Dave,
The cartridge is not physically generating at these frequencies. It's an electrical resonance at a particular frequency which can cause overload or oscillation. This occurrence will also intermodulate and affect the mid/high frequency range with an overtone coloration.
A common example of this occurring is with the DL-S1 MC going straight into a phono stage with extended bandwidth. The cart has very low output (0.15mV) due to the coreless design, but its impedance is 33 ohms. This low output requires extraordinary gain and makes the problem more likely to occur.
To deal with this, a prominent poster on Asylum loads his DL-S1 below the impedance value of the cart (22 ohms I believe). Apparently his phono stage has enough gain to compensate and he's happy with results.
Not all phono stages will be thus affected. If a design is more bandwidth limited, then this overload is less likely to occur. If phono preamp response rolls off at 100K, it probably is immune to resonance in the MHz range.
I've read about tonearm cables for MC's with very high capacitance. More capacitance will lower the frequency of electrical resonance and might be a bad idea.
A phono cart generates output with magnets and coils. The internal cart resistance reflects the size of the coils. Some coreless designs have stronger magnets inside the cart and lower impedance/inductance. The AT 50ANV and ART7 are such designs. Output is still extremely low, but so is inductance.
Regards,
The cartridge is not physically generating at these frequencies. It's an electrical resonance at a particular frequency which can cause overload or oscillation. This occurrence will also intermodulate and affect the mid/high frequency range with an overtone coloration.
A common example of this occurring is with the DL-S1 MC going straight into a phono stage with extended bandwidth. The cart has very low output (0.15mV) due to the coreless design, but its impedance is 33 ohms. This low output requires extraordinary gain and makes the problem more likely to occur.
To deal with this, a prominent poster on Asylum loads his DL-S1 below the impedance value of the cart (22 ohms I believe). Apparently his phono stage has enough gain to compensate and he's happy with results.
Not all phono stages will be thus affected. If a design is more bandwidth limited, then this overload is less likely to occur. If phono preamp response rolls off at 100K, it probably is immune to resonance in the MHz range.
I've read about tonearm cables for MC's with very high capacitance. More capacitance will lower the frequency of electrical resonance and might be a bad idea.
A phono cart generates output with magnets and coils. The internal cart resistance reflects the size of the coils. Some coreless designs have stronger magnets inside the cart and lower impedance/inductance. The AT 50ANV and ART7 are such designs. Output is still extremely low, but so is inductance.
Regards,