Hi All,
"Just when I think I'm out, they drag me back in".
Axel has revamped an Acutex 420 STR and sent it to me. When put on an Audio Technica MG-10 magnesium headshell on my AC3300 LB, it is simply a great cartridge. I recommend anyone who already owns this cartridge to consider sending it to Axel for changes.
A seriously worthy contender
As always... |
To all,
Great buy on what is a rebranded Ortofon Digitrac OM 20.
Ebay number=== 271116407270
Regards, Don |
Raul yes unfortunately i have not been able to get my hands on a 20ss body/cartridge as of yet. I did get lucky enough to grab the 15sa and really looking forward to the combo. If it delivers anywhere near the musical satisfaction my 155lc 160ml give i will be a happy music lover.
Yes 320 short noise is not pretty but as you say boy can it sing. It was not easy removing 320 to mount p100le. It seems the suspension is getting a little weak. I was considering giving the fellow in Washington a try. Has any of you done any business with northwest.
I now have nearly 25 hrs on my akg and have not been disappointed at all in what i am hearing. Layered and spread out music to behold. Mike |
Dear Stltrains: Your 15Sa with the 20SS certainly is a " winner " and almost the 20SS. We have to remember that the main difference between the 15 and the 20 model is because this one measured better due that the the stylus tip was more " perfect " than the similar one of the 15 models.
I have on hand two other 320 short nose samples other that the one I sold. I don't tested yet but for what I remember in my first sample the 320 quality level performance is second to almost none. I don't like how the cartridge looks but I like its performance level.
Good to know that your AKG P100LE is back now, you will enjoy it. I think that after my review I did not give a listening any more. IMHO this AKG is in a different " league " that many of the well regarded cartridges we usually talk about. I don't post very often on the P100LE because people have no reference because they never had the opportunity to heard it not even once. I think that you and me are living alone in the AKG " island " a unique island I have to say.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
I agree that the 881s MK II seems to have some negative "press" on the web. I wonder if it might be due to quality control issues with the MK II stylus, which have also been chronicled.
Clouding the picture, at least one member of the 881 design team has written that the MK II stylus represented a step forward. So several months ago when an opportunity to acquire a MK II presented itself I decided to enter a bloody battle to get it lol. I considered it an expensive gamble but got "lucky" and received a NOS stylus that sounds at least as good as my two D81 styli that also were acquired NOS.
I haven't read about any differences between the two 881 bodies, but I stopped researching the thing after getting that last stylus. Is anyone aware of differences between the two bodies? |
Hello Acman, Exactly, very special with the Tomahawk wand, you and other owners know that this combination is a terrific, even "winner" performer. The AKAI RS180 looks exactly like the stylus/cantilever ass´y that was originally on my cart. Mine has the AT logo and "20SLa" printed on bottom. These cantilevers are quite bulky compared to much thinner beryllium on my ATN20SS which looks exactly like the Pfanstielh 203-DQX currently on auction on eBay. These beryllium cantilevers have only the logo on bottom. However, the AKAI stylus may very well sound excellent with the SLa body. |
Hi Mike, The Stanton 881S seems to be better then Mk 2 version. You should check on the net first. I have a spare 881 S stylus (D 81) but don't believe the stylus is the cause. |
Dear Dover, You wrote, "rotational speed needs to be adjusted for the changing overhang as the arm transverses the record". I think what you refer to is the fact that the cutter head is like a straight-line tonearm. Thus when one is playing an LP with a pivoted tonearm, there is effectively a tiny speed error as the LP revolves and the stylus tip describes its arc across the LP, moving from one groove to the next inner one. But this error is VERY tiny from one groove to the next, is very regular in nature and so less likely to be disturbing to one's sense of pitch, and reaches its worst extreme in the central part of the record surface, gradually correcting itself as the stylus reaches the innermost grooves. I just cannot believe anyone can hear it. Do you really think you can? I think this effect is trivial compared to irregular speed variations due to stylus drag or turntable mechanism idiosyncracies. |
Hello Harold, the AT 20ss on the terminator is really special. Good luck on getting it fixed. Not even a hint of sibilance.
As Professor Timeltel mentioned the 15xe is surprisingly good. I modified an Akai RS180 shibata to work on the body and it is close to the 20ss. The AT 14 should also work if similarly modded. It is I think the same as a 15sla. Someone please correct me if I am wrong.
Best of luck! |
Hi Mike, great minds think alike. I also picked up a AT 20ss replacement. The sources are getting slim, and after Harold's situation, I was thinking how close I was to not hearing the beryllium 20ss.
I think the Stanton 881s is very good. Stylus are hard to come by.
Glad you got the p100le going. Let us know how it progresses.
Glad to hear things are good. |
Hello all been awhile but have kept up with the thread. I just pulled the trigger for a 20 ss nos replacement from stereoneedles for my at15sa body. The price was fair and lower than a few others i found. I bought a at 160ml using it with a 155lc body and it sounds so good i haven't taken it out of service for months now from them so it seams there legit.
I received Axels repair of my p100le awhile back but had a acutex 320 short noise mounted on my micro sheiki 505 and and can't get enough of it. Seams the suspension is loosing its grip. Think i will send to Washington for repair. Anyhow mounted the le have 10 hrs on it and from jump it is seductive and pretty much sounds like Rauls description in his review.
Just picked up a stanton 881s mk2 from the description by the seller might be close to nos piece. I've been unlucky when it comes to this cartridge with 2 prior ones. It has such good write ups and reviews gotta be another winner for the mm fans. Has any of you enjoyed or not this one. Mike |
Harold, if you can't return the stylus maybe you could fix it. If the tip is in good shape it's worth a try. First remove the stylus and inspect. To quote Timeltel, "If inspection of the "V" magnets proves them to be in the correct 45* position relative to the pole pieces but the stylus is not vertical then replacement/repair should be considered."
If the magnets are rotated the cantilever can be turned by using the compliance screw on the inside of the plug, which is the part that fits inside the body. This screw is painted over and must be scraped away. Once loosened, the whole cantilever can be rotated. If you don't feel you're able to do this (it often takes four or five tries), then send it to Axel for a nominal fee. Look for magnets out of alignment. This will tell you if it's repairable. Regards, |
Regards, Harold n-t-b: Were I in the market, this one looks 100% correct: http://www.ebay.com/itm/150955609685?ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1423.l2649On pg. 161, this thread, Grbluen2 discussed a problem with a rotated AT stylus, see his 09-09-'12 post. There were several suggestions made & the problem was resolved. AT styli are fairly sturdy assemblages. If rotated they can be (sometimes, a la Grbluen2) "tweezed" back into a usable azimuth. If off-axis and unlistenable, you might try pushing against the compliance donut at the base of the cantilever with a blunt rod. A wooden matchstick comes to mind. This should be done with due deliberation. Of course. If loaded above 200pF the 20SS tends towards brightness. With a VTF in the 1.3-1.4gm range and aligned by the cantilever, should the response still seems grainy or etched then it seems likely the stylus assembly is defective. As an alternative, consider an ATN-15XE stylus. Elliptical on aluminum, slightly diminished detail & apparent extension but a capable performer with a slightly warmer character. Good luck! Peace, |
Harold - sorry I posted at the same time as you. I would expect a cracked diamond to misstrack - probably on one channel only. This is not sibilance. Brightness is not sibilance either. You can have sibilance ( my definition SSSSSS's ) without brightness. You can have brightness ( sharp, unnatural or rising upper frequencies in my language ) without sibilance. Most records have been cut with non standard cutting angles, and most records have RIAA errors in them. Virtually all cutting heads dont conform to RIAA, but some were corrected by compensation in the cutterhead amplifiers, some not. I have access to a phono amplifier that has a flat mid ( no RIAA through the midrange ) and it sounds more harmonically complete than most RIAA phonos. RIAA's of +-0.1db etc dont mean jack really. It's a bit like those fancy direct drives with an accuracy of 33+-0.0000**1% - because if you are running a pivot arm with an overhang then rotational speed needs to be adjusted for the changing overhang as the arm transverses the record. Now if they were really smart they could program this into the speed controller. |
Harold, Fleib et al - This saga is a guessing game to no avail. We need Harold to describe what he is hearing in order to identify possible causes. If he has sibilance but the cartridge tracks fine then .... . If he has mistracking as well as sibilance, then it is more likely the cartridge is rooted. In my vocabulary sibilance is the accentuation of SSSSSSS's. It may or may not be accompanied by missttttttttracking, which is a separate issue. It never ceases to amaze me how people will shag around with rooted cartridges. As far as I know, once missttttttttttracking has occurred once ( the first time ), then the record has been permanently damaged. OMG down goes another $400 Lyrita pressing I cant get any more. No worries, I'll throw on the only copy I've got of Manoug Parikian/LSO/Vernon Handley "Elizabeth Maconchy" TAS Lyrita SRCS 116 and see if I can screw that one too. |
Regards Dover, Fleib & fans, Sibilance is a too much accentuated S phoneme and sounds unnatural and usually harsh. For example: Played with my other cartridges Greg Lake´s voice on an original "Pictutes at an Exhibition" live album (German Island 1971) is refined and also very powerful, whereas his singing on other reissue ELP albums I have are sibilant to various extents with the Tomahawk wand. "Lucky Man" on the Italian Earmark reissue is torture to listen. On the other hand, sibilance/over brightness is an error in recording or/and cutting process of the vinyl record. That´s why some reissues are inferior to first editions because quality requirements in the production are not so
I bought my AT20SLa second hand from an eBayer knowing he wouldn´t accept return. The stylus, likely counterfeit/after market in Raul´s opinion, sounded very sibilant and way too harsh to listen, so a few weeks later adviced by Raul I bought this new original replacement stylus from a famous professional US seller. The cantilever was slightly twisted from new, I admit I should had returned it right away. But the sound was much better now. I agree there is a possibility that the cart itself is defective or has something loose, maybe dropped to hard floor. Beryllium is brittle indeed, so it's not something to mess with trying to straighten for a common man like me. I will send the whole package to Andy in the UK. What I´m describing is often an azimuth problem or chipped or cracked diamond. Wish I had a real microscope... Oh dear, I must buy one very soon. It seems that my cart is defective, and perhaps a counterfeit or a defective return, being resold.
|
Hi Harold, you obviously have a defective stylus. There is a remote possibility that the cart is defective or has something loose, but it's doubtful. The ATN20SS was not exactly mass produced. Beryllium is brittle, so it's not something to mess with trying to straighten. What you're describing is often an azimuth problem or chipped or cracked diamond. Have you looked at it under magnification? Perhaps you can return the stylus?
I have no idea where you bought the cart/stylus, but it's obviously defective, and perhaps counterfeit or a defective return, being resold. I suspect one major stylus shop in NY to be selling counterfeit beryllium or boron styli, but I don't think they have the 20SS. Hope this comes to a satisfactory conclusion, it's a great cart. Regards, |
Harold - could you please define what you mean by sibilance. I had a friend called Sybil and she accentuated her SS's but never mistracked or sounded harsh. |
Regards Raul, My preamp´s lowest capacitance value is 130 pF + 20 pF / 30 pF, Tomahawk´s uninterrupted silver shielded signal path straight to phono RCAs may very well provide less than 30 pF, so the total value is between 150 pF and 160 pF I think. I can use only the 47 kOhm impedance value but I will ask my hi-fi specialist to add a 100 kOhm option in near future. Also the wiring from preamp to power amps are silver + the GENELEC S30 studio monitors I´m using are both unforgiving so if such imperfections as sibilance are issues they instantly become unbearable. My friend who also uses TERMINATOR describes his AT20´s treble smooth as silk. The very rigid flat aluminium profile Tomahawk wand has this ability to distinguish good cartridges from lesser ones IME. The other carts I play don´t suond sibilant. Of course, some vinyls are more sibilant than others, but usually the first editions/originals don´t suffer from annouying sibilance. For example, all the Castle Classic reissue vinyls I have heard are sibilant: Uriah Heep, Colosseum II, Nazareth, Utopia. And near all the Earmark reissues are torture to hear with Tomahawk. |
Dear Harold-not-the-barrel : Playing with different load impedance/capacitance values could help a little about. It is dificult to know exactly what is happening down there which factors are contributing to that sibilant problem.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Professors, fans & those who are planning to buy a used AT20SLa/SS, My new ATN20SS´s cantilever is deviated to the left with respect to the long axis of the cart body and the fulcrum of the 64 mm long pivot is lowered for 4 mm (3.5 degrees´ negative VTA). Sibilance and over brightness is equal in both channels still. It seems that at least two other owners of the AT20, Raul and a friend of mine have had similar twisted cantilevers. But only mine sounds sibilant and peaky. Otherwise, even at this point it really is a superb tracker and very nuanced & musical, so I have "seen" glimpses of Nirvana. Oh, I must listen to "Shine of Brightly" by Procol Harum soon, with the ACUTEX LPM315 III STR that I´m currently enjoying ! . |
Dear SB, You wrote, "If the cantilever's azimuth is twisted, i.e. not 90 degrees, then a more complicated diamond profile may indeed show peculiar mistracking distortions, sibilance being #1."
I don't know if I agree with your assumption that sibilance would be the #1 result of a cantilever that is "twisted" wrt azimuth, but when Harold thus described his cantilever, I assumed he meant deviated to the left or right with respect to the long axis of the cartridge body, which has nothing to do with azimuth. In either case, I would expect the resulting distortions, even sibilance, to be asymmetrically expressed in one channel vs the other, assuming the internal mechanism of the cartridge is properly aligned. Has anyone asked Harold about VTA? Too high VTA can exaggerate treble and generate sibilance, as well.
What's remarkable to me is that almost none of our cartridges is "perfect" in construction, nearly none could withstand a careful inspection under a microscope, yet the great majority of them sound just fine to most listeners, shows us we are not so perspicacious as we like to think we are. |
Dear Harold-not-the-barrel: The At-20SS never was an " easy girl ". Not only needs 40-50 hours of playback from new to begin to shows what kind of real quality performance level has, even after this playback time we have to re-set our original set up taking more care on the " right " VTA/SRA.
According with my experiences with the AT-20SS when the cartridge already settle down it is truly amzing performer. Now, I had trouble with the cartridge when I tested with a second stylus replacement that I bought as a NOS one but latter on I conclude was not excatly the original 20SS stylus replacement. Exist several samples of these " NOS " 20SS stylus replacements that are not original. One of the troubles I had was precisely what you are experienced with your sample.
Dgarretson owns this cartridge and he owns the same tonearm you own and if I remember he does not has that kind of trouble.
I could assume that your sample is out of specs and in specific with the stylus and probably suspension. The 20SS is a winner as a tracker ( one of the best out there. ) and seems to me the cartridge is showing a tracking problem because a self problem or tonearm/cartridge mistracking.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Regards, Thuchan: One wishing to assess Shure carts has their work cut out for them, VTA and Loading are "all over the map". A Gramophone review, June 1984 of the ML140HE:  "Overall sound quality had a transparent brightness which immediately lifted this cartridge into the upper hi=fi bracket. ---"The effect was of smoothness in the middle register with bass clearly extending down to the audible limits.---"With a capacitance loading of around 150pF, the response is of ruler flatness, sloping very gently by a mere 1dB @ 20kHz--- (T)his smoothness extends to well above 30kHz." Also noted was a "Sharp rise time, absence of unwanted resonance". Shures' recommended ML140 HE Cap. is 250pF. An experienced reviewer (John Borwick) with the gear to accurately measure response found differently. Possibly an input from their marketing people, intended to make the cart more attractive to "home stereo" owners who either didn't care to, or have the facilities to make loading adjustments? The V15 gained its moniker from an early recognition of the advantages of standardization of cantilever tracking angle. In this instance 15* from which the V15 series gained its identification. As RF interference is eliminated at loading above 400pF, your V15-111 was designed for suggested loading at 400-600pF. A slightly tail-down VTA should be tried. An early offering of carts with laminated plates, the mounting shroud was extended in depth as a measure of controlling resonance. The HE stylus response is rich in the mids. Solid bass & nicely resolving in the hfs, avoiding the somewhat forwardness of the upper range some observe with either the elliptical or ML styli. The al cantilever effects a midrange warmth and lively bass. Legendary tracker, listening to "Gaucho" with mine now, you may suspect I enjoy the V15-111/HE? The M75, M91, M95 & M97 progressed with the V15 carts, configured from flat to pentagonal casings. "Junior" V15's, styli are frequently interchangeable within the "family", sometimes requiring a consideration of "plastic surgery". The M97xE to V15xMR is an example. The V15-IV, a love-hate cart, a possibly "un-Shure" first step into "neutrality", let us know your impression? The V15-V, IIRC there were thirteen options, styli, damper brush & P-mount. Well regarded cart, the 300/400 Ultra, ML120/140HE & M97E/ML/HE were siblings. Running out of ink, early Shures are moderately capacitance insensitive. Bumped up into the 400-600pF range in the mid/late 70s & back into the 200-300pF range in the '80s. VTA needs attention. US mfg. styli are of good quality, some later imports are of suspected QC deficiencies. There is also a M24H, hyperbolic nude, 20-50kHz response. Shure's only (AFAIK) cart specifically designated for CD-4 play, an attractive 3.0mv output & 510 ohm output impedance . One offered now, someone reading this really needs this cart. ;) Here: http://www.ebay.com/itm/Genuine-Shure-M24H-Wide-Range-Dynetic-Cartridge-Stylus-New-Sealed-in-Box-NOS-/321029684535?pt=US_Record_Player_Turntable_Parts&hash=item4abedc3d37NOS styli also available, same search. No association with either. Am casually looking for an Ultra 500, reports from owners are of the "from my cold, dead hands" category. Peace, |
Dear Halcro and Timetel, thanks for the hints and very good background information on the Shures. I am now back at home waiting for my Shures being delivered (V15VxMR, V15III-HE, V15VMR etc.), including some NOS replacement styli, also the VNVxMR). Some people say these are carts for the upper entry level, how do you assess these? |
Halcro,. Griffithds and Timeltel Thank you. The right channel is back. |
In-Shore,
Something esle you just might check. I have just discovered one of my arm wands has a loose wire at the junction of the female clip/pin location. I discovered it doing just what you had described. Reinstalling a arm wand with a known working cartridge that was previously attached, only of find out that one chanel was dead. Mine was the blue wire (left ground), from the arm wand. Did a continuity test (of the arm wires), and discovered it. Gently twisted and pushed it back into the clip and all is now fine. Regards, Don |
Regards, In_Shore: A pencil eraser is both abrasive and gentle enough to remove oxidation from headshell contacts, cartridge out-pins & etc without damaging plating.
Peace, |
Thanks In_shore. In regard to your 'lost' channel.......I also had exactly such a problem with one of my FR-S4 headshells. After storing it for some time with a mounted cartridge.......the right channel went missing on re-insertion. I thought it was a headshell problem and had it replaced. Long story short.......it turned out that the contact points of the headshell were not making full contact with the arm 'points'. Really tightening the collar on the arm solved the contact problem and voila.......two channel listening was re-instated. Good luck. |
Hi All,
For those championing the Acutex 420 STR, I have just received an unexpected cartridge back from Axel. I say 'unexpected' because I had given him it as a gift following a few revamps and my continued dissatisfaction with elements of its performance.
Unsolicited, I receive this new manifestation and on playing it I am surprised. He has (from what is immediately and visibly obvious) changed the entire stylus and cantilever. Early days but 'very' promising. As with many things on our revolving world, maybe worthy of reconsideration: although obviously no longer a standard 420.
As always... |
Hi Don I usally have a delicate touch with such fragile things and treat installs like I.m handling explosives .I'll take a closer look and try your suggestions. |
If the cantilever's azimuth is twisted, i.e. not 90 degrees, then a more complicated diamond profile may indeed show peculiar mistracking distortions, sibilance being #1. If it is leaning left or right of the center line, it may also experience non-linearities, especially if when in position, some part of the assembly is touching something it is not suppose to.
Close examination with a magnifier is recommended. |
In shore,
I wonder if when you mount the cartridge into the suspect headshell, you are (unknowingly), twisting the cartridge body and making some kind of ground effect inside of the cartridge body? Have you tried the cartridge in some other headshell? Regards, Don |
Obviously, story boy and I cannot both be correct. His only comment was that i am wrong. I do not see why a deviated cantilever would cause sibilance. I would rather expect it to cause distortions of other types, in one channel vs the other, or a channel imbalance, or both. I have no idea what sb really thinks. |
Halcro, handsome pictures
Could anyone have an answer why a cartridge that worked fine prior to switching then stored away still mounted to the head shell only to have the right channel not working upon re-installing to a tone arm. Substituting the Empire 40003d gold with another cartridge confirmed the problem is in the Empire cartridge. ? the right channel punks out while in a headshell box, this is strange. |
Dear Henry, I am sorry but what you think 'Nikola says' is not what he actually stated. I noticed, more in particular in the Balkan, that people know exactly to what the quantifiers like 'all', 'noone', 'some', etc, refer. So as a good and patriotic Serbian I am supposed to kill all the Croats without exception. And if my bike is stolen than, obviously, some Croat is involved. Now if the moderator has seen whatever 'inappropriate conduct' such conduct can't be done by an indeterminate person (some, all, etc . are like variables=x). Well we all have our forum names so the writer of this 'offensive post' must also have one. Then there is no such a thing as 'collective guilt'. So, to my mind, the moderator was disturbed by the critic in our forum about the moderators conduct and wanted to check what the responce of others to this critic was. That is why your and my post neededto be 'moderated' even if we both are not seen as 'suspects' at all. As the moderator put it in his answer to my remarks: 'it is difficult to explain'...It usualy is if one wants to hide his real reasons.
Regards,
|
Hi Don, As Nikola says.......the 'intruder'....or 'troll'.....turned our thread into personal attacks on one or more people we know. They were inappropriate and offensive posts which have since been notable by their absence. |
Lewn & Storyboy, Thanks for your comments. You are probably right: there´s something wrong with the suspension of the cantilever or/and the stylus itself. Or inside the cart. Sibilance & over brightness should had settled at lower hours I think. Griffithds, Glad to hear your repair service was successful. I will send my cart to Andy in near future. |
Dear Don, Glad to hear there is a good repair service in your neighbourhood. I can at last use an intermediary without any added cost because my comrade lives there. I got a similar 'explanation' from the moderator as Henry: 'some members left inappropriate comments' and because of them the whole thread is suspect. Something like 'someone has stolen my bike' and because 'someone' is not a name with refering function anybody in the MM group is a suspect My quess is that the 'intruder' you are referring to 'intruded' in the moderators competence and this caused mederators interest in the possible conspirators.
Regards, |
Hi Tom, "www.phonocartridgeretipping.com/index.html"
I have just received a LOMC cartridge that has been repaired (suspension refreshed), by this retipper. He goes by the name of Andy and I can conferm that he does excellent work. My Blue Oasis (cartridge be Sao Winn of Winn strain-gauge fame), had become rather bright sounding. I suspected hardining of the damper. The following quote is from the reply I received from Andy " I presume you will need it's damper and coil readjustment, -- (here, coil means the thin wire holding cantilever, so that cantilever stays straight with flexible movement, your Benz Micro repaired in Germany had this problem). Presuming diamond tip is still in good condition, the repair cost is $100 + 10 (return shipping)."
The repair turned out to be just as he had suspected, and the cost was as the estimated. Excellent work and the cartridge sounds exactly as I remember it when it was performing at 100%. Turn around time was 22 days to my mailbox. He is only a couple of hundred miles from where I live so he will become my go to retipper. Funny how alot of these retippers have a watch/clock repair backround. Highly recommended! Regards, Don |
Harold, I doubt that Lewm is correct. |
Halcro,
When the moderators say "intruder", are they refering to a virus/trojan, spam, or something on that line? Regards, Don |
Harold, I doubt that the sibilance is related to the imperfect cantilever alignment. |
Professor, Thanks for showing us that other retipping/repair service in the UK, the other being the Nortwest Analogue. I have played 125 LPs (app. 83 hours) with my original beryllium/Shibata ATN20SS replacement stylus and the sound is still quite sibilant and too peaky with my TERMINATOR T3Pro, as other T3Pro owners don´t have annoying sibilance with their AT20SS, as far as I know. This may very well due to already from new slightly twisted cantilever. Oh yes, stylii we buy from sellers are mass production and not always perfect. God bless all the retippers. I´m glad that my ACUTEX LPM315 STR III (long nose) with original cantilever/Shibata doesn´t need repair and doesn´t suffer from sibilance. |
Just heard back from the Moderators. Apparently it was not I who was being 'moderated'..........but the whole MM Thread thanks to the appearance of an 'intruder' a few weeks ago? I guess we can be thankful that they 'monitor' the thread....rather than just shut it down? |
Thanks Audpulse. I agree that the paint over the Halcro DM10 circuit boards affords protection against possible corrosion...as well as helping with damping as you point out? Just makes for difficulty in others being able to work on the electronics in case of any fault? |
Thanks Halcro - If you removed the stylus guard, it would be a lot more attractive to me than my V15Vxmr. Not into the gold bling though. If the marketeers got hold of it it would be the Shure Stealth 140 with proprietory resonance controlled body designed by the top engineers at MIT. |
Halcro, it seems to me that the paint on the internal of the product is not only protecting patent copying of the unit. It might also be damping the circuits thereby lowering the noise floor of the unit very considerably. Wish many manufacturers will do that to protect their intellectual audio achievements. Nice pictures. |
If form follows function, then I think the ML140HE is one of the most beautiful cartridges I've ever seen! This is a clear case of BEAUTY being in the eyes of the beholder? |
Regards, Nandric: For the relatively unrecognized Pio. cart mentioned above, there are about ten styli available, a mix & match of conical, elliptical & Shibata on al., titanium and beryllium. Pick just about any AT or Signet, options abound. Mainstream Shure carts like the V-15 series? Again, stereo or mono, 33.3 or 78 rpm, conical, ellipt., HE, ML & cantilever builds are yet another elective. ADC? Covered. Pfansteil, Goldring, EVG, JICO, Nagaoaka, Ortofon, even Radio Shack is expanding their catalog. I think the point might be made that with MM/MI (etc) carts, that even though the original styli are becoming both more scarce and costly, the options are available. Peter Lederman will provide a respectable line contact on ruby for a nom. $250, nude ellipt. on al for less. An entirely different case with MC carts. With these the owner is indeed at the tender mercy (?) of the retipper. No association & no personal experience but getting good feedback: http://www.phonocartridgeretipping.com/index.htmlAny "color"you want, any color at all! Peace, |