Dear Larry/Jloveys: I forgot in my last post to Dgob the critical importance on Allaerts quality performance.
My Mc2 Finish Gold never perform but at stellar top quality performance on the Essential 3160 that btw Dgob owns.
+++++ " blow to the owner of the Allaerts if it is the Boulder that is just not up to the task ... " +++++
I heard twice the 2008/2010 Boulder combination in two very different systems with three different cartridges ( non Allaerts ) and till today I'm still thinking and asking why these Boulder items are so expensive when ( with cartridges ) its quality performance is so poor, IMHO the 2008 is " not up to the task" like you say.
Dgob is a very good reference about the Allaerts subject that not only needs first class/rate Phonolinepreamp but the right tonearm: it is very keen on this subject too, I like the Schoroeder Reference tonearm design ( one of the top very top tonearms today, no doubt about. )but IMHO and knowing in deep the Allaert cartridge and not so deep that tonearm I think that it is not the best match.
I don't like the step up transformers ( any ) specially with the Allaerts and I know for sure that as good as is the Jloveys Allaerts performance through the Tron IMHO there is no doubt that with the Allaert cartridge you can do it better with out step up transformers on the cartridge signal.
Anyway, I agree that this cartridge is not for every one but if you have the right " analog rig " the Allaerts is an enormous plleasure to experience and a must to hear.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Raul, this thread is very interesting but also confusing... I assume that Larry's friend bought his Boulder/ Schroeder/ Allaerts on a global agreement as this combo beeing the "best" available/ most expensive too. Many reviewers agree with that and if I had the funds maybe I would have done the same. Than a curious experimenter living in Mexico puts a bomb in the audio establishment telling us that a well choosen cheap MM cartridge with mating tonearm and phono preamp beats the best expensive MC cartridge if tonearm/phonopre not carefully choosen. I LIKE THAT ATTITUDE ! . This is realy helping us in the right learning curve, not blindly believing audio reviews. Thank you Raul. |
Sirspeedy,
Thanks. My listening time is fulfilling if ever more obsessive. The Allaerts reminds me of a former girlfriend who needed much care and attention but gave great rewards when handled correctly. Oh fond memories! I would remind all Ikeda owners that the provided template is inaccurate and can have a detrimental effect if used without adjustments.
Raul,
You are spot on. I feel like I am hearing the Allaerts for the first time - many years after buying and sweaty hours spent unsuccessfully setting it up and playing it. I think that the tonearm set up (the effective length) is in fact critical in providing a suitable platform and ditto the overhang: at least that has seemed an inescapable conclusion following my recent experience with the Allaerts. I think that is (along with an undeniable streak of laziness) the reason why I am so bowled over by the protractor from Dr. Feikert: German ingenuity at its best. The template, strobe and protractor make tonearm and cartridge set up literally fool-proof and a quick and consistent pleasure. I will however come to another fundamental aspect of the performance that I am now enjoying from the Allaerts
Larryi/Jloveys,
What can I say? The Essential 3160 is IMO simply that: "essential" to what I am hearing. I've already tried to share my experience in threads and reviews but would add that any MM or MC cartridge (including my Allaerts) is given an unbelievable platform through the Essential. It is not a commercially driven enterprise but I believe it is SOTA when it comes to performance. Even better, it's linestage is of equivalent standard and unsurpassed in my years of listening. If your friend could audition his floating set up with the Essential 3160 I feel certain it would make sense of the high costs already spent on his system and reqard him handsomely.
In short, if I were a vinyl loving audiophile being exiled to an island that held every cartridge known to man, my two CANNOT do without accessories would be the Essential 3160 and Dr Feikert's protractor kit. Sheer magic |
Try a Decca!! I own the (Decca) London Reference-THE BEST MM EVER!! I also own the best MC-Ortofon Per Windfield! Different presentation. The MC is neutral and even handed, the London emotional and exciting! Another super rare MM that Kavi Alexander uses as a reference-The Stanton CS100,if you find it-buy it!! |
Thank you Raul for starting this thread and sharing your experiences and expertise. I started researching it, and your "discoveries..." thread a number of months ago after spending 18 wonderful months with a SS rebuilt DL103.
I'm currently enjoying two of the Empire cartridges you recommended-the 600LAC and the 900GT, along with a cartridge that D. Pogue recommended in this thread as well-the Pickering TL-2S. From time to time I'm also enjoying examples from the previous two Empire generations of cartridges that weren't recommended in this thread, but I found that I like them--an Empire 1000ZE/X, and 888TE. They certainly aren't as refined as the 600LAC or 900GT, and they really don't belong on the "list" because of this, but to my ears they are effective and pleasing music-makers.
Please accept my thanks for initiating these discussions about MM cartridges!
Jim
|
Robyatt,
The Decca is the best MM/MI cartridge I have have heard -- so lively and exciting (a big contrast to most MM cartridges which tend to be a bit more opaque and dull sounding than MC cartridges).
The Stanton CS100 is also exciting, but I got rid of that cartridge within a month. It may have been a matter of incompatibility with my equipment at that time (Coda preamp with built-in phono), but the sound was WAY too crude, rough and peaky.
The friend I mentioned above with the Tron electronics, has the PW. He is just now getting into phono, so he is in the first stages of upgrading. I have no idea how good the PW is because, in his current setup, it is on the cheapest Project table ($299). To make that heavy cartridge work on that table, a big stainless steel counterweight was jury-rigged to the tonearm. This did not sound bad, but it certainly wasn't showing off the PW at its best. |
Dear Robyatt: Yes I know that the the Decca one is vry good and one of the best out there, the best MM ever?: well till today I never find any audio item for that " title ", IMHO every thing is more " relative " than absolut due not only to our analog imperfection world but due that every one of us are different, like different, hear different, etc, etc, different...
I owned the CS-100 and I change it ( on those " learning " not experienced old times ) for the low output LZS-981 because the dealer's recomendation, I can't say now if the CS-100 is really better ( not only different ) that the 981 in my today system what I can say is that the 981 is something to own.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Dear Larryi: +++++ " to most MM cartridges which tend to be a bit more opaque and dull sounding than MC cartridges). " +++++
IMHO and due to what I'm experienced on the past and in today times that statement ( with all my respect to you. ) is a false myth and depends on the right overall audio system and the right cartridge overall set up.
You can prove it if you want in your own system with more than one of my MM cartridges that can beat overall your Titan and please I'm not saying that the Titan is not a good one because it is. Better yet be my guest along your Titan and have an audio fest here in México.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Dear Larryi/Jloveys: About the 2008 I have to be very precise : I only heard the 2008 once ( the other time was the 2010 with a different phono stage ).
I say " poor " performance due to its very high price ( btw, for that price you expect not to find connecting wires internally but direct soldered to the boards and all the Boulder input/output connectors are wired!! ) , anyway this Boulder phono stage is a little noisy ( any one can read the J.Atkinson measurements on it ) for a SS design and in my understanding the Jensen gain modules ( a design that comes from many years and that use mainly on mic-preamps ) that are inside are unbalanced design not balanced like Boulder state but I can't be sure because I don't know its circuit diagram.
+++++ " Boulder said that the phonostage could not be made to accomodate the .1 mv output of the Allaert. " +++++
it is totally clear that the Formula 1 is a wrong cartridge for the 2008 or the 2008 is the wrong phono stage for the Formula 1. Here there is no synergy between those audio items so the owner can't expect/wait a top quality performance.
I wonder if the cartridge dealer makes a not so good " job " with the customer, anyway it is clear too that the customer has no in deep knowledge about but it is clear too that whom sold the cartridge did not give him the right advise about, fortunately the customer is " heavy " wealthy guy and can take alternative steps to achieve what he is looking for and what he and the music deserves after those high audio system investment.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Larryi most MM cartridges ...tend to be a bit more opaque and dull sounding than MC cartridges This phrase EXACTLY reproduces my experience until early this year. Today I find that in most cases, the sound as described can be ascribed to the "unhappy" loading of 47k coupled with high input capacitance. At least in part. So, say, a mid-range empire, spec'd at 47k 250pF and actually played at 94k 100pF, sounds slightly less hi freq extended (i.e. bandwidth) than a Clearaudio Discovery. The price differential is, of course, staggering, as is the ease of use of one vs the other. Mind you, I use a medium weight arm. On a heavy arm, the MM will usually sound heavy. BTW, the Decca -- a lovely cartridge -- is an exception to the rule: it performs very well at standard 47k loading. |
Try a Empire 108!! Old massive MM limited hi-fi traits-BIG musicality!! The most agile and impressive of all the Empires,and I have collected almost all of them, the Empire 888VE.Far superior to the Shure V15. A wonderful MM in an arm from the era, but frightningly good in a Souther/Clearaudio straightline arm! |
Gregm,
Yes, high capacitive loading will make MM cartridges sound dull (the capacitance of the cable must be factored in as well).
Most of the MMs I've heard do not compete with the top MCs for balance of characteristics. They are either opaque and dynamically dull, or alternatively, they sound rough and crude. There are exceptions, like the Decca London Reference. The 981 and CS-100 fell in the rough and crude camp to me, although I did not have the ability or inclination at that time to customize my setup to make those cartridges work for me (I did experiment with different capacitive loading/tonearm cables).
I haven't listened to Clearaudio cartridges in quite a while, so I don't know how they stack up. I really did not like their premium MC cartridges because they sounded so thin and harmonically bleached to my ears. I just assumed that their MM would be voiced the same way.
There are a lot of cartridges I have not heard. I probably have unfairly overlooked MMs, probably because those that were premium-priced and supposedly a challenge for top model MCs were a disappointment to me (e.g.,Grado Reference). |
Dear Dead man: Certainly there are more cartridges out there waiting for us and my " list " on this thread is only a sample of it, the only requisite we need to enjoy those " beauties " is a little of " adventure spirit " and open mind.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Dear Larryi: +++++ " I did not have the ability or inclination at that time to customize my setup to make those cartridges work for me .... " +++++
this is all about, IMHO if you try ( with your very nice today audio system ) to " customize my setup to make those cartridges work for me " I'm sure you will be very " happy " to do it and you will receive a great " reward " for that: top quality sound reproduction performance, certainly not with all the MM cartridges but if you choose 2-3 ( are inexpensive ones by MC standard prices. ) good examples ( not the Grado you name it. ) you will be " almost " satisfied and your comments about will be more precise and like you say less " unfair " on the subject.
Regards and enjoy the music. raul. |
Larryi,
Honestly, my only concern/hope is that we all share the joy of beautiful music performed as well as we are able to obtain. Please try the Nagaoka MP-50 MM cartridge. Granted, I am listening to it loaded at 100k but it is truly phenomenal. I also know that I use the Essential 3160 but am certain good results can be obtained with an adequate alternative. Do give it a go for a starter: it is relatively cheap and boy does it sing!? |
Here's something I like about what I'm able to take away from a thread like this(and of course thanks Raul,for such passion)....It's NOT only about MM cartridges...there's more.
First off,NO,I am not personally going to change any current componentry(and I admit to owning some pricey,and superb equipment,much of it highly modded to my taste)but...it is becoming increasingly obvious,especially if one,like me,likes to" hunt" the internet for "interesting" audio "alternative attitude hobbyists",and the intriguing systems they own.
What I mean is there is an increasing contingent of opinionated and educated listeners,who simply don't look at,or are influenced, by conventional approaches to how they want to hear music!!!Off the beaten path,seems to be their approach,and I like that!
Some(many) of their systems are pictured on-line and consist of a hodge-podge of "mostly old/some new" stuff,but most of all the set-ups appear very well thought out.....
There appears to be a "secondary" and significant number of "very serious" hobbyists here who don't migrate to "anything" new!!....At all!!!!
It seems they have legitimized the attitude towards appreciating the many quality components having been made a while ago,and they "want" the old,but "proven" designs.They DO mod much of it,but I'm sure save a ton of money!!
I LOVE this,because I particularly like to envision how their particular set-ups might sound.Much of "these" set-ups are pictured on-line,and many of these configurations I'd never dream existed.....SO diverse,and offbeat they are!!...FANTASTIC!
This all started,in my case,about ten years ago.I'd been invited to a fellow who lived in Manhattan,and was doing some minor mods on my pre.I left the unit at his place,to attend an LP collector's show,and would pick it up later in the day.
Turned out he was not only interested in getting paid,by me,but really took pride in the unusual and "not" overly costly systems(two of them)he'd put together.He really wanted me to stay and have a good listen.What fun!
He would look for used "good" stuff.Mod the crap out of it,and set it up for some to hear....If it was good,he'd keep it.Everything else got sold,cheaply.
Well,I was bowled over with both these set-ups.I could not believe how "old" forgotten stuff could sound so damn good!!!
I mean,"convincing"!!!Not big bass,loud,dynamic,inner detail blah,blah....."CONVINCING".That's it!
I "knew" I had to rearrange my approach to the hobby,because previously I "thought" the majority of new products could bring us further ahead,in our own quest for sonic happyiness.Funny,I'd been changing stuff frequently(then),but never keeping anything for long!...NOW,I knew why!
It absolutely changed my perspective on the hobby,and how I approach my own system!...Now I was going to keep what I like(and had the confidence to trust in my taste)and attempt to "mod" first, in hopes of significant improvement,before going in another direction.I've been amazingly well rewarded,by trying to be a "thinking" hobbyist!It makes sense,that something will reward you,if you liked it originally,and take it further....Older,but now better....
This is "not always" a universal success approach,but it damn well makes alot of sense.
This attitude sort of mirrors what Raul is attempting to do,in mentioning alternative,great sounding MM's!
Saving a few dollars does not hurt,and adding expensive items does not always bring great sound.
This is a "general" statement on my part,because I've spent big dough in the past two years,but do see my expenditures dwindling due to "careful" choices.
Hope this makes sense,because I did go a bit long.Sorry! |
100 % agree with you Sirspeedy. |
I have a newbie question. I have a phono stage that doesn't allow me to change capacitance. I don't even know what's the input capacitance. If I have a Capacitance Meter like this: http://www.virtualvillage.com/items/item.aspx?itemid=3842717&utm_source=baseusa&utm_medium=shopping&CAWELAID=190649247
How do I use it to measure the input capacitance of my phono stage? Is it as simple as connecting the red probe to the + RCA input and connecting the black probe to the - RCA input of my phono stage?
Thank you all. |
Viper, Usually there is no actual capacitor at the input to a phono stage, except when one is deliberately added in order to properly load an MM cartridge. If you see a discrete capacitor in there, then yes you can measure it with a very good quality meter. (I say good quality, because the cap will no doubt be in the picoFarad (pF) range of values. A pico anything is 10 to the negative 12 power, or one-trillionth. Not many meters can measure such tiny values.) Other capacitance that affects a cartridge comes from the tonearm cable and from the gain device itself. Those capacitances are difficult or impossible to measure with a meter, but usually the maker of your cable will be able to tell you that the cable has X pF per foot of capacitance and if you can identify the devices used in the input gainstage of the phono section you can guesstimate the capacitance added there, which is usually very low but not negligible in this case. |
Dear Gregm: +++++ " slightly less hi freq extended (i.e. bandwidth) than a Clearaudio Discovery " +++++
due to this statement yesterday I mount an Empire 4000/D3, 750LTD and the Discovery and yes you could think that the Discovery is more extended on frequency but IMHO what it is really happening is that this cartridge has a higher distortion on that frequency range than the Empires that IMHO have a better and extended on that frequency range, normally the MC ones has a ringing ( " natural " distortion ) at high frequencies and this kind of distortion we take it like extended frequency/transparency/spark but like I say is only more distortion.
+++++ " On a heavy arm, the MM will usually sound heavy. " +++++
sharing my experience with you I can tell that mine are a little different on the subject because I don't experienced yet ( or at least I don't mind/conscient about ) that " heavy " sound on a heavy arm, well like everything it is system/set-up dependent. Anyway I will try to be ears open about.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Re: On a heavy arm, the MM will usually sound heavy. Some of better MM cartridges have dynamic compliance of 9-12 cu. They prefer arms with effective mass of more then 15 g. |
Hi: Who was the lucky one that buy this?:
http://www.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/cls.pl?anlgcart&1229308286&/Nagaoka-MP50-Super
I have to say that this is ( other that mine ) the first time that I " see " this cartridge ( MP-50 Super ) for sale anywhere.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Raul, is there a difference between "MP-50" and "MP-50 Super"? |
Dear Viper z: The main difference is that the MP 50 has a boron cantilever and the MP 50 Super a Sapphire one, IMHO this sappire cantilever gives a more " refined " quality sound to the Super but both are very good performers.
regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Raul: sharing my experience with you I can tell that mine are a little different on the subject because I don't experienced yet ( or at least I don't mind/conscient about) Hmmm, interesting! I checked this out with two arms & a Shure and... maybe I was being imprecise in my previous post. There is something in the result that seems to favour lower-mids. It's NOT the arm weight, however, I had similar (not identical) results using a Morch & a heavy Pluto. Rather, I suspect it has to do with the cartridge compliance & the riaa loading. There must be a simple rule somewhere there -- but I haven't found it. Anyway, thank you for pointing this out. |
Dear friends: Well another cartridge report. I the last 3-4 weeks I was trying different MM cartridges from Signet TK10ML, ADC TRX-1, Sonus Dimension 5, Mission Solitaire, Andante P38 and Nagatron 350E.
I can live easy with any one of them, no it do not sound the same but all are " right ".
The last one, the Nagatron, was a real surprise to me because I don't expect nothing special about due that the other are in theory a lot better cartridges and this cartridge was not the Nagatron top of the line, is a low compliance, eliptical stylus, very old and when new 95.00 price list. It take me several hours to found how good it is: first because take some hours to the suspension settle down and to find the right VTF due that I have no infomation about, anyway today I have the opportunity to enjoy recod after record this cartridge performance that it is not an " alive " one but a cartridge that owns the unique " VIVID " quality top performance that I never experiece before in any MC/MM catridge, how comes?: I can't say it but a real GEM like a solitaire diamond of 10 qt!. If you see it you can't give a dime fo it: plastic body, blue and black ( ugly ), very short aluminum cantilever ( bad tracker ), low weight and a marvelous quality performance. I have to say that the Andante P38 is near the Nagatron performance at both frequency extremes ( specially at the bottom end. ) but on the midrange the Nagatron stay " alone ".
I mount the Nagatron on an Audio Technica 1503-III medium/high mass tonearm with a Belldream headshell positive VTA and 2grs on VTF.
Tis 350E puts on shame not only other top MM cartridges but top MC names too.
Till today, on the cartridges I own, I don't experienced a bad MM performer. I need to try another 10-15 ones that I don't have the time to test it yet.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Dear friends: Every day is almost a learning one. The performace of the Nagatron 350 was so " formidable " ( like I posted ) that I decide that other people hear it and confirm or not my findings so I invite two very trusty audio friends in two different days and they were very satisfied an surprise about due that the catridge is a MM very " old " and low low price. Well evrything goes fine till in the second day Guillermo told me if I could change the cartridge to hea something else and I did changing fo the Sonus Dimension 5 and latter the Ortofon MC7500.
What we hear was really exiting because as good as the Nagatron performed the other two cartridges are better and certainly in theory/paper these ones must be better. So, why I posted that the Nagatron is a better one? was I wrong?, well yes and no, for what I heard it was better bfore I try agin the other ones: what happen in reallity?, well if you take a look at my virtual system you can read in my last two post that I made some ( two ) modifications on my speakers and what I assume about is that fo the time I try the Nagatron one or both of the speakers changes " settle down " for the better and now the system quality performance impove over the time and over what I was hearing before the Nagatron test.
Anyway a good " surprise " to me and with a lot of fun in the near future because I have to ty again almost all my cartridges where my opinion on each one will be more precise.
This is the first time that a changes on my system takes a " long " time to " settle down " in this great way because after one week from the speker's changes the system performance " suffer " a significant improve and I never imagine that that initial improve was only that: a initial performance improve. A welcome learning experience.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Dear Rauliruegas and others in this topic. Influenced by this discussion and in other topics, I have recently changed my belt drive MC pickup and dedicated MC preamp based analog chain to a vintage Pionner PL 707 DD turntable with a technics 207 cartridge with 205 MK3 MM stylus with a Philips vintage preamp with inbuilt MM phono. Just for fun, I thought I have to try out how this is working. After days, I am still floored how beautiful warm tender and at the same time dynamic sound I am getting from this inexpensive set up. Before I rarely played LPs, as the earlier setup was only a bit better than my digital rig,a not really worth the effort to hassle with LPs. Now, there is a major difference. Realistic and natural sound with human touch and without any excess energy in treble and especially lack of of certain "hardness" which is part of the digitalised media. So, thanks for everybody. |
WEll great,
discussion, there have been less wide ranging discussions on the vinyl asylum. But making the same point there are some very nice MM cartridges out there some of the older ones "vintage" capable of producing very nice sound quality!!!
I just recently acquired an Audio Technica AT 311E, seems quite ordinary, like a lot of models from them in the 1970-80s quite a few model numbers, that seems to have been based on the AT 10, AT 11, At 12, series of cartridges.
This one cost me about $9.00 US on Ebay I live in Australia, so the final cost was about $30 australian with postage!!!! But what i got was the body of the AT-311E fitted with an AT12s Shibata stylus with still a bit of life left in it!!
My trusty OLD Rega RB-300 lost the last bit of it wiring recently and i sucessfully rewired it with OFC wire which opened up the sound enormously every cartridge i own that i can run, at the moment which has a working stlus. Suddenly has greater differences in the sound!!! most of them quite noticeable. None of them sound BAD all a little different!!!
I own an Ortophon vms20 E mark -2 (not working no useable stylus) ;
an Ortophon om10 with a Canadian Astatic om30 stylus;
An Audio Technica AT 8008 P mount with an Adapter for 1/2inch mounting with an at3472BE .4x.7 mil stylus An Audio Technica AT 311E with an AT12s Shibata stylus
An Excell ES-70x4 with a Shibata stylus
A Grace F-8L with a totally worn out stylus which was a Garrott Micro scanner.
On my rewired REGA rb-300 i have tried the following:-
I have tried the OM-10 with the Astatic om-30 stylus nice sound fat bass, smooth, only an elliptical not sure what dimensions!!
The AT 8008 with the .4x.7 mil elliptical nice sound, smoother than the OM cartridge but leaner bass end.
The current purchase AT 311 E with a AT12s Shibata stylus is WOWWWWW very lush,very smooth, very addictive and i do not have a fresh brand new stylus!!!! it extracts MASSIVE detail from any record!!! And if the acoustics and depth is there you hear it, it jumps out at you, very alive!!! this set me back $30 Australian that is WOWWWWWWW I wonder what a new stylus will be like when broken in.
I Must try out the Excel ES-70x4 which is also a Shibata stylus If i can bear to unfit the AT 311E/AT12s that is!!
HMMMMMM if only someone made replacement stylii for the Grace F-8, F-9 series.
Thanks for your investigations an Empire might be on the cards someone said that the em-888 was quite nice!!!
Best wishes Fantasia
Ps I have a dead Entre Mc-1 Moving coil which is beyond economic repair but when i had it re-tipped with a Garrott micro scanner I was shocked that, my micro scanner Grace F-8 was different in sound but very similar in the quality of sound!!!!!! |
Raul thanks for this posting. Myself I had found the largest improvment for me in sound reproduction was when I bought a used Grado Reference, The Reference Cartridge High Output Type. Loads of refined detail and huge bass swings.It performed very well, but I'm sure the use of the Wally Tracker did some help, and being patient with the VTA AND Tracking played a part in the direct connection to the music as well. I am a musician and have been playing in an orchestra for almost 20 years and I can identify natural sound , vs. High End Sound most easily.Alot of live music may so didfferent than a tipped up top end with enhanced detail that in the 70's u could obtain with a Soundcrafter Equilizer, or a parametric EQ from SAE. sO WE SHOULD NOT THROW OUT THE BABY WITH THE BATHWATER. Yes I still think we can find cartridges without taking out a big loan from your bank.My father always did like the Shure V and keep it on his Dual tt for years and years. I did remember having the AT20SL and enjoyed it very much in its day, along with the Ortofons. |
HI, Just another post, well i can't bring myself to take the Audio Technica AT311E/AT12S(cartridge will take a AT12s Sibata stylus) off my Rega RB-300. It is really addictive, just for info i do not own highly exotic gear this runs on a Sytemdeck -2 "The Oil Rig" it just has a bit of modeling clay and lead weights in it for damping and Aluminium cones instead of the original feet which seem to reduce internal vibrations a bit. I drool over every LP i put on the plater to play iam not disappointed.
I will have to try the Excel EX-70x4 also a Shibata it is actually a good compliance match for the REGA Rb-300 arm.
Two things that i have certainly noticed, the ability because of the Rega's one piece cast constuction to really fasten a cartridge to the arm ie mechanically bond it to the arm which stops movement and also reduces resonance, this is quite difficult with my one P-mount Cartridge AT-8008 which is P-mount with an adapter. The second any "line contact" stylus profile has a noticeable difference to an ordinary elliptical I mean .4x.7mil stylus you pick it straight away, by the extra detail your getting from the groove. I suspect that if you have a tonearm with an SME type collar and a detachable headshell or any head shelled arm you could tighten up the focus of the arm considerably by getting a very rigid headshell.
Most of this is since i rewired the Rega and not with "wire with a special process where it was cooled to minus 5000K while circling Venus in a satelite either" just joking guys!!!!! The wire was O.F.C. copper best $20Australian i ever spent!!!!!!
I now have just one ribbon tweeter to try out in my home built speakers just to see if they are more revealing, they are faster than dome tweeters.
Best wishes
Fantasia AKA Glenn Stewart |
Dear Ajahu: That Technics MM cartridge ( 205 MK3 ) is one of my favorities specially when you load it at 100 Kohms.
I agree that it is a lot better than digital source and I can add that IMHO it is a top contender to any MC or MM cartridge out there.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Dear Fantasia: Good that you are having fun with the At12S stylus replacement, on that Audio technica series the two top of the line were the AT 20SLa and AT 200SS: both great performers that if you can you have to try at least either of them.
I own the Ortofon VMS30MK2 and it is very good and I can see that you own the VMS20E that I assume is a good cartridge too and along the Grace IMHO it will be worth to fix it.
Yes, I agree that a line contact stylus could be a noticeable difference against 0.4X0.7mil elliptical one but when you have a 0.2X0.7mil elliptical the differences are so minor and depending on the cartridge design maybe you can't say which is one.
Regards and enjoy the music. raul. |
Raul et al, I am still waiting for you or someone to try one of the old Grado TLZ or XTE. I still have my TLZ, and I intend to give it a listen via an RS-A1 tonearm that I just bought. What I remember about it is that the TLZ was head and shoulders better than the other Grados of that era (I tried them in my system at the time), and on certain nights, when everything was just right, TLZ had tremendous "air" and detail plus never clinical sounding. |
Dear Lewm: I never had the opportunity to hear that Grado cartridge but I can tell you that the Grado Amber The Tribute that I own is one of the best quality performers I heard/hear.
Please come back and give us your impressions on that TLZ.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Raul, Before auditioning the TLZ or any of these MMs you are enjoying, I first have to de-tune my phono section in order to tolerate the huge output of an MM compared to any low output MC. I know how to do it actually; it's just a matter of getting out the soldering iron. That's the beauty of your preamp over most others; you have both MM and MC capability without flipping switches or etc. |
Hi again from Fantasia!!,
Well i finally took the At311E/At12s of my Rega RB-300, and put the Excell es-70x4 also a Shibata stylus on the arm!!!quite a revelation!!!! jaw dropping!!!
Like the Audio Technica all the same qualities except "spades more of it" as the Excel has a stylus with a lot of life in it, it is clearly down to stylus wear as they are both have bonded Shibata stylii , so i will have to buy a new at12s stylus.
The thing that blows me away is that the stylus for the Excell Es-70x4 cost me all of $27 Canadian from Canadian Astatic which is incredible bang for the buck!!! Especially since the cartridge cost me nothing.
My AT8008 with a .4x.7 elliptical just cant cut it with, this humble cartridge with a better stylus profile. Having said that they do make (Audio Technica that is) an At3472ML (Micro Linear) stylus for their current P mount cartridges.
Now i will have to get that at12s stylus to compare it with the Excel Es-70x4!!!!! This does prove that large ammounts of money are not always the way with sound quality. i would think i would have to lay out about $200 to get similar sound quality or better, i think the At 440mla would top this. This not bad for the money and the age of the cartridge probably 30 years old.
Now only if someone only made, a Shibata or line contact stylus for the Grace F-8 and F-9 series hmmmmmmmmm Or how can i buy an AT 15ss or AT 20ss or At20Sla second hand, Oh i must be a Vinyl addict!!!
Best wishes
fantasia |
Dear 76doublebass: +++++ " I can identify natural sound , vs. High End Sound most easily.Alot of live music may so didfferent than a tipped up top end with enhanced detail ... " +++++
this subject is really critical and many of us have to learn a little more about.
Btw, I can't speak for your Grado reference model but the one Grado cartridge that I own is a stellar performer. I agree about the AT20Sl, very good cartridge.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Hi Raul, a few days ago i decided to hear what my Magnetic cartridges sounded like along with an old sony preamp what i had heard actually beat my ref rig so i began looking for information about sonus cartridges etc.. and i came along this thread wonderfull i have used my astatic 2500mf my sonus silver and my micro acoustics ceramic electric cart
I did try changing the loading to 100k not good sounded thin lost bass response and dynamics i don't know what you are hearing but in the old sony preamp it doest work
regargs....the astatic 2500mf and the micro acoustics are for sale if anyone is interested
Lawrence
+ |
In this weekend I had compared the digitalised sound of my earlier Wilson Benesch Full Circle turntable with Ply MC cartridge and dedicated MC preamp to my current Pioneer Pl-707 DD turntable with Technics 205MKIII MM cartridge and Philips AH 280 preamp with inbuilt MM phono. The digital copy was made by Apogee Rosetta 200 AD/DA and Soundforge program at 24/192 mode. The digital copy is almost the same as the analog, there is a bit of thinnes and less soundstage, but one really has to concentrate on the music to appreciate the differences. I have compared Shostakovich quartett no. 6, Taneyev Qartett, Melodya, 1977. In one sense, at least for me, there are clearly better the current analog sound compared to the earlier one. It is simply palpable the difference in terms of body of sound and soundstage. On the other hand, as far as portrayal of music concerned, there are also big differences due to tonal differences between the two sources. The WB sound somehow has more treble information, certain brightness and seems to have more speed. It translates into a nervous, tragic, to use a metaphore from painted arts almost expressionist way wildness of emotions, like an early Kandinsky picture. The Pioneer-MM combo somehow has a more midrange oriented sound with body and with certain internal warmth. It comes out better the interplay and the concertation between the individual musicians of the quartett and with somehow more sustained sound gives a more relaxed feeling. As music it portrays rather better the haunting painful memories of the author, the change between pain and sarcasm, dark humor and passages of lyricsm. It is more like the Guernica of Picasso, to use an other metaphor. So, to certain degree it is issue of taste and system synergy. But, as far as me concerned, the complexity of the music and the internal dynamic is better portrayed by the Pio DD-MM combo than by the WB package. It is simply more natural sound. WB with MC seems to fall into the tipped up and enhanced treble detail style of music making, as was characterised by 76doublebass. |
If you haven't seen it, check out this week's TNT-Audio for Werner Ogier's measurements of resitive and capacitive loading of MM's. |
Dear Lawrence: I never have/had the opportunity to hear any of the cartridges you name it si I can't comment on its performance.
I don't know either nothing about your old Sony preamp so I can't comment on its performance with that load impedance. But as almost always the result is system dependent.
Regards and enjoy the music. raul. |
Dear Maxson: Thank you for the link. It is always a " plus " to confirm the importance on the load in MM cartridges that in some ways are more sensitive than the MC ones.
Regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
I'm wondering how Micro Acoustics cartridges sound comparing to best MM out there? They are using electret principle and eq network inside the body. Therefore I'm asking... |
here is some information about the company and these very fine cartridges..
http://www.roger-russell.com/sonopg/micropg.htm
Lawrence |
thanks, I read this article and searched the web. I'm looking for first hand listening experience with MA electrets. |
Dear Siniy123: I own the 630 and the 2002, both are very good with a more refined and better tonal/naturalbalance to the 630, recomemded these cartridges are up to the task: comparing to the best MM out there!.
Btw, thank you Lawrence for the link about.
regards and enjoy the music. Raul. |
Strangely, Raul, that none of Shures made it to your top list...I agree that Shure V15 V is good life style cartridge: good for some types of music and for some mood. Tracking is perfect. Is V15 V MR better? |
There is a chance to buy new Technics T4P version of 100CMK4 cartridge. It is not cheap (like $770). I have Technics accessory mount for T4P on SME tonearm mount. So, what is your suggestion: to pass or buy? |
Dear Siny123: In theory the EPC-100 was the best on MM Technics catalog a small up-step on the 205-MK4.
I never imagine that exist in P-mount fashion and this fact IMHO could degrade a little its quality performance against the normal no P-mount sample. I agree with you that is on the expensive price range but maybe could be fine to test/try it and see how good it is.
Rgards and enjoy the music. Raul. |