Hear my Cartridges....šŸŽ¶


Many Forums have a 'Show your Turntables' Thread or 'Show your Cartridges' Thread but that's just 'eye-candy'.... These days, it's possible to see and HEAR your turntables/arms and cartridges via YouTube videos.
Peter Breuninger does it on his AV Showrooms Site and Michael Fremer does it with high-res digital files made from his analogue front ends.
Now Fremer claims that the 'sound' on his high-res digital files captures the complex, ephemeral nuances and differences that he hears directly from the analogue equipment in his room.
That may well be....when he plays it through the rest of his high-end setup šŸ˜Ž
But when I play his files through my humble iMac speakers or even worse.....my iPad speakers.....they sound no more convincing than the YouTube videos produced by Breuninger.
Of course YouTube videos struggle to capture 'soundstage' (side to side and front to back) and obviously can't reproduce the effects of the lowest octaves out of subwoofers.....but.....they can sometimes give a reasonably accurate IMPRESSION of the overall sound of a system.

With that in mind.....see if any of you can distinguish the differences between some of my vintage (and modern) cartridges.
VICTOR X1
This cartridge is the pinnacle of the Victor MM designs and has a Shibata stylus on a beryllium cantilever. Almost impossible to find these days with its original Victor stylus assembly but if you are lucky enough to do so.....be prepared to pay over US$1000.....šŸ¤Ŗ
VICTOR 4MD-X1
This cartridge is down the ladder from the X1 but still has a Shibata stylus (don't know if the cantilever is beryllium?)
This cartridge was designed for 4-Channel reproduction and so has a wide frequency response 10Hz-60KHz.
Easier to find than the X1 but a lot cheaper (I got this one for US$130).
AUDIO TECHNICA AT ML180 OCC
Top of the line MM cartridge from Audio Technica with Microline Stylus on Gold-Plated Boron Tube cantilever.
Expensive if you can find one....think US$1000.

I will be interested if people can hear any differences in these three vintage MM cartridges....
Then I might post some vintage MMs against vintage and MODERN LOMC cartridges.....šŸ¤—
128x128halcro
Victors:

Well, I am not prepared to say which is the best by listening to only one recording this way, but I am pretty comfortable saying which is my favorite: The X-1IIE. My least favorite: the X-1II

With both the X-1 and X-1II high frequencies sound overly prominent to the point of distraction and with excessive sibilance on the vocals. I like the X-1 very much for its very naturally colorful midrange. With the X1IIE the midrange is also naturally colorful, but high frequencies are much better controlled and balanced. Possibly as a result of this, vocals and the midrange in general sound fuller and more natural.
Love it Frogman.......šŸ‘Œ
I could read your descriptions all day long.....šŸ—£
Iā€™m off to buy some more cartridges to keep your contributions coming..
DonĀ“t get me wrong, I just found my ML-180 outperforming all the MM ATĀ“s I have tried over the years, hence my expression bad. The same goes for my statement about TOTL ACUTEX models, they are superb performers as you have discovered too.Ā  But not magical IME. And there may very well be a subtle difference between the samples.Ā 

That X-1IIE with titanium pipe cantilever and Shibata stylus ?
Victor X-1 and X-1II have Beryllium/Shibata whilst X-1IIE hasĀ Titanium hollowĀ pipe cantilever and nude Elliptical stylus.Ā 
Harold, I donā€™t doubt it at all and as we all know system context is very important. Curious, have you tried the AT 150 that the 180 was compared to? I havenā€™t owned either one, but would consider purchasing the 150 if I can find one; I think it would be a good fit in my system. BTW, I agree with you re the Acutex; I like it very much, but I wouldnā€™t call it magical either. Regards.
We heard previously how my cheapest vintage (NOS) MM cartridge (Victor 4MD-20X) compares to my most expensive LOMC (AS Palladian).

We certainly can't expect a 'shock' result at this scale.....but I can still happily listen to the 4MD-20X all day long....šŸ¤—

The question remains though......how close to the Mega-Buck LOMCs can cheap vintage MMs actually come?
The Signet MR-5.0 LC is an interesting cartridge......
It sports a nude Line Contact stylus on a Beryllium cantilever just like the Signet TK-7LCa, but why have the two models especially when the parent company have their own competition with the AT-180ML.....?

AS PALLADIAN LOMC Cartridge
Mounted in SAEC WE-8000/ST ToneArm on solid Bronze ArmPod surrounding Vintage Victor TT-101 DD Turntable

GARROTT P77 MM Cartridge with Jico Neo-SAS(R) Stylus
Mounted in DV-507/IIĀ on solid Bronze ArmPod surrounding Vintage Victor TT-101 DD Turntable

SIGNET MR5.0 LC MM Cartridge
Mounted in DV-507/II on solid Bronze ArmPod surrounding Vintage Victor TT-101 DD Turntable

Frogman, many years ago I had the AT-ANV150 and it truly was excellent, very very balanced sound, the high register in particular, one of the very finest I have experienced. But it lacked something in the mid range, detail and nuances. I never went excited with so after a hundred hour play I decided to sell it, for a good price.

But it was better than my AT-ML180 in the high register. I started to wonder why that ATĀ“s flagship w/ a very special stylus tip and ceramic top lacks finesse in high frequency area... maybe there was something wrong with my set-up. Finally I thought that ML180 may benefit from extra damping and it did, as seen here:

https://ucarecdn.audiogon.com/e830b57c-0609-4c78-bca4-d41b9402cbda/-/autorotate/yes/

Now its high register is the same league as ANV150Ā“s. Still, however it lacks the magic I have heard with certain others.

My buddy in Norway has covered the whole body of his DECCA Jubilee with that damping material, he says that makes a huge difference : )
Image a dark gray blanket on the Jubilee, looks so funny but not for everyoneĀ“s taste : )
So both AT-ML180 and the Jubilee benefit from extra damping in certain systems. And itĀ“s a well known fact that the DECCA carts need well damped arms.

The AT-ANV150 will fit your system just fine, I believe. Also Audio-TechnicaĀ“s latest technology VM760 is worth to try:
https://www.audio-technica.com/cms/cartridges/6637a2f0787470c3/index.html
I have always disliked AT carts, including Signet even when I could get them for free .
A good friend of mine whose ear I trust told me the ATVM540ML was coherent top to bottom , better than VM750 .I went over with demo LPā€™s in hand to school him about his $250 cartridge .

He took me to school , 540 is all of that, by far best AT I ever heard .His TT is a Rega 8 which is formidable .
Interesting Schubert....
Maybe it's System Synergy as Frogman says.....?
Do you have Tube or SS amplification?
But it lacked something in the mid range, detail and nuances.

I agree Harold.....
Halcro, I have both tube and SS amps and pre-amps . Speakers often like one combo or the other , no doubt impedance matching of entire system IMO . I agree 1000% with frogman on the Synergy . Both the fun and PITA
of the audio hobby aka addiction .

The 450 was mounted on a friends Rega P8 , the fabulous 880 arm on that jewel no doubt had something to do with it . He is also a master of TT set-up as well .In any event it did what needed to be done quite well for $250 .Natch, there is always something better .
I had hoped that Frogman would have divulged his analysis on the previous test......šŸ¤—

Let's try a different approach.....

If the $10,000 AS Palladian LOMC Cartridge is taken as the 'Benchmark' (in my system).....how close can cheaper cartridges get to it...?

The Palladian is a beautifully built modern Meg-Buck LOMC cartridge that owes much to the Classic Vintage Fidelity Research FR-7 Series of cartridges from 35 years ago.
Instead of the current 'fad' for Boron cantilevers.... the Palladian utilises an aluminium one with a nude Fine-Line stylus in a 'bush-hammered' Titanium body.

The Vintage Signet TK-7LCa MM Cartridge utilises a Beryllium cantilever with a nude Line Contact stylus.
The Signet can be had for approx. $600-$800 NOS on Ebay (if one is patient enough).

Here you can decide if $9,200 price differential is worth it....šŸ¤”

AS PALLADIAN LOMC Cartridge
Mounted in Vintage SAEC WE-8000/ST ToneArm on solid Bronze ArmPod surrounding Vintage Victor TT-101 DD Turntable.

VINTAGE SIGNET TK-7LCa MM Cartridge
Mounted in DV-507/II ToneArm on solid Bronze ArmPod surrounding Vintage Victor TT-101 DD Turntable.

Sorry to disappoint, halcro. Ā I promise some thoughts on all by the end of the weekend. Ā Best to all.
Palladian/Garrott/MR5:

Not sure how one could quantify ā€œhow closeā€ an inexpensive cartridge can come to the sound of the Palladian, but the Palladian is clearly in a different league than the other two. Ā It gives a much bigger dose of the natural timbre of instruments. Ā The sound of the triangle is an obvious one. Ā With the P it has an appropriate metallic brilliance and one hears a longer decay of its ring. Ā Other percussion instruments also sound more realistic. Ā With the Garrott itā€™s hard to tell that it is a cowbell being played. Ā With the P it is obvious. Ā One also hears more of the snap of the hand on the conga drum along with more of its woody timbre.

The MR5 gets closer to the level of the P than the Garrott which makes high frequency sounds too covered and dull. Ā The MR5 also sounds too covered by comparison, but less so. Ā Neither approach the level of overall clarity that the P has.Ā 

Palladian/TK-7:

Holy Grail recording and one of my favorites. Ā Great recording and performance of this beautiful music.

Well, as with the Decca, Iā€™m not prepared to say that the Palladian sounds $9,000 better than the less expensive cartridge; but, it sure sounds a lot better. Ā In fact, probably due to the more demanding nature of this music, I would say that I hear more of a disparity between the overall sound of the Palladian and that of the TK-7 than I did between the Palladian and the MR5 playing Marvin Gaye.

Right from the first woodwind chords one hears better clarity of timbre with the Palladian. Ā The TK-7 actually sounds as if it is on the verge of mistracking onĀ the opening woodwinds with a hint of distortion at the endĀ of each phrase where the winds play loudest. Ā The harp sounds much more realistic and one hears the correct urgency in the way that the player plays the arpeggios that answer the woodwinds. Ā The harp sounds beautiful with the Palladian; much more realistic color. Ā Not only is there more clarity in the upper range of the instrument, but notice to how the single plucked low notes on the left hand sound much more realistically resonant and one actually hears the decay of the sound of the vibrating string. Ā The clarinet playerā€™s wonderful phrasing is much more clear in its subtle pushes and pull backs of the tempo. Ā With the TK-7 that phrasing and the overall musical energy seemsĀ more subdued. Ā The massed strings sound fabulous with the Palladian. Ā They sound good and beautifully full with the TK-7, but not quite as natural and I hear a similar effect as with the opening winds: as if it is on the verge of mistracking and a hint of distortion is heard in the loudest passages.Ā 

The Palladian sounds like a killer cartridge. Ā Is it $9000 better? Ā I donā€™t know, but for the difference in price it should sound better...a lot better. Ā SpeakingĀ for myself, if I had it and the TK-7, while I like the TK-7 a lot it would spend a lot more time in the cartridge drawer than the Palladian.

Thanks for letting us hear these fabulous cartridges. Ā Listening was done on my Stax/tube driver set.




















It's the rightly famous RCA Victor release of "The Royal Ballet" Gala Performances conducted by Ernest Ansermet.
No music lover should be without a copy....
HEREĀ 
Good Golly Frogman......
I told you I didn't regret purchasing the Palladian.....šŸ˜
Perhaps I've been wrong all these years in thinking that the very best vintage MM cartridges of yesteryear can play on the same field as the best modern MCs......?

I'm determined though.....to use your ears (if you don't mind).....to tell me exactly which of my MM cartridges come closest to possessing the abilities of the Palladian in one-on-one 'Shoot-Outs'.

Before I do that though.....I'd like your opinion of how a vintage LOMC like the JMAS MIT-1 compares to the Palladian.

I just bought a wonderful piano recording of the 'Beethoven Appasionata' which was described by the Seller on Discogs as 'Very Good+' condition.
As you will hear...the disc has been 'churned' by some scalpel-like stylus and is going back to whence it came....šŸ¤¬

AS PALLADIAN LOMC Cartridge
Mounted in Vintage SAEC WE-8000/ST ToneArm on solid Bronze ArmPod surrounding Vintage Victor DD Turntable

JMAS MIT-1 LOMC Cartridge
Mounted in Vintage SAEC WE-8000/ST ToneArm on solid Bronze ArmPod surrounding Vintage Victor DD Turntable

A couple of additional facts re this wonderful recording which, as halcro points out, should be a must-own for audiophiles. If one is to own only one recording of Classical music this one is definitely one to consider as the one. The pedigree of this recording is immaculate with associated names that should be familiar to all audiophiles who care about such matters:

The music is ā€œWaltz Of The Flowersā€ from Tchaikovskyā€™ ā€œNutcrackerā€ Ballet. The recording engineer was the legenday Kenneth Wilkinson who engineered so many of the great Decca/London recordings and it took place at Londonā€™s Kingsway Hall one of the best concert halls in the world. This one was licensed by RCA/Victor from Decca for its premium ā€œSoriaā€ series. In my experience any recording made by Wilkinson is worth owning if only for its sound.

Halcro, you flatter me and I confess to feeling a bit uncomfortable being the arbiter of which is best. This has been educational for me and I am glad to, time allowing, continue to offer my thoughts as my honest impressions and opinions only; while acknowledging that we all have at least somewhat different priorities and preferences when it comes to sound and that system context and the limitations of this methodology needs to be taken into account.

I donā€™t think that you ā€œ(have) been wrong all these years in thinking that the very best vintage MM cartridges of yesteryear can play on the same field as the best modern MCsā€. No two cartridges will sound the same; often, not even two different samples of the same cartridge. Ā The fact that a vintage MM can compete at all with a $10,000 modern MC is kind of miraculous. Ā Detectable subtle differences favoring one cartridge or another donā€™t invalidate or diminish what they each do at least very well. I have to assume that since you donā€™t regret purchasing the $10,000 Palladian that you hear something in its sound that justifies the price disparity. I know that if didnā€™t hear any advantage that I would regret having spent the money. ā€œSame playing fieldā€? That one is tricky. If there were no differences in the sound between a cartridge like the Palladian and the Signet then the price discrepancy would not be justified. I have no doubt that there are many high priced MCā€™s that donā€™t sound, overall, as good as the Signet.

Thanks again.
Judging from the ā€™viewsā€™.........there is quiet a bit of interest in the vintage Victor MM cartridges (and the London Decca Reference šŸ˜Ž).
The X-1 range of Victors are almost ā€™unobtaniumā€™ and replacement styli are generally unavailable or unsatisfactory.
The Z1 Victors however are plentiful on the used market and are ā€™dirtā€™ cheap.
Jico makes a range of replacement styli for them with the SAS or Neo-SAS being the best (if they ever come into production again).

The Z1/SAS is a real challenger for the X-1.....šŸ˜ƒ

AS PALLADIAN LOMC Cartridge
Mounted in Vintage SAEC WE-8000/ST ToneArm on solid Bronze ArmPod surrounding Vintage Victor TT-101 Turntable

VICTOR Z1/SAS Vintage MM Cartridge
Mounted in Vintage SAEC WE-8000/ST ToneArm on solid Bronze ArmPod surrounding Vintage Victor TT-101 Turntable

On my phone. Simon and Garfunkle sound more live with the Victor. The MC sounds more colorful initially ...until it just sounds colored and somewhat recessed. The MM is like opening the windows and hearing the live sound.
I hear something similar to you Noromance......
This could be interesting....šŸ§
Although on listening to both again......I donā€™t really know šŸ¤”
The sound on my iPad is not quite what I hear ā€˜liveā€™....?
Will be interesting to see what Frogman thinks......
Catching up to you guys. Listened on my Stax/tube set.

Palladian/MIT:

Once again, I wish I could say that the less expensive cartridge (MIT) sounds as good as the Palladian, but I just donā€™t hear it that way. They both sound very good, but the Palladian refuses to add extra body to the midrange/lower mids. The first minute or so of the recording tells the whole story:

From the very first notes of the piece one hears a little less false roundness to the left hand (lows) of the piano with the Palladian; a good thing. The MIT sounds slightly (!) tubby by comparison while the Palladian lets one hear more of the natural resonance and decay of low notes. Partly as a result of this the mids sound a little less incisive with the MIT; sounding, again, a little too round without as much natural leading edge. As always, the extra thickness obscures musical performance detail. The most obvious difference can be heard beginning at around :50 in the ā€œforteā€ chord passages and with the sharply struck individual high notes. On demanding passages the MITā€™s character seems to change dramatically (relatively) and almost sounds like a not particularly good upright piano instead of a good grand. It starts to sound clangy and almost metallic. Not good. The Palladian remains much more ā€œcomposedā€ without strain or hint of mistracking which may be the reason for the clangy quality that the MIT exhibits on loud passages.

Palladian/Victor:

I agree with noromance that the Palladian sounds recessed by comparison. However, Iā€™m not sure that I would agree that it sounds ā€œcoloredā€ compared to the Palladian. ā€œColoredā€ means different things to different listeners and to me the Palladian sounds closer to what I might hear during a live performance. I think that the ā€œrecessedā€ quality of the Palladian is simply the way it was recorded and the extra midrange juice of the Victor may be pushing things forward a bit for a seemingly less recessed quality. Much of what was heard in the Palladian/MIT comparison applies, but even more so. The Victor (most of the Victors, so far) have a very juicy midrange/lower mids that, while very attractive, is not necessarily the most natural and is, in fact, what I would call ā€œcoloredā€.

Even before the tune begins we can hear a difference in the tonal character of each cartridge. The audience sounds sound slightly muffled with the Victor. Then, listen to the introductory guitar accompaniment. Notice how much ā€œbiggerā€ the single low note that starts each measure of the ostinato guitar line is; almost as if it is being played by a different and larger instrument. That low note should have the same tonal character as the upper notes and sound more like a natural and integrated part of the musical line as heard with the Palladian. Then, when the bass enters things get a little too thick and borderline boomy for me and all that extra juice obscures some of the beautifully simple vocal harmonies.

As always, taking into account the limitations of listening this way and possible system synergy issues, I think that the Palladian is a kicka$$ cartridge. It is amazing that far less expensive cartridges can compete in any way, but still....no free rides, as they say. Ā I also think that being used to the terrible leanness and lack of natural tonal body of much ā€œaudiophileā€-pedigree sound it is easy to be seduced by components that possibly swing too far in the opposite direction. As with most things, the truth is usually in the middle.

Thanks, all.






**** However, Iā€™m not sure that I would agree that it sounds ā€œcoloredā€ compared to the Palladian ****

Should read:

**** However, Iā€™m not sure that I would agree that it (Palladian) sounds ā€œcoloredā€ compared to the Victor ****

Sorry.
Interesting notes @frogmanĀ .Ā 
I'm recovering from illness so not able to listen through my digital rig.Ā 
By colored I mean that I can hear a color superimposed over the recording like a thin veil. I know it's probably an odd description and perception. Ā Once I detect it in a setup, I hear it with every recording. Whether there are frequency response variations in the MM, I don't really notice on the phone but now I'm curious. Nevertheless, it sounds clearer and more live and exciting.

Your ears need to be insured for millions šŸ’°Frogman....
Whilst I was recording the Victor Z1/SAS....I could clearly hear in my room....the "extra midrange juice of the Victor" that you picked up.
After recording it.....I realised that I had left the loading of the MM cartridge at 40K Ohms instead of the 60K Ohms that the Victors like...šŸ„“

On playback however....through my iPad.....I heard it like Noromance did, with a richness that seemed to have an advantage over the Palladian so I uploaded it like that.....

I think we need to get ourselves ears like Frogman, Noromance......or at least try to get the sameĀ Stax/tube set....šŸ‘…

It'll be interesting to see what you hear through your digital rig Noromance?
You listen on Tidal don't you?
Your ears can be just as good as frogmanā€™s, our walking encyclopedia on all thinks musical .

First step is to listen to live acoustic music for about 60, 000 hours , maybe 50,000 if you do the playing and either way take Music Theory 101-102 at a
university School of Music at the same time .You can read the 4-500
musical history books at home in your spare time .
Our quest to find a MM cartridge as close as possible to a current $10,000 Uber LOMC cartridge continues.
Here is a new acquisition....
GLANZ 610LX
A NOS vintage Moving Flux cartridge for which there exists precious little information.
It has a nude line-contact (or Shibata) stylus pressure-fitted into a BERYLLIUM HOLLOW-TUBE CANTILEVER
Technology that no current manufacturer can match or supply...šŸ¤—

AS PALLADIAN LOMC CARTRIDGE
This is the $10,000 current LOMC cartridge that Frogman has 'anointed' as 'The Benchmark' in my system (correct me if I'm wrong Frogman šŸ¤”)

GLANZ 610LX
@halcroĀ thanks for the close-up picture of the Glanz 610LX cantilever (finally), now we can see it's completely different in comparison to the Glanz 61 (from 1984) which has a Boron Rod cantilever. The way the stylus is mounted is also different. I have many more high-resolution pictures to post in our glanz thread, some pics and interesting facts are already there in my last messages.Ā 
Yes Chak,
Very different technology with the boron cantilever needing a load of epoxy....whilst the hollow beryllium is more sophisticated.
What do you think of the sound...?
Iā€™ve never tried the 610LX, but the sound of my 61 was excellent, but it was long time ago when i played a records with it.

The Beryllium on your 610LX looks like my Titanium Victor X-1IIe :)

We canā€™t go wrong with Beryllium, this is what i know for sure.

But i wish to see the manual to make sure 100% what cantilever they got on 610LX

I realized that the japanese seller claimed itā€™s Boron ( which is better for his seles :)

In fact it can be Beryllium or Titanium, it can be Boron (because my SONY XL-50 MM has a hollow pipe Boron and it looks similar, just darker).







But you canā€™t pressure-fit a stylus to boron....
You must use glue.
I meant.....what do you think of the sound in my video?
Just checked the video, i like the 610LX sound! And the music is nice tooĀ 

But you canā€™t pressure-fit a stylus to boron....

Actually SONY did that just like Technics with laser technology (magic trick). Their hollow Boron pipes fitted with Nude Diamonds with almost no glue compared to traditional Boron rods with a drop of glue (like on my 61).

Iā€™m a fan of Beryllium catilevers, you know.

No correction necessary, Halcro. With, of course, the usual caveats that listening this way has important limitations (talk about stating the obvious!) and using different tone arms has to be factored in. Still, one can compare the two different sounds and determine which one is closest to the ultimate benchmark, the sound of live.

Wow, this one is really interesting! A couple of quick listens only so far; will share some impressions later today when I have more time to listen and write. The external mic into the iPhone is a definite improvement over the previous šŸ˜‰
Glanz - nice open sound, free and loose of damping which give it a dynamic quality. Initially, it almost sounds better than the MC...
Palladian - nice open sound, I can feel that there is more control over the music. Bass is tighter and more delineated, In fact, this is how most of it sounds. Voice and piano are more controlled, more etched and consequently, more musical information is imparted.
First, Rita sounds wonderful. Ā Very nice performance.

I should probably go back and listen to the other cartridges that have been compared to the Palladian before making this comment, but I think that the Glanz, overall, gives the Palladian the best ā€œrun for its moneyā€ of all of them. Ā 

The Glanz is excellent and in some ways I like its tonal balance on the sound of the piano a little better than the Palladian which sounds a little ā€œtinklyā€ at times. Ā This is a result or the Glanz having a fuller tonal balance which also adds more weight to the bass and a seductive dusky quality to the voice. Ā While the piano has more realistic weight it also has a less realistic timbre overall; it sounds a little odd in the higher registers and lacking a little natural brilliance.Ā The extra weight in the bass makes the bass sound a little too thick and with less pitch definition than the Palladian. Ā Listen to the three note ascending bass line at 1:52 and the upward glissando at 1:59. Ā Less distinct than on the Palladian where one can more clearly hear the individual pitches of the notes. Ā The voice on the Palladian has a better sense of purity and refinement to my ears even if that dusky quality and extra chestiness one hears with the Glanz can be very appealing. Ā 

The Palladian also seems slightly more dynamically alive. Ā At 2:20 the vocal finishes a phrase with ā€œam I blue?ā€ and the piano takes over for a solo. Ā There is a dynamic crescendo that happens from that point forward until the beginning of the new chorus at 2:28. Ā With the Palladian this increase in intensity sounds more like an arrival at a new musical ā€œeventā€; as it should. Ā With the Glanz this musical detail is a little less obvious and one doesnā€™t hear quite as much increase in intensity.

The Glanz does not track as well as the Palladian. Ā There are times when the sound gets a little strained and at least two obvious examples of breakup:

1:28 - on the lyric ā€œIā€ one hears a bit of strain in the vocal sound.
1:50 - very obvious breakup from the low bass note along with the lyric ā€œLordyā€.
2:43 - a bit of breakup on the sharply struck single piano note.

Both are excellent and the differences are certainly not huge. Ā I can definitely see how the Glanzā€™ tonal balance might be just the ticket in a particular system with a particular voicing. Ā I would be curious how the Glanz handles orchestral strings in the tracking department. Ā As always, I wish I could say that the less expensive cartridgeĀ beats the $10K Palladian, but Iā€™m afraid the Palladian is still ā€œthe benchmarkā€. Ā The Palladian is a kickass cartridge. Ā 

Thanks, Halcro; always interesting and fun. Ā 

BTW, all timings are from the Glanz track which runs about two seconds ahead of the P track. Ā 


Halcro, excellent as always ! ThatĀ“s a great find ! Looks like beryllium... As you have many beryllium carts can you confirm the material ?? This is extremely important. Thank you
Yes Frogman,
Rita Coolidge's 'Good Old Days' on A&M is one of the most naturally Ā recorded,Ā all analogueĀ albums I've heard.
No theatrics or 'look-at-me' processing in the recording and mastering stages....this has been my 'go-to' album for 40 years having been played over 1000 times (hence the missing cover).
The whole album will tell me almost everything I need to know about a system or a cartridge or a tonearm or an amplifier or speakers.....

An excellent appraisal (as always) Frogman and it seems that you and Noromance are in agreement on these two šŸ‘

I'm really glad that the Palladian remains the 'benchmark' as I would feel rather silly having forked out the price of admission needlessly....šŸ¤”

My aim is really to expose the SLIGHT differences produced by the uber-priced LOMC cartridges over fairly cheap vintage MM ones.
The Glanz 610LX in NOS condition cost me $450......
If some audiophiles can justify those differences to be worth $9,000-$15,000.....who am I to argue?

I'm grateful for your contributions Frogman and am pleased it is "fun" for you because it surely also is for me....šŸ˜Ž

Regards
Thanks Harold.....
The cantilever looks like beryllium to me.....
But it might be titanium or even aluminium although someone claims it is boron......
There was no box or literature that came with it and the specs page I've seem only lists the stylus as 'line contact' but no mention of the cantilever.
Being familiar with all the beryllium cantilevered styli in my collection....my money is on that šŸ¤—

And as Chakster has repeatedly stated.....the performance of the 610LX is NOTHING like the other Glanz 31L, 51L, and 71L cartridges which are rather dull and mediocre IMO.
Yes of course the MFG-610LXs top them all, IĀ“ve known that for two yrs now, you see I have the former 1980Ā“s edition 610LX w/ boron and it sounded awesome out of the box (was NOS). Fantastic cartridge in my system, top 5 "MM".
My first GLANZ was MFG-310LX (in early 80Ā“s) and also great, the best thing I remember it had no listening fatigue. Now I must point that the former 31L is inferior and mediocre indeed. 51L is still quite enjoyable, tracks Telarc cannons with ease but nothing magical though.
Seems that the darn Palladian is still a few steps ahead ; )
Glanz invented Boron cantilever for one model only in 1982, this model is MFG-61 with PH stylus.

At that time all Mitachi Moving Flux cartridges have had 3 kings of cantilevers, look at my picture: 1) Conventional Aluminum, 2) Rare Boron Rod (in the middle) 3) Very strage huge tapered Aluminum.

The headshell integrated versions of Glanz MF may have slightlyt different cantilevers, but they are all huge in diameter!

The manufacturer clearly stated the Glanz MFG-61 is most prestige model among Moving Flux cartridges . The date on the Bruel & Kjaer individual test for MFG-61 is 1982.07.04

Any Glanz MF models with 3 digits number released later on, not before.
I believe the 610LX was released in the late 80ā€™s or in the early 90ā€™s, the Glanz was closed in 2003.

We have no proof of the cantilever type utilized for their MFG-610LX, but i wish to find a proof!

All we can say for sure is that earlier MFG-61 has Boron Rod cantilever and itā€™s documented.

@harold-not-the-barrel IĀ“ve known that for two yrs now, you see I have the former 1980Ā“s edition 610LX w/ boron


The cantilever of MFG-610LX is completely different compared to MFG-61 !
The color of 610 is too light for Boron, most likely itā€™s Beryllium or Titanium (because it hollow). But if you said you have a Boron (and you have a box) it sould be nice to know whatā€™s stated in the manual. Do you have the manual for 610LX ? We could stop speculation about it once we could see a picture of the manual, really. Could you provide it ?

Now I must point that the former 31L is inferior and mediocre indeed. 51L is still quite enjoyable, tracks Telarc cannons with ease but nothing magical though.


I have scanned the manual for all Glanz (2 digit models) and now you can compare the specification for all of them from 71 to 51 and from 31 to 11 , enjoy.

Comparing my 31L, 71L and 61 i must say the worst sounding model is 71L with itā€™s huge cantilever. My sample was NOS, burned-in and tested. The 31L was much better than 71L in my system.

But they are all too bad compared to the MFG-61

....the performance of the 610LX is NOTHING like the other Glanz 31L, 51L, and 71L cartridges which are rather dull and mediocre IMO.

Good to know, Henry. The rest of the models except 610LX and 61 can be forgotten forever with all ASTATIC cartridges made by Mitachi.

Listening your files and reading your comments i believe more people will realize than Cantilever material does matters when it comes to Mitachi MF cartridges (Glanz, Astatic, Azzurra, Jamo ... ).

More information about Glanz is in the glanz thread

Cheers.












Another new acquisition (thanks to Chakster)........
A NOS GRACE SERIES II
Disco version....šŸ•ŗ though we don't quite know what that means as it has the BERYLLIUM CANTILEVER WITH LINE CONTACT STYLUS just like the normal Series II.
Definitely better than the GRACE F9...the LEVEL IIĀ requires careful set-up and probably 50 hours run-in time.
This one only has about 9 hours......
How does it fare in the shoot-out....?

AS PALLADIANĀ 

GRACE LEVEL IIĀ 
Me ? IĀ“m just lawnmover and not good at computers, IĀ“m an old hat : ^ĀØ. To be honest, I donĀ“t trust those machines. Btw, without Isaac AsimovĀ“s Three Laws of Robotics the computers and eventually robots will take over, maybe sooner than later; some experts say that we already have lost our control over technology that eventually will enslave mankind. How cares about some unknown author who died exactly 27 yrs ago. Certainly those who are in power are not thinking about AsimovĀ“s Laws ! Let alone EinsteinĀ“s or HawkingĀ“s ideas and guidance.

And I have a life outside the internet and activities like marital responsibilities, and in my restricted spare time IĀ“d rather listen some music than argue in dull and endless conversations about divergence of outcome audio quality levels in different Hi-Fi stereo systems especially with besserwissers. And IĀ“m really not good at in social media either. To be honest, just lately IĀ“ve been listening a spectacular vintage cartridge that probably and "seemingly" outperforms all GLANZ models, no matter what styli they may have, itĀ“s just in other performance level. But that of course is a different subject and off-topic.

However, I may have some crucial information of the relatively interesting subject in question. I live in a different GLANZ bubble unlike some others (?), you see IĀ“ve been living in the MGF-XXX bubble all my audio life ; )
Indeed I had an audio life decades ago, my first true HQ cartridge was namely the GLANZ MFG-310LX w/ Line Contact stylus which I bought ... if my memory serves me right late 1984 ... wait a moment ... something came to my mind ...

Meanwhile you could see this more closely and judge yourselves (I still can copy and paste): https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/GLANZ-610LX-Moving-Flux-Phono-Cartridge-/132994137794?ul_noapp=true&n... I asked the seller if this has original manual but he said no. What a pity.
So, it was you šŸ˜¤. Ā Btw, a most unusual (strange) and interesting post.
Wonderful Harmonia Mundi record. The MM sounds great. On first listen, it sounded more fun to listen to. Bowed cello sounded purposeful and driven. It took three listens to appreciate the essential additional detail, sustain and decay of the (glass) bells and the snappier, spacious, colorful, playful percussion of sticks on rims by the Palladian to have the MC win it for me. I'm noticing a trend. The magnets are lively and free and make you wanna dance whilst the coils are detailed and precise.
Nice descriptions by no romance and I agree completely; with the possible exception of the ā€œmakes you wanna danceā€ part. I say possible because, while I donā€™t hear any outright advantage with the Grace in the ā€œdanceā€ department, it is true that sometimes if one reduces one type of detail it can serve to highlight another aspect of the sound. The Grace reduces some high frequency detail. This results in the sound of the plucks of the strings of the guitar and the harpsichord sounding slightly round compared to the more realistic incisive quality one hears with the Palladian.

This recording is wonderful with many different and unique instrumental timbres. With the Grace they all sound slightly homogenized compared to the Palladian which allows one to hear more individuality in the color of the various instrumental sounds. I think the very cute pooch agrees; he(?) left the room while the Grace played ā˜ŗļø

As halcro pointed out the differences are slight and make one wonder whether the price difference is justified. The Grace sounds excellent but I think the Glanz does a somewhat better job of challenging the Palladian.