You may be getting burned out, but you're going to have to stick with it for a
little bit :^) The TT just gets things spinning - the cartridge/tonearm
combination is what pulls the info out of the groove, and the phono
pre/equalizer is what gets the low-level signal from the phono cable to the
pre or amp (depending on how your phono pre-amp is set up).
For $1500, you can 'save' some money (or spend more and get a bit better
quality in the other things) by avoiding the step-up transformer and going
with an MM cart. What phono stage are you expecting to use?
If you are set on an MC cart, inexpensive ways to get that done are a set
of Cinemag transformers (see Audioasylum.com's Vinyl Asylum for more info
on these) or a Haglabs.com Piccolo headamp (again see VA for commentary).
If you have an SME armboard, do you know for which effective length of SME?
If you do not know, you can measure the distance from the spindle to the
mounting hole and someone here (or on the VA) can help you identify which
model arm would work with your armboard.
Assuming for a moment that it is a 9" tonearm model which will fit, I would
expect that a relatively 'low-cost' excellent-sounding MC-cart combination
in SME-land would be something like a used SME 3009 Series II with a Denon
103R (or plain 103). To use the Denon 103R, to my knowledge, you would
have to avoid the 3009 II "Improved" and the Series III (which were
lighter weight arms, requiring higher-compliance carts). That will do for
stereo 33s and 45s. For mono records, for relatively low-cost mono carts, I
have heard the Denon 102 and the Audio Technica AT33 SP and they both are
acceptable - certainly for the price.
For MM carts, and for carts/arms for 78s, someone else will have to help you.
I have no experience there in recent memory.
Despite their ubiquity, I have never heard a Rega arm, nor a Rega-style arm
made by someone else (such as Origin Live). Used Rega and Rega-like arms
abound so one can be picked up for not huge outlay.
little bit :^) The TT just gets things spinning - the cartridge/tonearm
combination is what pulls the info out of the groove, and the phono
pre/equalizer is what gets the low-level signal from the phono cable to the
pre or amp (depending on how your phono pre-amp is set up).
For $1500, you can 'save' some money (or spend more and get a bit better
quality in the other things) by avoiding the step-up transformer and going
with an MM cart. What phono stage are you expecting to use?
If you are set on an MC cart, inexpensive ways to get that done are a set
of Cinemag transformers (see Audioasylum.com's Vinyl Asylum for more info
on these) or a Haglabs.com Piccolo headamp (again see VA for commentary).
If you have an SME armboard, do you know for which effective length of SME?
If you do not know, you can measure the distance from the spindle to the
mounting hole and someone here (or on the VA) can help you identify which
model arm would work with your armboard.
Assuming for a moment that it is a 9" tonearm model which will fit, I would
expect that a relatively 'low-cost' excellent-sounding MC-cart combination
in SME-land would be something like a used SME 3009 Series II with a Denon
103R (or plain 103). To use the Denon 103R, to my knowledge, you would
have to avoid the 3009 II "Improved" and the Series III (which were
lighter weight arms, requiring higher-compliance carts). That will do for
stereo 33s and 45s. For mono records, for relatively low-cost mono carts, I
have heard the Denon 102 and the Audio Technica AT33 SP and they both are
acceptable - certainly for the price.
For MM carts, and for carts/arms for 78s, someone else will have to help you.
I have no experience there in recent memory.
Despite their ubiquity, I have never heard a Rega arm, nor a Rega-style arm
made by someone else (such as Origin Live). Used Rega and Rega-like arms
abound so one can be picked up for not huge outlay.