high versus low output


I have been getting back into vinyl the last few months after getting rid of my turntable and records about 28 years ago. I currently have a Rega P5 with a Dynavector 10x5 high output cartridge. I use a Simaudio LP3 phono stage. A friend of mine just upgraded from a Benz Micro Glider L2 low output cartridge to something else. He said I could try the Glider with my P5 if I wanted.
What are the differences between a low output and high output cartridge? What are the advantages and disadvantages of one or the other in terms of sound and phono preamp usage?
I attempted to search the Audiogon discussions but wasn't able to find a thread that gave me a clear answer.
valinar
Theoretically you will get better sound with a low output cartridge, given other gear of the same quality in either setup. This is just because the coils on a LO cart have to be larger to generate more current. Since those coils are attached to the cantilever, they represent more inertia for the stylus assembly to control.

A HO cart has smaller coils, therefore less inertia and a speedier response to changing signals.

This is just theory, of course, and theory is great but execution is at least nine tenths of the battle.
Tobias of course meant to say "LO cart has smaller coils..."
If you plan to try the Benz LO, your phono stage will need enough gain and likely adjustable cart loading to provide anything like optimal sound from the LO cart.
Low output carts have MUCH less wire in the coils. Thus, are more responsive.....

As swamp said, you'll need a phono stage that has enough gain, or step-up transformers......another link in the chain..... Loading can vary, depending on the cart.
The difference isn't really high output versus low output; it's moving coil versus moving magnet.

A cartridge consists of a coil of wire and a magnet. The stylus moves in the record groove in response to the vibrations in the record groove. When you move a magnet and a coil of wire relative to each other, an electrical current is generated. This contains the musical information that is amplified.

A moving coil cartridge has the coil attached to the sytlus. The magnet is fixed in the cartridge body. A moving magnet cartridge is the opposite. The magnet is attached to the stylus; the coil of wire is in the cartridge body.

Having a heavy magnet on the stylus can dampen the response of the stylus to the record groove vibrations. Having the coil of wire on the stylus makes it lighter so more vibrational information is picked up from the record. In order to keep the stylus light, the moving coil cartridge has only a few turns of wire. Therefore, output is less; therefore you need greater amplification.

A moving coil cartridge is superior to a moving magnet cartridge in terms of information retrieval. But the trade off is lower output. And it is more expensive to manufacture.

Some moving coil cartridges use more turns of wire to increase the output. These are "high output" moving coil cartridges. But you start to increase weight, like the moving magnet, and thereby start to dampen and mask vibrational information. It defeats the purpose of using a moving coil in the first place over the less expensive moving magnet.

So it isn't the low output that gives better quality. It is the more responsive stylus of the moving coil that gives better quality. The low output is just a byproduct of the lighter stylus assembly.
I went ahead and set up the Benz Micro Glider L. It plays at a lower volume than the Dynavector 10x5. The Moon LP 3 has a maximum gain setting of 60db. There are two options for capacitance setting, 0pf and 100pf. There is no difference in volume between these. What role does the capacitance setting play?
Tobias and Swampwalker described the reason why LO carts tend to be more responsive to groove modulations than HO carts. These differences are real and audible, provided you're comparing apples to apples (and not Benz's to Dyna's).

They also hinted at the techical issues you asked about without providing any details, so here goes...

Capacitance adjustment is for MM cartridges. It does not effect the performance of MC cartridges, which both of yours are. That's why you didn't hear any difference. Ignore this adjustment unless/until you acquire an MM cartridge.

The two critical phono stage parameters for MC cartridges are GAIN and IMPEDANCE. Each MC is unique in its requirements, so cartridge-phono stage matching can have a critical bearing on overall performance. The importance of this cannot be over-emphasized.

For impedance matching of an MC cartridge to an active phono stage like ours (ie, NOT a stepup transfomer), the rule of thumb is 25 times the internal impedance of the cartridge coils, + or - 50%. Every system is unique so experimentation is the only way to be sure of the "best" value, but anything in the above range will be close.

For gain matching of an MC cartridge, look here: KAB USA preamp gain computer.

***
For the Dyna 10x5 HO (2.5mv output, 150 ohms internal impedance)

- optimal impedance = ~1900-5500 ohms
Your SP3 has selectable impedance of 100 or 47K ohms. Try them both, but the 47K is likely to sound better. 100 ohms will give the cart a dull top end and a closed in feeling.

- optimal phono stage gain = ~42db
Your SP3 has selectable gain settings of 40 or 60db. Use 40db for this cartridge, 60 db is likely to overload your line stage.

***
For the Glider (0.3mv output, 12 ohms internal impedance)

- optimal impedance = ~150-450 ohms
Your SP3's 100 ohm setting will probably be best. 47K might sound a bit edgy or shrill (though it will hurt nothing to try both).

- optimal phono gain = ~61db
Your SP3's 60db setting should be about perfect. The 40db setting will produce lower volumes and perhaps lackluster dynamics even when you crank up the gain control on your line stage.

Read that twice. There'll be a quiz!
Swampwalker: thank you, thank you. I just hate it when that happens. Some
good person takes the risk of looking dumb and asks a fairly basic question
but he gets more confusion instead of help. 04rdking, thank you too for
emphasizing the point.

Valinar, I humbly apologize for my incompetently proofread response.
Swampy, if you agree, I would like to ask the OP and everyone else to
interchange "HO" and "LO" in my confusing post,
above, so that the relevant lines read

"The coils in a HO cart have to be larger to generate more
current,"

and

"A LO cart has smaller coils".

I am so glad to have a second chance to get that right.

Dougdeacon, thank you very much indeed for keeping me from putting my
foot in the wrong place over input capacitance. Using your limpid post, I am
going to work up slowly to the quiz.
Dougdeacon,
Thanks for your helpful response. I will study for the quiz. Hopefully you will allow cheat sheets.
Dear Valinar: Tobias said: " This is just theory..... " +++++

I agree with him, Mark, Doug and everyone here about because in theory is right but in an imperfect analog world ( recording, Lp's pressing, cartridge quality, tonearm matching, whole set-up, load impedance, capacitance, etc, etc ) like the one where we live not always the theory even what really happen when we put the cartridge stylus on the running Lp.

It is all system dependent, your/self knowledge dependent, your choice of trade-offs and your music sound priorities.

Over the time and in my cartridge experiences I really can't say for sure if a low output cartridge ( say 0.22mv ) can/could sound better than a medium one ( say 0.45mv ) due just to its output level difference, things are not so easy as a fact it is really complex and a subject for other thread.

Due of what you own IMHO I think that you could be better " served " by a MM cartridge design, you can take a look about here: http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1200430667

Regards and enjoy the music.
Raul.