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
@chakster
It is in transit - will be here next week. If the stylus replacement is dead, I will get my money back from paypal as it is being sold as new. You face this issue with EVERY old cartridge or stylus one buys - it may fail. My original EPC100Mk4 was fine and suspension is still fine even after vdh re-tip.

As far as the price goes - it is what it is. This is probably last new one in existence - or at least until the next one :-)
The EPCP1000mk4 performance is world class and as competitive any high end cartridge.
If it functions as "new" as advertised - it will be a bargin and well worth the price.

  Thanks Raul - finger crossed 
cheers
This is the same seller who has a bunch of Glanz cartridges, some dead stock. He also offering repair service for Victor X1 suspension. Make sure to check it's the original. I've been watching this technics stylus for about 2-3 years from this seller on various sources, i don't think he's got only one! If he has a bunch of them then the price is high imo. I hope you will get what you paid for.  Please report back when you got it. 
Dear @pryso : """  When you express such strong preferential feelings I can't believe they are based upon discoveries made in just the past few months.  """

I understand your concern about but in reality that did not happens that way.

Around the 2000 year that was almost when appeared the DVDA ( PCM ) and SACD ( DSD (1x). ) I bougth some DVDA and an all formats Denon player.

What I listened likes me for the first time as a digital alternative and at least was a " promise " that digital " thigs " were improving and will improves in the future and I was not in an error about.

Unfortunatelly I have many posts in Agon and not easy to look for posts where in those " old times " I posted that we all must try the DVDA alternative and latter I speaks the same for the SACD.

In more " modern " years, 3-5 years,  I posted several times that digital is a true serious music/sounds alternative for any home audio system. Even some of my posts wake-up very hot discussion against my digital points of view even that as today I left very clear that I still listen to LPs.

So, it's not " in the past few months " as you said. My discovery about digital came from many years now. As a fact I knew about digital advantages in the very early 80's through digital LP recordings.

Digital is not perfect and as with analog there are " horrible " recordings but not because the medium but because a bad recording producer/enginners choices during the recording process.


Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.


Hey Mischa.
  If he has more of them, I will buy another.
  Not sure how I can physically check to make sure its original outside of the Technics packaging.  I do know how an original sounds thou.
Cheers 
They’re original, though the ones I bought all collapsed after a couple hours of play. 
Dear @jpjones3318: I remember when some of us (  7-8 . @downunder and me betweem them. ) bougth from the same source the NOS mk4 cartridges where almost all had problems with the cartridge suspension.

That kind of problem with Technics appeared only with the EPC100 mk4 because I bougth a great 205 mk4 that was developed only with two years difference and never had that kind of problems and other gentlemans that bougth the EPC 100 MK3 or 2 never had any problem.

I really hope the downunder sample arrives in good shape. We can't know it till we have it.

If the replacement works as new then its price is worth to invest on it but it's a risk to do it due to the whole history about.


regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.
@rauliruegas actually when i managed to get perfect 205c mk4 in mint condition the suspension was not perfect, that’s what we call Lowriders. People can live with them, but i sold mine for that reason. The stylus is tall, so even when the cartridge is almost lay down on the record surface there is a tiny distance between cartridge and record just because of the size of the diamond.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DMImN1rWkAAtqx0.jpg:large

Lowriders are not for everyone. As we discussed with Nandrik 10 000 times, no one can fix it without exchange of the cantilever and damper: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DMIq61hXUAA_9hF.jpg:large

Foxtan sold me 100c mk3 and when i told him it’s a lowrider he asked me to ship it back to him to fix the damper (just the damper), half year later he returned me the cartridge as an original with "fixed damper", thanks jpjones who poited me it’s not the original. But funny, when i shipped that sample to Axel for inspection he recognized his own refurbishing work he did for the seller who cheated me. Axel told me he replaced the whole cantilever. Crazy world.

I don’t really understand (still) how Van Den Hul can "refresh" those 100c mk4 suspension/damper without changing the cantilever?
When vdh refreshed my 100c mk4 the only thing they did was replace the diamond stylus. 
   They did not touch cantilever or suspension.  I know this as the cantilever is still ever so not quite straight- very close but not perfect.  It was like this when bought new.
  
Oh, that's what we call re-tip, but "refresh" in Raul's terminology means something different. I always thought it's something with suspension. 

Dear chakster, What kind of ''Slavic brother'' are you when you

obviously have no idea that all Serbians family names end with

''ic''?

Your theory about lowriders is as curious as by Mexican oracle.

According to him there is no such thing as ''lowrider''. According

to you ''it depends from the stylus lenght''. I assume that the

probable cause is (too much) Stolnickaja (grin).


@nandric

What kind of ’’Slavic brother’’ are you when you

obviously have no idea that all Serbians family names end with

’’ic’’?

Oh, forgive me, but when it comes to vodka you should know correct brand name " Stolichnaya " if you prefer late 70’s flavour. I prefer white wine.

Well, when the stylus is too long, like on those old technics, it’s the only thing that does not allow the cartridge metal part to fall down on the vinyl surface. But that’s the worst case of course.

I think your Ikeda cart without cantilever is pretty similar to the low riders.

My dear brother, There are no clear nor sensible rules about

writing native names in English or other languages . Example

 ''Wien'' versus Vienna. In Dutch ''Wenen'' and Serbian ''Bec''

for the same city in Austria. My ''Stolnicnaja'' is the Serbian

(chirilic) version of your capital city wodka.

BTW my Ikeda ''misses'' (aka ''does not need'') the cantilever

but can't do without suspension.  With your encyclopedic knowledge

 about carts you should not mix up parts . But it is true that the

first produced TT's deed their job without suspension. That is

to say with ''your stylus only''.

 

For what it's worth, to Technics EPC 100 fans.

Several years ago one of my audio buddies recovered the EPC 100 Mk4 he bought new years prior to that.  He became curious after I advised him of Raul's post on MM cartridges.

Since he was the original owner he knew it had not been mis-treated.  But when he installed it he found the suspension had failed over the intervening years.  So he shipped it off to Soundsmith, requesting the suspension be rebuilt.  A reply came back that they tried but it couldn't be rebuilt.  That seemed hard to believe to me but I'm not an expert.  All too bad since the stylus likely had less than 100 hours. :^(

Now with Technics return to analog with their new DD turntables, can we hope for a new EPC 100 Mk5?
Hi Raul,

I'm not sure you understood the intent of my post when you replied, "I understand your concern about but in reality that did not happens that way."

My point was my assumption that your stated position on digital playback had likely developed over an extended period of time, not from recent developments, say within the past year or so.

You now verified that, stating your digital appreciation began around 2000, at least for the promise you heard then.

So my confusion comes from your statements over the years in this post beginning January, 2008, and up until recently, when as you now report you find digital to be the more "true" playback.  If you developed greater satisfaction from digital playback at some point since 2000 why did you continue to spend the time, effort, and money with MM, and eventually MC, cartridges as you were reporting here?  "Still listening to LPs" is not the same as actively promoting specific components to do so.

Of course each of us may choose whatever medium suits us best.  You decided at some point that digital best suits your needs.  I'm just surprised that you would put this much effort into analog, and specifically MM cartridges, once you came to that conclusion.
Whew!  Regarding MCs, if you have noise, then you have a problem and it’s not the cartridge. The problem is multiple grounds, aka “ground loops.”  In chasing these suckers down, I’ve discovered, for example, some manufacturers connect one of the signal “grounds” on the cartridge to the metal cartridge body (e.g. Clearaudio). If your TT also has a ground lead that you connect to your phonostage, then voila, 2 ground paths=noisy ground loop. I had to use a plastic spacer and nylon hardware to insulate this cartridge from my metal headshell (and leaving the arm/TT ungrounded caused great RFI because I lived very near TV transmission towers).
Not intending to revive a “religious”  (i. e. one of belief rather than experience), there are those who believe that MCs work best with a step up transformer, rather than a high gain phonostage. Certainly it is easier to use a transformer for proper impedance (not resistance) matching of the moving coil. Although my phonostage had sufficient gain, I found running a step-up was a definite sound improvement. Any decent step-up will have flat bandpass in the audio band.
The theoretical advantage of a moving coil is less moving mass than a moving magnet and therefore better ability to render nuance and delicacy.  That was my observation in stepping up from a Clearaudio MM to a Dynavector MC. The Clearaudio was certainly good and it had a dynamic sound that complemented rock in particular. If that was all I listened to, I would have considered the extra $1,500 spent on the Dynavector to have been a waste of money.
A few other comments: back in the late 60s-early 70s, the obsession with “trackabiliy ” (led by Shure), low tracking force (0.75 gram) and ultra low mass tonearms led to very high compliance cartridges. But, the truth is, the V-15 had a lifeless quality notwithstanding its measured response and trackability. In any event, you can’t fairly test low compliance cartridges (like the Denon 103) in a low-mass arm. They need a heavier arm, like say a VPI JMW. Nor can you expect to run a high compliance cartridge in a massy arm like the VPI.
I do agree that the best MM cartridges are probably the equal of similarly priced MCs, especially “high output” MCs which defeat the low moving mass advantage of MCs by having big (i. e. heavy) coil to generate the higher voltage.
I can't remember anyone praised V15 in this thread, but i remember the statement that Clearaudio use the Audio-Technica generator in their MM cartridges. My first switch from MM/MI to LOMC was very impressive until i discovered many more MM cartridges (some very best vintage MM from this thread). Then everything became much more difficult. But the MM cartridges are definitely much 
My EPS-P100ED4 has arrived and its set up on the SL1000MK3D.

This sounds incredible and what I remember from the EPC-P100CMK4 before vdh did their re-tip. speed, neutrality and transparency.


now - how long will it last? It is definitely riding a little lower than my other P100ED4 stylus. I will keep playing over the weekend and hopefully it does not collapse in the meantime.
In theory I have up to 30 days before I can invoke my eBay Money Back Guarantee. Lets hope I don’t have to.

cheers

Hi all, j. carr ever proposed to extend this thread to other kinds

of carts. I started this thread but, alas, nobody was interested.

However if there are members who own either: Panasonic strain

gauge EPC 450, 451,etc,; Toshiba electret C 400 or Stax CP-Y

I got the address of an lab in Slovenia where those can be fixed,

improved ,etc. www. eselab.si

Dear @pryso : Easy: I own over 7K LPs and when I re-discovered the MM alternative was really enligthed and I wanted to share every one.

Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.
Dear @downunder : That original cartridge is just terrific. Good luck with it and yes play with all this warranty days time.

Btw, @pryso maybe we don't need a mk5 new Technics design today but this same MK4 with some kind of up-dates. It's a killer´s cartridge.

Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.
Thanks Raul, apparently I just assumed wrongly that vinyl was your preference over the years of this post, with MMs being your favorites until recently when you again discovered MCs you found satisfying.  At least up until your most recent statements about digital.

I only have about 3K LPs.  But that has been enough to keep me committed to vinyl playback.  And while I'm not anti-digital (some local audio friends, including a couple you met when you visited San Diego, stated they couldn't stand listening to digital for at least the initial 20 years or so) I find I simply enjoy listening to analog more.  So I'm in a similar place as frogman. 

Peace
Dear @frogman : I dont think we are around circles but if you think are " circles " is better because a circle is closed not something that just left in the " air "/open.

I respect your position on the subject but I posted clear evidence of all the different steps and sources where the analog signal is totally losted and never recovered because there is no way to recover it.
I told you that I was not analizing all the other steps during the playback where that true losting of information is happening and where additional are generated full of different kind of distortions that at minimum puts blur in the analog signal but this kind of blur happens to during the recording process and I did not analize it yet.
Other lost information analog source: if your phono stage was not designed with the Neumann pole in the inverse RIAA eq. then you are losting information too.

All those " facts " not only alter but disappears the original expression you talk about and what we are listening from the speakers through analog is a totally new " expression " if exist at all. and the like

Digital has not that kind of heavy different problems if any.

People think that R2R is the " reference " and better than same digital process but it's not because is way different to record in tape zeros and ones than the complexity of the analog information signal.
We have to think that the analog signal must " suffer " the R2R noise levels, frequency response limitations, speed stability of the recording mechanism, wow&flutter and the like where to the digital recording signal  is not affected by and you can attest what I'm saying:

take one of the D2D Sheffield LP and check it against is counterpart ( same LP recording, same session. ) recorded direct two 2 track tape and you will listen a huge differences in between where the D2D is way superior to the one that was recorded using a R2R.

Analog is a mess, problem for we analog and music lovers is to understand it and accept it's.

I remember very well and I own it several LPs recorded digital in the old times with all the digital limitations that the medium had.

Examples about are the Denon PCM LP recordings that if you listen one of the good Denon recordings you will be extremely satisfied with. Not all Denon's LP sounds good and comes with that " expression " but the good ones are really good.

Telarcs are other very good example of digital LP recordings. Yes, there are the bad ones here too but the good ones you can't say if are full analog or digital/analog, even if you invite one of your friends and with out tell him is a digital recording he just can't take it in count is digital.

Delos is another great example of labels with digital LP recordings.

Delos and Telarc used the rudimentary Soundstream digital machine where Denon, that are experts about, designed his own PCM recording machine that in theory was better than the Soundstream.

From some time now ( in the last times. ) many of the LP recordings are recorded with the latest digital technology and many audiophiles just don't know it and like a lot what they are hearing.

Look this gentleman  in one word is a true reference, take a look on his audio system where he has top reference analog rig including R2R and top digital rig but additional well not additional but before all that he is a true music lover and as a human beeen a true top gentleman . Read what he posted and again read and see his home audio system details:


https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/what-sounds-best-vinyl-or-cds/post?postid=1445044#1445044

https://systems.audiogon.com/systems/615


I'm not closed to your " expression " it's only that other than listen it I analize if in reality is preserved by analog and things says it's not.
Even this I like analog alternative and as he I like digital too and know for sure its inherent today superiority.

Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.



dc_bruce, If moving mass was the whole story, then MI cartridges would be king. They have lower moving mass than MCs.  So do the optical and strain gauge cartridge types.  (But many do say that those are "special".)
Dear Raul,

I always hesitate to approach discussions/debates such as this from this vantage point for reasons that may be important only to me; but here goes...and for whatever it may be worth to anyone:

I, like the great majority of my "friends" (as you refer to them), have been playing music (mostly, but not entirely, in acoustic settings) on a daily basis for (in my case) almost fifty years. There have been countless experiences in performance and recording settings employing both analog and digital. I mention this not to gain any kind of exclusivity, but simply to set the backdrop that is at the root of my views on the analog/digital issue. All of the "facts" and "clear evidence" that you present mean little when our ears tell us something different. Yet, you expect us to ignore what our ears tell us. You offer a lot of technical data; but, ironically, little or no details about what you actually hear that support your views. In another thread another musician offered a point of view similar to mine that was also in opposition to your point of view and you, likewise, dismissed it. Moreover, you previously referred to the musicians that you say you have a relationship with as "almost deaf". Could it be that your musician friends also feel the way that mine do? Have you asked them? Additionally, there are many intelligent and very musically astute audiophiles here that, likewise, share these views. Do you ever consider the possibility that maybe, just maybe, there is something, on a very fundamental level, about how the two technologies capture and present music that transcends all of the "facts" and "clear evidence" that you present? This "evidence" is "clear" only on paper. Remember the THD "wars" of yesteryear? The point is that numbers seldom tell the whole story.

The beauty of art is that it transcends what can be explained factually and only by accepting this can we get closer to the facts. I WANT digital to consistently sound as true to the musical values that I feel are most important as analog does; it simply doesn’t. Btw, as usual I am perplexed by some of the supporting "evidence" that you offer:

In the link that you included in your most recent post the audiophile that you cite wrote this after extolling the obvious virtues of his new DAC:

**** can Lps still be better? sure they can but not by as much as you might think.......****

So, what is your point? Is this not what I have been saying all along?

Regards.

"It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure.” - Albert Einstein


Well said, frogman. This same dichotomy appears in the cable debates. Those who say the data show cables don't matter and those who say their ears say cables do matter.

I tend to go with the ears..
Dear @frogman : For years Mike was an analog lover and as thousands of audiophiles and music lovers digital was a forbiden alternative. For some time now he " understand " digital scenario and its top quality performance and today he is really deep learning about.

Today digital alternative is working in the beginning of its maturity step and what it shows it is just fabolous and the good news is that it’s every day improving it so the best is forth coming. Nothing can stop it, not even we analog lovers because I’m one of them.

I don’t dimish you or other gentlemans that think like you, things are that I see " things " from a different approach. Remember that my main target in my home system is to stay nearer to the recording not to the live experiences.

I’m not talking of " numbers " per sé I only pointed out clear sources ( and many more than exist in analog. ) where in this alternative the original information is losted and this like it or not alter everything on what we are listening.

As you I know what I listen what my ears, brain and body perceives. Years ago I was a furious defender of analog against digital but as digital through the time I learn what happens all over the recording/playback process of what we are listening.

Like it or not what you and every one listen in its systems are reflected through ( at least. ): frequency response, noise/distortions levels and SPL. Inside this characteristics and other goes everything we percieves at listening sessions.

Mike is a gentleman that’s polite and mind opened to any kind of subjects as the one we are touching and I?m sure that he never did the " 3 months digital test " but I’m sure too that you and tyour friends and furious digital detractor neither and if we don’t do it then we can’t talk inside the same scenario.

You can tell that maybe you don’t need that test as Mike that does not need it but today he knows and through many of his posts you can read that that " expression " exist even for his musicians/composer friends as he pointed out in the link I posted:

" Friday night I had a few serious analog focused guys over and we listened to quite a bit of digital; mostly string quartets, and classical piano. they were quite amazed at the natural, spacious and focused presentation. one of them is a classical composer and music professor. he was especially taken with a redbook Haydn String Quartet and the sound staging and natural tone. "

" he was especially taken...

and his friends was not in the daily listening in digital.

Btw, if we analize a little to the Mike’s system we can note that exist no tubes that can’t honor music/expression ( impedes to stay nearer to the recording, no matters what. ), DD TT, no LT tonearm ( he was owner for year of a Rockport series 3 TT that came with LT. ), no all metal tonearm and no undamped tonearm, speakers with two self powered subwoofers. His TT is not only a DD but the most importan issue is that the manufacturer before builded TTs is an expert in damping devices for audio and that TT has that expertise including in the arm boards.

Now, maybe we don’t like or don’t want to stay truer to the recording and this is up to each one of us.

For me this dialogue with you was and is a learning one and my target is not who has the reason because both alternatives has its own trade-offs. Maybe what you and other gentlemans need is to be exposed more frequently to decent or top digital listening sessions.

Btw, in this subject we are discussing is happening the same that happened when I touch for the first time in this forum the necessity to have: a pair of self powered subwoofers, DD turntables, tonearms with removable headshells, well damped tonearms and the like. Many many people was and posted against what I was telling but years latter almost all of them areb using exactly what they were against it. Such is life.

@toddverrone said: " well said. ", with out explanation why is good said because I’m not using " the data " as a main argument.

frogman even in this audio system subject we have to walk ahead, digital is a step ahead and not as you posted somewhere a backwards. It¿’s not this way. As Mike there are several analog lovers that " knows " about and like it .

I think it’s a good time for every one to start to build a digital rig at least: just for fun ! !


Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.


Raul, now you've confused me again with your statement, "Remember that my main target in my home system is to stay nearer to the recording not to the live experiences."

How many of us can have the experience of hearing a recording session to then judge how closely the resulting media (in any format) sounds on our home systems?

At least in attending acoustic musical performances I can "refresh" my auditory memory of the sounds of the instruments being played.  For me that furnishes a basis for judgement of my system at home.  No my recording will not (likely) be the same musician with the same instrument in the same acoustic environment.  But if I attend enough live performances I can fix in my sonic memory the tones, colorations, dynamic abilities, and details of say a trumpet.  Listening to trumpet recordings at home may not be an exact replication but I can judge how close I've come to some average of those.

Attempting to understand the basic sonics of each and every recording to judge the accuracy of playback seems an impossible task.

Sorry if I've diverted from the analog VS digital discussion which is a diversion from the original cartridge design type topic. ;^)
@rauliruegas

Hi Raul.
MikeL is now buying a 6 figure reproduced American Sound high mass turntable to be made by David Karmeli.

He has a very good digital system, but he still prefers turntables.
http://www.whatsbestforum.com/showthread.php?18161-The-American-Sound-Turntable-Beyond-s-Minimalist!

cheers
**** if I attend enough live performances I can fix in my sonic memory the tones, colorations, dynamic abilities, and details of say a trumpet. Listening to trumpet recordings at home may not be an exact replication but I can judge how close I've come to some average of those ****

That is such an important point; and you made it very succintly.  I have tried, with varying degrees of success, to make that very point numerous times in other discussions when faced with the argument that the live music experience is not a valid reference.  Whether in a hall or a recording studio the mics pick up the sound of a live performance and do so with varying degrees of fidelity depending on the mics used and how they are used.  To use the resulting recorded sound as a reference is problematic as you point out and should be obvious.
Raul and all,
My Dynavector Karat Nova 13D. It was for sale at Hart Audio UK and advertised as a demo cart direct from Japan. The seller said they had used it just for 10-15 hours at most, so the cart was practically as new.
It came w/ original wooden box but no papers, in ad there were specs about and if my memory serves me right the average VTF was stated as 1.4 g.  So I used 1.5 g to be in "safe area" as I also understand that too lower weight may cause damage to vinyl groove.
Raul, I may have a slightly different sample of the Nova 13D, it also looks that the body is longer than yours.
Anyway, now I have 1.65 g and it tracks 100 microns :)
Thanks for advice.
Raul your preference for digital and solid state tells me that you listen with your head and not your heart. Both analog and tubes do a much better job at capturing the emotion of the music. 
In fact I believe that SET when run within its proper parameters also offers less distortion than ss and sounds natural when doing it. 
 You may have spent a lot of time studying these things but you need to spend more listening and trusting your heart and feelings  while listening 
Dear @downunder : That AS TT is nothing especial. Appeared in 1983 along the heavy weigth fashion of all those old times. Yes, a very high inertia moment that can helps to speed stability but with draw backs too. Nothing is perfect.

If you observe this design is very similar to MS one: all metal, four metal arm boards and all these arm board at the worst place: at the TT feets where everything must pass.

What's new with? what advantage has over any today top TT? . I have no curiosity about.

Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.
Not sure "what's the best", Harold, i think it can be the best of the month only :) But i like Joseph Grado Signature TXZ (MI) model. Those Decca are the uglies in my chart, but i never owned any of them and i don't think i have tonearm for them.   

The best MI cart ever produced is the AKG P-100 Le. Lew already

mentioned MI carts in the context of the lowest moving mass

assumptions which postulated  that MC carts have lower moving

mass in comparison with the ''MM kinds''. AKG invented MI system

with a small iron tube on the cantilever end which moved between 4

small rod magnets. Alas AKG made a big mistake by chosing the

wrong material for the suspension. To avoid liability they closed

the carts division of their company. The P-100 Le is made in (very)

limited numbers but appears from time to time on eBay. The only

person who owns one is Raul if my memory still works.

Now speaking about suspension. We are so obsessed with retips

that we totally overlooked suspension. Because I know Axel for

such a long time I know what the problems by retippers are.

One need to discriminate between cart producers who also have

repair service like Van den Hul and Soundsmith and ''ordinary

retippers''. The cart producers  have much better access to

part supplier. This is not the case with ''ordinary retipper''. They

have not only the problems with styli and cantilevers but also with

dampers (aka ''rubber ring'') . According to my new retipper from

Slovenia if he can't get the right damper the cart will not sound as

original.  They can't get coils have  limited supply of styli/ cantilevers

and dampers. So no wonder Axel bought second hand carts as

donors for parts.

So my advice for a new suspension is either Van den Hul or

Soundsmith. Both produce carts with different compliance so

should have different dampers available for their customers.

Dear @frogman @pryso : """ you’ve confused me again with your statement, "Remember that my main target in my home system is to stay nearer to the recording not to the live experiences."

How many of us can have the experience of hearing a recording session to then judge how closely the resulting media (in any format) sounds on our home systems? """


"""
to make that very point numerous times in other discussions when faced with the argument that the live music experience is not a valid reference. ........ To use the resulting recorded sound as a reference is problematic as you point out ....... """



I’m sorry for both of you confussions. As you know several times my explanations are not really good because my ignorance levels on the english language.

Here I go: for third time in this discussion I post that my ultimate reference always is LIVE MUSIC ( I posted in this and other forums hundreds of times. ). Period.

Now, of course that I never was on my LPs recording sessions and I don’t need it to fulfill my target: truer to the recording.

Why I don’t need it. Because ity does not matters about the recording sessions that I can’t change it  in any way .My whole/overall home audio system work has its solid foundation in this statement:

TRY TO MANTAIN AT MINIMUM EVERY KIND OF DISTORTIONS OR ADDED INFORMATION LEVELS AT EACH SINGLE LINK IN THE ROOM/SYSTEM AUDIO CHAIN.

The target it self permit that you lost the minimum information you can and that at the same time you add the least information that was not created in the recording process but generated through the playback one.

That was why tubes are forbidden for me as all metal undamped tonearm and poor cartridge trackers and many other things as can be that in a system with passive speakers the owner owns no self powered subwoofers. The list is to long to analize it here as is why tubes are a forbidden item for that precise target.
Yes, we have to look for something that does not exist: PERFECTION but at least to stay nearest to it.

So, when any one of us fulfill the target to in true mantain at minimum the system/room distortions or added information we will stay nearer to the recording and then to the LIVE experience too.

Tha’s all.

Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.

Dear @analogluvr : """ your preference for digital and solid state tells me that you listen with your head and not your heart. ..................................................................
You may have spent a lot of time studying these things but you need to spend more listening and trusting your heart and feelings while listening.""

If in any audio sytem what I’m listening does not moves me then I stop to listened. MUSIC is " feelings/emotion ", as you I know very well and understand your point.

For years I was a tube lover and owned, listened in my system and in other systems the tube electronics you can name it. I was a lover.

Many times want it to come back to SS and every time I intented was dissapointed with, I never gave a good opportunity and in those years SS was not like today where we have several alternatives of very good SS designs that makes the differences.

With SS alternative happens the same as with digital: gentlemans/audiophiles as you have a deep foundation in analog and tubes and shows it through all your posts but and this BUT is what makes the difference with all of you: BUT almost no one gives a true opportunity and the effort need it to SS and digital.

What means a serious " opportunity ": means that we have to invest money on SS or digital, it’s not that we listen to it for a few hours or few days NO, we have to be serious about. But it’s not only that we have to invest on it but we have to make a new whole system/room SET-UP with the new items.

We can’t imagine that SS or digital will works only connecting it, no it’s a mistake to do it that way. Both technologies hide almost no one " errors " in our set-up as happens with analog and tubes. With SS and digital there is no way to hide the system/room " mistakes " that exist all over the audio chain at each single link. We have to remember that each one system is fine tunned ( in this case ) to those tubes or analog.

Now, when we have a really fine tunned room/system with SS/digital then the analog experiences shines on it as never before and we are truer to the live experience.

Is very dificult to give an opinion ( that I respect. ) when we have not true and serious first hand today experiences on the subjects.

Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.
Dear @analogluvr  @frogman : Each one of us has to do our job. Belive me that I did it for years not months and in all this time I learned a lot.

Unfortunatelly there is no rules about , we have to learn and stay/try to mantain a self training to have sucess. Not easy task and is more of knowledge level  that we go step by step acquiring than too much money to spend. Money is guarantee of nothing, always need it but......

Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.
Mr. Peter Ledermann of the SoundSmith could post in our thread too, i just realized he's not a fan of MC cartridges at all (serviced many thousands of them). In the middle of this video he explain the advantages of MI cartridges over MC. And Strain Gauge over any of them. Very interesting lecture. I also noticed that he hate conical styli :) 

Who would compare cart manufacturers with philosopher? Well to

refute whatever philosopher the only thing one need to do is

read some other. ''Our own'' J. Carr explained  in this same thread

why he prefer MC - and never even try to design an MM kind.

Unfortunately J.Carr's statement is outdated on this forum, but the Ledermann's statement is dated October 2017 and he speak about MI (not MM). It worth to watch just to see Peter and to check some technical data he's talking about. 

My Gosh, chakster knows better than Carr???

When will we see the first MI cart designed and produced in

''Russia with love''?

Addition, I knew that love can make people blind but thanks

to my Russian brother it is obvious that t love  also can

cause deafness.

I'm just collect the arguments, i do not take anyone's opinion too seriously. Jonathan Carr did not find any advantages in Raul's long time favorite 100c mk4, but he has mentioned Victor L-1000 MC as very unique design with tiny printed coil right above the stylus, i think Decca MI can be in this category too for its design. SoundSmith video is interesting, how about those 5k MC with very poor channel separation he has mentioned in the video? He even mentioned distortion that MC owners like so much. The stupidity of using conical tip. Strain Gauge cartridge (originally developed by Panasonic) if you want to talk about unique design. And cacti growed by his friend  Frank Schröder

My dear brother, The old Roman's already invented the so

called ''oratio pro domo'' argument. I do see J. Carr more as

an scientist than ''producer'' but the fact is that he produce and

sell MC carts while the impressive looking Ledermann produce

and sell MI carts. Besides considering the price of my Allaerts

MC 2 finish gold I would be crazy to prefer MM kinds(grin).

Right, but Ledermann also fix cartridges for other people like the hardest working man in this business, so i believe his experience is great and he knows the weakness of the carts (of any type) very well.  

Mother Teresa was even more helpfull but , if I am right she

was catholic while the Russians are Greek orthodox. What

kind of argument is that? Like Polish? When one ask a Pole

''are you Slavic?'' his answer is : ''no I am catholic''.

chakster, ".  .  .  if you want to talk about unique design. And cacti growed by his friend Frank Schröder"

Cacti styli may now be unusual, but they are not"unique".  At the beginning of home playback the acoustical Victrolas and other models utilized cactus as well as steel needles.  ;^)  
Dear @chakster : I don't think that PL of SS post in this thread never because is me who started this thread. Is a long and " old " history " that was developed precisely because his unique Strain Gauge system.

As you said was Panasonic ( Matushita group member as Technics. ) whom first appeared in the market with a Strain Gauge cartridge that conformed with the eq. RIAA standard.
After Panasonic came Stax, Sao Win and some one else. All of them conforming according that RIAA standards.

Srain Gauge cartridge concept is in true the best way by a wide margin to make a cartridge transducer, no doubt about. It's not perfect but better than MM/MI/MC technology.

Unfortunatelly is not free of trade-offs and the main one is that needs an external " electronics " that must be a real top design and that was not happened in those times as it does noth happens today with the SS one.

Now, when I read and listen for the first time to the SS Strain gauge I did not know that its design just was made it with out conforming the RIAA standards.
Latter on and reading the SS site I learned that critical RIAA subject with that Strain gauge system and I knew it because in their site they showed a chart/diagram where every one can observe that the SS cartridge was designed with out that RIAA eq. in mind. PL arguments many things about trying to compensates for that " mistake ".

Through my posts in two different SS Strain Gauge threads he posted that he never be again to accept any cartridge re-tipping to my cartridges ( I was a customer from him with 4-5 of my cartridges in the past. ). Btw, sooner after those threads he deleted the link in his site that showed the differences  between the SS curve and the RIAA curve.

Here is one of those threads where he thougth that I was attaking him when in reality I was looking for direct and precise answers about because I want it to know why I listened what I listen the first time I heard his Strain Gauge cartridge. I have to say that today I don't know if the SS Strain Gauge electronics in the system confoms according the RIAA standards:

https://forum.audiogon.com/discussions/would-like-to-hear-from-strain-gauge-owners#3

Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.

@pryso 
Cacti styli may now be unusual, but they are not"unique".

Am i said they are unique? No.
But we know that Miyajima use Bamboo cantilever.