I have an Enabler in house, haven't used it yet. I understand everyone's argument for and against. There's many positive reviews. Heard of Funk Firm Houdini? The designer says it's his most important achievement yet. Thinking about getting one to compare with the Enabler.
Cartridge ISOLATION; What Say You?
another good read, it does go against my 'instinct' of a rock solid cartridge/arm connection. (non-removable headshell)
Who thinks what?
Who tried what?
https://www.tnt-audio.com/accessories/isolator_e.html
btw, has anyone tried a Len Gregory cartridge (with or without the isolator)?
another comment in the article: reviewer mentioned a layer of isolation under the tonearm base (he tried blu-tac). Also against my 'instinct'.
Who thinks what?
Who tried what?
https://www.tnt-audio.com/accessories/isolator_e.html
btw, has anyone tried a Len Gregory cartridge (with or without the isolator)?
another comment in the article: reviewer mentioned a layer of isolation under the tonearm base (he tried blu-tac). Also against my 'instinct'.
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- 113 posts total
There very well could be benefits to limiting vibrations through cartridge isolation. I’m not sure this should be categorically dismissed as snake oil. What I was reacting to incredulously is how MC believes that addressing these types of vibrations is important while also asserting that vibrations caused by poor tonearm/cart matching can be ignored. Even his audio heros over at Soundsmith believe compliance matching is important - because vibrations are indeed harmful to sonics. https://www.sound-smith.com/articles/how-choose-cartridge Meanwhile MC rants about why anyone should worry about compliance. Apparently F=ma only when convenient to MC. https://i.postimg.cc/t70jjFHV/MC.jpg As Emerson once said: "A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds..." |
Of course, that will lead to what Tonearm? Origin Live Conqueror, or Enterprise. I had the old Conqueror MkIII and now have Enterprise MkIV. These are awesome arms! Among the many great features are the hard-wired phono leads. I’ve had both and there is no doubt all the extra connections of an interconnect is not good. Also the quality needed at this level costs a small fortune. Whatever you do go with an arm with integral leads. Please ignore the gnats. Any time you see someone twisting things around or even making stuff up out of whole cloth that is a sure sign of a weak mind and even weaker argument. Ignore them. The truth is when using a properly designed tone arm then compliance and other cartridge matching becomes moot. Therefore, whenever you see someone stressing the importance of understanding compliance, mass, etc and talking about matching what you do is make note of which arm they are talking about and cross it off your list. Then if you really want to save a lot of time and effort do the same for the person telling you how absolutely essential these things are. All you have to do is look at my system, read the listener comments, or heck even come and hear for yourself to get it. |
The compliance of a tonearm is what it is - even it's a Enterprise MkIV. It's a basic fact that high compliance cartridges work better in a low mass arm; medium compliance cartridges work best in a medium mass arm; and low compliance cartridges work best in a high mass arm. You can change the mass of a tonearm by changing the headshell. This is EXACTLY why Origin Live offers multiple headshell weights for the
Enterprise MkIV (2,5, and 10 grams). These options are available specifically for compliance matching. While some tonearms do a better job than others building in design features that minimize the potential for unwanted resonances due to compliance, no tonearm is immune - including yours MC - just ask Origin Live. Again, either all vibrations matter or they don't. Enjoy your cherry picking and please stop instructing people to ignore what other posters say - we are all free to read and ignore what we choose based solely on the merits of what is being said. |
- 113 posts total