiful musical sounds and actually showed me some insights. Never actually found him bullying his opinions. So let's keep it rolling I say, and when my MP-50 arrives it may just be the first bloody boron-stick I can say I'd *truly* like :-) Best of greetings, Axel |
Well Siniy123 you certainly have staked your claim firmly in the NOS MM camp so good luck to you.
Unfortunately you make Raul sound something like Ghandi but you're entitled to your opinion. Anyway as we say in Australia I am sure he big enough and ugly enough to defend himself if in fact defense is needed.
As for VDH well he is no god to me and I don't own one of his cartridges but to ignore his abilities and knowledge is churlish in the extreme.
More collective experience and knowledge?- well that depends on the size of the collective and the particular reviewer. You really don't like reviewers do you. I bet not one of them has a 666 tattooed under their hairline. I've got not hairline so I know I don't. |
In light of Werner Ogier's fine article addressing variable loading of MMs, I find the blanket recommendation of loading ALL MMs at 100Kohm/100Pf misleading. See: http://www.tnt-audio.com/sorgenti/load_the_magnets_e.html I recall objections to doing this from my retail days many moons ago, but Ogier's article confirms the cause of my concern in no uncertain terms.
One problem behavior of MCs is the typical midrange suckout followed by a rising topend. When you examine Ogier's graphs, you'll see clearly that when loading MMs as prescribed, you end up with a large midrange suckout and a sharply rising topend, ironically turning your MMs into seriously nonlinear transducers and quite similar to MCs. Using 100Kohms/100Pf gives the overall FR of the tested Shure a terrible overall FR graph--even worse than the worst-case 75Kohm/150Pf test shown. Why destroy your signal (e.g. make it totally nonlinear) at that early stage when your tubeamps/tube preamps, speakers, and rooms do such a good job of it?
Also, it may well be that changing the FR of MM in this way suits the sound of Raul's system and room; if his speakers for example has a midrange hump and mellow topend, or if his room has similar characteristics, then modifying a MM response as prescribed would sound better. It would be interesting to see an in-room CD pink noise FR graph of Raul's listening room.
Finally, all MMs have different electrical characteristics, meaning that the blanket recommendation will give different results with different pickups.
I echo Downunder's concern that I find it incredible to infer that ALL MM designers get their loading recommendations wrong. They slave away at designing pickups with flat FR only to have us ruin that by misloading them. |
Yep, the opinion of magazine reviewers we all know from heir publication in for-profit rags. Van Den Hul is cited here as you local preacher cites the God opinion for some pedestrian case. Like he knows...:)
Anyway, collectively we here have more experience, resources and will then any magazine reviewer.
For me cost will be one of most important variables. If it is not the case for somebody - I'm very happy for them.
MM/MI/Other technologies gives us more options to enjoy music and spend less. The fact some great cartridges are around for reasonable money, even add to this.
I'm so grateful to Raul for his bravery, investment and willingness to share the information in public. Every time he discloses his NOS source, the price will go up for this cartridge model. But he choose to share the information with community and disregard his monetary benefit.
Somebody raised here question why we mostly compare NOS MM/MI and not the current production. Been there, done that, I can say that Ortofon M20FL immeasurable better then Ortofon 540, as an example. Here, again, the price not on the side of current production. NOS also looks technically superior.
It is always difficult to break stereotypes, be a leader and pave new way. I admire Raul, for doing all this above. Unfortunately, it puts you into spotlight and them people will start to look for imperfections.
I'm not taking all his opinions at face value, but for me they are more of catalyst or additional direction to explore.
I'll contribute back to this thread any interesting findings in realm of non MC cartridges. |
Raul, I am sure the majority of us are enjoying this thread, me included. even the banter between us with differences of opinions is generally light hearted and just that - a difference of opinion - not fact.
Except you recently are starting to sound like a leader of some Waco like cult and try your hardest to discredit anyone that has a difference of opinion to the grand puppetmiester. some of the reasons why some of us don't agree are
- our systems are colored and biased towards MC distortions - WTF -
last I noticed my system is setup towards my listening, which is a little warmth in the upper bass, a little laid back,tonal meat on the musical notes but still with good dynamics and transparency. Phaser's system is voiced completely different - towards neutrality, speed and transparency, Tobes system is about in the middle of both our systems.
Guess what, I respect both their systems, in fact anyones system as we all have slightly different priorities and biases when listening to music. there is no absolute.
yet all 3 of us clearly prefer MC's as our ultimate music making device. All of use have spent the same amount of time setting up( in reality probbaly more) and listening to MM's. What does this mean - nothing in tengrand sceme except we prefer MC's over MM's.
Clearly all of our systems are biased towards MC's right ? - you have been drinking too much kool aid Raul.
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.
- All MM phono stages MUST be loaded at 100k to sound at its best, otherwise you are intentially incorrectly loading your MM cart.
- last time I looked, ALL MM manufacturers design and voice their cartridges at a standard load of 47K
- yet you in one swoop claim they are all idiots and all MM's must be loaded at 100k. If you don't have a MM phono stage that has 100k, your phono stage is biased towards not getting the best out of MM carts. WTF?
- Where are the facts that MC's have much higher distortions than MM?. OTOH CD has less measured distortion than LP's at certain frequencies and we all know how CD sounds :-)
- What is wrong with current production MM's? You parody Fremer's review of the Ortofon Black MM ( I don't disagree with you) - Have you heard the Ortofon Black, or Nagaoka MP-500 or the new Soundsmith top of the range MM's for example?
You seem to have this obsession with recommending vintage NOS MM's that are hard to find, and if we don't luv the sound of the mentioned MM, there must be something wrong with the MM sample, our system etc etc - see a pattern?
You at every corner state that any phono stage with transformers are crap as they are totally coloured.
How many of us have received several emails from Raul offering to cure our phono stage ill's with one of Raul's masterpieces ? Not very good form IMO. There seems to be no disclosure of Raul being a manufacturer on his profile. BTW, I have heard it sounds wonderful - but that is not the point.
There is nothing wrong with MM's and I really like the Nagaoka MP-50 I just prefer MC's as the ultimate music source, I will still continue to play with and listen to MM's.
I appreciate you opening up this thread as it has been very interesting. I can also understand why a lot of people avoid this thread like the plague.
Differences of opinions and more importantly the respect of such opinions are vital for all of us to practice.
Any way if any offence is taken, none intended :-)
|
Siniy123, pretty strange response; are you running to the thread starter to censor the thread? Do you know who REG is, and/or did you read his article?
Also, I find it unnecessary to be demonstrative about posters' abilities to afford gear. What someone can or can't afford is uninteresting. Someone's ability to spend $10K on a cartridge is nothing to get sore about if you cannot. This thread is not about cheap cartridges; it is about whether MMs are able to hold their own with more costly MCs.
Best,
Kristian |
Dear Dgarretson: I never try over 100K but ( I can't remember whom. ) one person posted here that he was achieving great performance at 250K!
I agree with you, with this continuosly variable loading the performance gap between cartridges can be narrowed a lot and can give us the right tool to achieve in more easy way the best of each one cartridge, welcomed idea!!
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Siniy123, I think everyone's opinion is of some value, including yours and "those strange people such as magazine reviewers and nice Dutch gentlemen." The Dutch gentleman probably knows more about cartridges than everyone on this thread put together and then some. Are reviewers strange because they express a different opinion or occasionally do something we think is not as thoughtful as it should be? The one reviewer Raul mentions not only has an exceptional level of knowledge of things vinyl but was and is a stalwart in championing the superiority of vinyl when all about him were digitizing. He's heard more cartridges than I've had hot dinners so I am interested in what he has to say. Not always convinced and I don't always agree but I'm always interested.
If we don't accept the views of other fresh or differing views and only seek the advice of like minds we become myopic and miss what is right before us if we just took the time to look and listen to others' experiences.
I've have criticized Raul here on this thread but I respect his right to have and express a view different to mine and I believe that he respects my right to express my view even though he disagrees with some of what I have to say.
You'll be waiting a long time for economies of scale to return to vinyl. It's a niche market experiencing some growth but it has to be put into perspective and it will remain a niche market. Enjoyable, rewarding but niche. |
Dear Pryso: I ask to his right hand worker.
No it is not a stretch because I'm only refereing to a cartridge reference not source reference.
Regards and enjoy the music, raul. |
Hi Raul, when you were experimenting with high load values for MM/MI, did you find that any of the cartridges preferred loading >100K? Reason is I am constructing a circuit to provide continuously variable loading and need to select a value for the upper limit of the range.
With precise & continuously variable loading on the fly, perhaps the performance gap between respective MM/MI cartridges can be narrowed. The method used will be a variable optocoupler resistor in parallel with a high-value fixed resistor. |
Raul, where did you read that Van den Hul uses the Technics as his reference/standard? Is that recent? I have read that he has a Technics EPA-100 arm as one reference but no idea how many others he may own and use.
I'm not doubting that he may admire the performance of a 20+ year old cartridge but for a cartridge manufacturer to use one as a reference/standard seems to be a bit of a stretch. I would think if anything he would have a few master tapes and custom pressed vinyl from those for a reference. |