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Dear @jeff1225 : You are welcome. The P 77 is a winner, good for you!
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
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Dear @mrubey : Never is too late ffor this overall thread party.
Now, in audio always is important the hardware but the software is the real audio star where I can read is your really weak analogue link: no LPs. I think you have to work as harder you can on this subject.
In the other side and before you pull the triger with any today cartridge you need to take " experience "/" learn " the essential knowledge level to work with analog alternative that's is not so easy as the digital one. Analog is not " plug and play " in anyway. You need to know how achieve the " right ": TT/tonearm/cartridge overall set up. Of course that if you already have the right knowledge level the go on.
In the mean time you can buy 1 or 2 good vintage MM/MI cartridges that between other things has a real quality performance level value.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @mrubey : Good that you know for sure what to do. Go a head.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @o_holter : There are many entry level PS that can handle the Atlas and is not " surprising " it can do it at low prices and the quality performance normally goes according that low price. Yes, sometimes could be intriguing that quality vs that low price.
Regards and enjoy the music, R.
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Dear @topoxforddoc : You are welcome.
It's a " honor " for the real MM alternative that with you is surrounded for that great analog rig! and it works!
As I said it's an alternative that as the LOMC alternative has its own trade-offs.
Maybe the today vintage MM/MI hunting is not for USD200 but who knows because there are still several great samples over the net, even some better cartridges/performers that your Garrot that's very good one.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @topoxforddoc : R2R?, almost everything starts there. Perhaps a trade-off with is that there is not enough software and the tapes we can find are expensive but there is no doubt that the R2R experience is worth to try it and with excelent rewards.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @chakster : """
CS100 on Luxman TA-1 arm impressed me more than 980LZS on Reed 3p arm and Sp10mk2 deck.. """"
there you are comparing oranges vs apples: two different tonearms with different internal wiring, two different TTs and two cartridges with way different output and different needs because of this.
Try to find out the 981 HZ ( that I own ) and maybe your " take " could be different too.
Regarding the 170 and as you own the 180 you know that both cartridges belongs to the AT ML/OCC series from the 140 to 180 . This AT cartridge series comes from 1985 and started with the 170 at the early months of that years where the 180 is a real refinnement over the 170 where its " major " differences are that the 180: has lower inductance, more extended high frequency response, smaller ML stylus radio 0.08 m/m against 0.1 for the 170, stylus angle for the 180 is 23° against 20° and 7.5 grs. in the 180 vs 7.00 in the other series models and yes you can hear its differences but not easy to detect it.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
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Dear @2channel8: That's by design. Normally the load impedance comes at the PS input circuit and is here where we can change the it but you will need manufacturer advise to do it. You can do it too in external way but not convenient. The best is to ask the manufacturer of your PS how to do it and where to do it in that circuit board where usually needs to change a resistor value.
@chakster , not only Grace cartridges shows a benefit loading it 100 kohms but several of your cartridges. That a PS permits loading changes with MM cartridges is a must in its design.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @chakster : """
They were smarter than others 40 years ago? """
not really, on those times appeared the four channels recordings or similar " news " that were recorded with wider high frequency range and that's why those cartridges was loaded at 100kohms.
"""
what's the difference for example with Grace loaded at standard 47k ohms or at 100k ohms? """
it depends on the phono satge and the capacitance we mated it.
MM cartridges " reacts " according how we loaded ( impedance/capacitance. ). There are diferent experiences, some persons like to load at 60k-70k and I read that some cartridge models performs better at 20-30K. So there are not a precise rules down there. You have to test it in your own system, in my system I prefer ( almost all the time. ) 100K but maybe in yours could be diferent.
Regards and enjoy the music, R.
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Dear friends: Thank's to @mofimadness for its link where we can read that we have a better Jico SAS stylus replacement alternative for 211.00: https://www.jico-stylus.com/neosasnews.phpruby and saphire cantilever, very good news here. Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear friends: What an experiences with SuperTweeters. I bought my ST-200, you can see at the speakers top plate in my virtual system and here:
http://www.audioemotion.co.uk/tannoy-st200-supertweeter-512-p.asp
and when arrived I thought that the up-grade will be on the high frequency range, right? well I was wrong because the improvement was astonishing ( for say the least. ) all over the frequency range and all over the main characteristics of quality level performance in my audio system: not only better transparency, " better " more equilibrated system tone, dynamics and power in the MUSIC as I never heard it in an audio system, transients response very close to what we experienced with live music, the brightness in some recordings goes lower and in some disappeared, at each single place in the diferent frequency ranges precision was up graded, low bass range more tunneful/precise and tight ( don't ask: I don't know for sure the whys. ), rythm of MUSIC closer to the live MUSIC experiences, etc, etc. It does not matters your system I think that everyone must have SperTweeters integrated ( other thanh the systems already has it. ) and we can't die with out listen our system with. Questions and comments are welcomed as other gentlemans experiences. Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @chakster : "
but it's a great cartridge. " not for me as the CS-100 neither.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @chakster : At least with me your statement is a misunderstood. I still enjoy the MM alternative along the MC one and till today nothing tell me to be sticked again with LOMC cartridges.
The MM alternative is a real and true alternative and for me it's here and forever.
Maybe what we need is to fine tune ( again. ) each one system and re-test the MM cartridges we own and I'm totally sure that more than one of us will be surprised again with this alternative.
In these days since my overall cartridge sale through Agon I tested several MM and LOMC cartridges I did not listen to it for several years and " I'm surprised " for say the least. Even started to listen cartridges that I own and never tested!
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @2channel18: """"
Maybe those myths about cable break-in are true! It can't be due to the lower impedance, obviously. Maybe the shorter cable length, better connectors or finer gauge, OFHC, long crystal conductors, or the fancy dielectric. I'm not sure I really care. """"
it can't be due the very low impedance and yes that myth is not a myth, IC cables as almost any audio item needs a break-in time.
Yes too, capacitance can makes differences with that Shure cartridge as loading impedance but as you stated you have to make changes at the input resistors values.
At the end, right now you are satisfied with and this is the main subject, good!
Regards and enjoy the music, R.
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Dear @harold-not-the-barrel : I think 3 years ago I added to my Pioneer cartridges this MK2 that I bougth for around 300.00 and I sold it ( sis months latter. ) for the same money.
Yes, is a good cartridge but nothing to die for.
Of course that as always all depends on the audio system, owner priorities and ears.
That price in that link is just " crazy " and not worth to pay for. If I remember a gentleman in Rusia puts on sale similar cartridge and for big money.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @chakster : I don't care about sellers including me.
I know exactly what each one MM/MC cartridge I own or owned is worth to pay for it and the more important: WHY to pay that price or just wait. This WHY is unknow for many buyers.
That Pioneer is not worth to pay for it at that price. That Russia gentleman and this Finland one think are alone in the world and where there exist no persons that can appreciate or not offers.
Btw, you are talking as a true and real seller.
Only for your records in this thread almost everyweek ( not many years ago. ) people posted here not one but several links to buy diferent cartridge models disclosing where exist the best offers. I posted these kind of links " hundreds of times ".
We were " hunters " and some still are.
"""
Take it easy . """
What do you mean with that?
regards and enjoy the music, R.
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Dear @florence4 : First than all exist two similar but with different quality performance level cartridges name it the same model:
JVC X1 MK2 and Victor X1 MK2. Both manufactured by JVC. I think than less than one year ago I posted and explained on its differences on quality performance levels where the JVC X1 MK2 was the best one.
How do you know which is JVC and which comes with the Victor designation?, you can read directly in the cartridge top plate where one says JVC and the other Victor.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @florence4 : If I was you I will on the hunt for ( at least ) the JVC X1 and from here to the JVC X1 MK2. Niot for the Victor ones ( SAS or not SAS. ).
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @dover : I have not precise evidence on the JVC/Victor subject other than:
- Usually what you can find out over internet is the Victor one but no the JVC X-1 MK2.
- In the english flyer JVC stated that the model was not marketed in USA and Canada.
- My take is that the JVC was for the Japan/Asia domestic market and Victor for export.
- In Japan exist JVC ( Japan Victor Co. ) but not Victor as " Victor " alone.
- After hearing the Victor and the JVC ( same models. ) my take is that been better quality performer the JVC this one is " hand calibrated " or with hand choosed the best Shibata stylus and nothing of that was made it with the Victor. This is like the Stanton 980 and 981 that are exactly the same cartridge but the 981 is hand calibrated or the AT 20SS and the AT 15SS tha are the same cartridge but the 20SS was a hand choosed/calibrated one.
I own four X-1 and the Z1 and the Jico SAS stylus and I agree totally with you: the Jico SAS is an inferior item. SAS stylus/tip does not changed only the cantilever, the only real change with Jico is that 210.00 higher price.
Rigth now I only own two of the X-1, the other two already sold.
I have not specs for the JVC X-1 MK2 but outperform both the X-1 JVC and the Victor. I think that the MK2, as I said it last year, is only outperformed by the Astatic 2500.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @chakster : Where do you think I bougth my JVC MK2?, yes in Europe.
regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @boofer : On that chart only the Empire was marked as " excellent ". Btw, the humble Ortofon MF20FL was in that same level. In the Audio Technica models only the AT 24 ( stand alone version of the AT 25. ) is rated as " very good " but I'm sure that the stand alone unit deservs the " excellent " range.
That comparison chart is really old and gaves an idea of what things were on those old times.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @boofer : You are rigth but seems to me from the more/less times.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @lewm : """
I have been listening lately to your Ortofon MC7500, another really fine cartridge. I run it at 47K load, contrary to popular custom. With this load (or lack of a load), the MC7500 is very wide open sounding, presents a soundstage that goes outside the edges of my speakers and up fills the room. """
TAS HP editor always loaded LOMC cartridges at 47K that I disagree with.
A LOMC cartridge normally has very low internal resistance 2-5 ohms and this means is not sensitive to impedance loading and if we have changes in the kind of sound when changing impedance then is really because the overall reacting inside the phonolinepream self design and not really because the cartridge it bself.
So, all depends...........................
Regards and enjoy the musiuc, R. |
Dear friends: I think that maybe the first LOMC cartridge advantage against the MM/MI alternative is that LOMC ones has no interchangeable stylus/cantilever assembly and avoid at 100% those vibrations/resonances generated in that assembly and it's really critical issue.
I think too that some MM/MI manufacturers thougth about trying to have better way to fix that criticalcartridge assembly.
We can remember Technics EPC 100MK4, AT/Signet, Grado, Clearaudio, ADC or B&O.
All of them designed cartridge models where that assembkly almost disappears and with the B/O disappears 100%.
Yes, I think that that is perhaps the most important " Aquilles heel and unfortunatelly we can't do nothing about other than ix the assebly in some way like glued it.
I did it with one of my ADC Astrion and I can tell you it works. Yes, there is a trade off but what in analog audio has not?
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @bimasta: Like you many of us owned and still own MM/MI cartridges that we bougth 30+ years ago and that was on " rest " for manuy many years because we were " directed " by the audio high hend establishment to the LOMC alternative that indeed is very good/excellent too but " diferent ".
As you many people " revived/discovered " again that the MM/MI alternative is not so bad as the corrupted audio establishment told us.
Good that your 881 is playing at its best.
Btw, yes there is compatibility between Stanton/Pickering stylus assembly. At least that was I experienced with my 981 and 5000/7500. Where for no sure reasons my 981 performs better with the Pickering assembly when both stylus are exactly the same. The only thing that changes is that the Pickering stylus overall assembly is more solid than the Stanton one and this could means lower resonances/vibrations down there.
The 981 HZ is an extraordinary performer.
@lewm , jus from the begining of my MM/MI journey 100K is the way to go. David ( Dlaloum. ) told us that is not that way and I respect all his knowledge and skills that are very high but there are " things " that goes against the theory and that function outstanding that's like the 100K on our beloved gems.
Regards and enjoy the music, R.
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Dear @bimasta: """
It seems to me the mechanical integrity of the stylus/body connection is less critical with MM than MC because their high compliance puts far less stress on the connection """
I think that no one here or elsewhere can proved that level of stress and its contribution to higher or lower vibrations/resonances/distortions in the cartridge performance.
For me and for the cartridge builders I neme it all is common sense and @lewm proved with his 981 and me with my Astrion and even with the change in stylus between the Stanton and Pickering I mentioned. There is no doubt that the improvement we have putting at minimum the vibrations generated down there is a big reward on the quality performance. Here LOMC designa are lot better than MM alternative.
I think that we can't diminish that fact, at the end we are talking of a cartridge signal degraded for that stylus assembly against the same cartridge with non degraded signal ( at least for that issue. ).
Which one do you prefer?, answer is obvious.
The overall problem on cartridge quality performance is that exist not only one source of signal degradation but several and we have to try to have those degradation sources at minimum to increment MUSIC enjoyment.
Regards and enjoy the music, R.
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Dear @lewm: Yes, that's in theory: not for all cartridges that 100k because each cartridge diferent electrical design values.
Now, please let me know for sure which of your MM cartridges sounds better at 47k than at 100k.
I own or owned " hundreds " of cartridges and that I remember no one performs better at 47k. We have to take in count here that the phono stage design characterisitcs count too.
The interaction between cartridge ad phono stage: inductance, impedance and capacitance is real complex to determine in easy way what is happening there.
Now, same question I do to @fleib maybe he has a recent experience where a cartridge performs better at 47k and if is that way I really am interested to know it.
Analog audio is not an exact " science " as are not our ears.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @cleeds : The corruption is not an issue that if some one differ of " someting " because in the mean time you learn you don't differ with.
When over time you learned that what you learned before coming from the audio establishment was totally wrong then you know that those establishment information was corrupted by audio market business, was totally biased and this convert that information in: corrupted one.
There are several examples over the audio history about not only in cartridges but on tonearms, TTs, electronics and the way.
No, I'm not corrupted but have to live inside the AHEE corruption. All of us are part of it but this fact does not means that like me other unbiased audiophiles are corrupts.
Are you a corrupted gentleman?
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @fleib : """
About MM loading - It's preamp and system dependent. Although people will often agree about a load for a particular cart, others might get different results. I think it has a lot to do with preamp topology, bandwidth and that sort of thing. """
Exactly and that's what I posted several times on diferent audio forums, even here the latest time was a thread where some one was touting a SUT and his preamp on the impedance critical subject talking on LOMC cartridges. I posted there ( was a very hot discussion. ) exactly what you posted here an additional posted that the LOMC are non sensitive at all the SUT impedance you choosed for it.
@lewm said " it's subjective " when it's not. Yes, as I posted is a very complex relationship down there.
@chakster did you read the fleib and this post?, because as I always " shout ": for us audiophiles time all days are a learning time, always.
Anyway, good to read that in this regards I agree with you.
Regards and enjoy the music, R.
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Dear @bimasta: """
But the transformation of those simple clicks and pops says a lot, and the improvement must extend to the music."""
That's why we can't diminish almost " nothing " on analog audio as I posted to you. Great that you tried it with extraordinary rewards and not did it as many other audiophiles that " attack " the " audio ideas " before test it.
The vintage MM cartridge manufacturers, a few of them not all, take care of that only in its top models:
Technics in the 100CMK4, Audio Technica in it's AT 24 ( glorious performer. ), Signet on the TK9 and TK10, ADC in its TRX series, B&O in all its cartridges. As you noted there is positive rewards.
I don't know why before my post about the Astrion ( many years ago. ) no one really " cares " about till today.
Btw, @lewm the MMC1 and 2 were designed as plug-in cartridge for B&O self TT designs and other plug-in tonearms in the market those years but they don't stop there and designed a very specific B&O specific adapter to use his cartridges with any universal headshell. That dedicated adapter is solid and you can't " feel " any movement/loose on it. I don't see a problem here.
Where exist a problem and was under deep discussion in this thread was what I did it not only with my B&O cartridges but with my 100CMK4 ( that's a plug-in design, better than the headshell integrated model. ) and that is to by-pass the male pin connectors on the cartridge universal adapter connecting directly the headshell or tonearm female wire connectors to de male cartridge ones. This simple move is outstanding.
Btw, if I remember was @dgarretson whom found out the female clips for that connection been tigth. We have to remember that that the cartridge male pins are not standard ones but thin/slim. Before he find it those slim female pins what I did it was crush ( literally. ) the female wires of the headshell that obviously only works in that configuration.
If you still have the MMC1 I urge you to test it again in this way and let us know your valuable experiences.
Regards and enjoy the music, R.
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Dear @lewm : I think that my post about was unclear.
Because I think exactly like you and in those " old " times what I did it not only with the B&O and other plug-in cartridges type ( like the Technics 100C MK4, Azden and the like. ) is to by-pass the female connectors of the universal adapter, this is take out totally from the adapter and changed the normal headshell female wires connectors for a thinnest ones that if I remember @dgarretson found out somewhere.
With that you have direct tigth connection between the cartridge thin pins and the tonearm: no more adapter female connectors.
I tested all my plug-in cartridges with out those adapter connectors.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
@lewm : Yes I have to " destroy the adapter drilling inside. I owned 3 adapters, two of them I bougth in ebay stand alone. Of course that if you don't have a second adapter and you want to put on sale in the future then there is a problem for that.
R. |
@lewm : Something that I did not do it but that you can is: due that the B&O use a dedicated ( not universal type. ) adapter some one at your place can machine with aluminum an open adapter that only can hold the tiny MMC1 cartridge body and in this way you don't have to destroy the B&O adapter.
It's worth to try it, the B&O MMC1 and 2 are better quality performers than many of the latest posts where those gentlemans touted other cartridges .
R. |
Dear @bimasta: ""
I don't think Raul likes me... ""
From where or why did you take " that "? , never mind the only kind of persons I don't like it are the dishonest/lier ones.
The earlier P8ES and the latest one P25MD share exactly the same kind of design on that subject you are talking about but the P25MD is a little better performer because its Analog 6 unique stylus shape.
The Nova VDH II came out to the market 4 years after the 25MD.
I own a lot of AKG ones , including the top P100 LE, many of them out of work because its suspension problem but I have in good condition the one you own, the P25MD and the Nova VDH 2.
Some people try to find out the Nova thinking is a better performer but it's not. The 25MD with its Analog 6 stylus performs at the same level and overall I prefer it over the Nova.
As I said all these models share the TS AKG design.
Now, """
then the only information transmitted to our amps and speakers will be the vibrations in the stylus directly caused by the groove modulations, and no other extraneous movements or causes. ""
"""
it strikes me a truly novel approach, possibly a breakthrough .. """
I agree with your second statement and " so so " with the first one because one thing is that we can detect the cantilever macroscopic movements and the other is what in reality is happening down there: stylus tip/grooves tracking where exist the more hardest " forces "/movements we can even imagine including that side to side ones.
Ovbiously that The AKG TS design try to put at minimum that kind of generation distortion movements and with out doubt this is something really good for us.
In the other side, today or past cartridge designers/builders is for sure they knew this kind of design and maybe they did not gave the need it importance for its designs or maybe becuase can goes against his own cartridge design.
I like AKG.
Regards and enjoy the music, R.
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Dear @chakster : In those old times anything diferent from elliptical stylus tip was named " line contact or extended " till appeared the patented Shibata stylus tip. This is to say true Shibata shape not " Shibata type ". Audio technica used the 0.2 x 0.7 elliptical shape and true Shibata on its top of the line models and with both stylus tip you can enjoy the 4-channel recordings because I did it with. This looks as an offical grace catalogue, even comes in japanese language and you can't read any single reference to true Shibata stylus tip: https://www.vinylengine.com/library/grace/stereo-pickups.shtml Shibata type does not means true Shibata stylus shape. In the other side: """
So why wasting time with elliptical versions of Grace if there are plenty of much better options? """ but not only with Grace but by other vintage manufacturers. Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @lewm : Agree with you, stylus is only one important part of the overall cartridge design. The cantilever build material and shape is other way important factor on the quality level performance in any cartridge.
Yes, agree too that the @chakster Grace information is very informative for say the least.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @chakster : Yes, stylus shape can make a diference alwaysand yes elliptical shape was main stylus development a next to it Shibata and the latest real new develpment VDH thank's to Dr. AJ. Before all those spherical was the " name " and over the time the other main stylus developments and its derivatives from outperformed spherical ones.
Now, I think that some of the information that you gave us where exist advantages of " this " over " that " are what the theory says.
How much of that theory is acchieved under playback conditions?, we have to take in count that cartridges in reality can't match exactly the grooves tangency to track it where in otherside the grooves tracking quality level performance depends on several other main factors as: cantilever build materials and shapes, how the cantilever is atached to, type of suspension design, quality of stylus build, quality of the stylus polished tip, etc etc.
But, all in all diferent stylus shapes helps to improve quality performance or at least can makes a " difference ". I think is not easy to evaluate it for sure.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @halcro / @chakster : """
100K Ohms loading is a subjective aberration .... """"
No, it's not. It's only knowledge level to understand what is happening down there. Btw, @lewm , the chart shows 1db divisions not 0.1db as you pointed out and that's is a huge difference.
The RIAA curve equalization made a very fast and abrupt high frequency to avoid that the high frequencies can goes over 50k. So, the curve shows that as the high frequency goes over 20khz starts to goes with 0ver minus 20db eq. dow to infinite. That's something to avoid that the cut lathe burn in.
That's why exist the Neumann pole that's an additional special characteristic that permits that the high frequencies stops to fall so fast to infinite, as a fact it really stop or makes a more gentle curve for the high frequencies.
This Neumann is something additional to the RIAA phono stage design and several phono stages designers and professional reviewers are against it and not because does not works but because is a pain in the ass implement in the phono stage design for hard phase/amplitude problems that introduce down there. So, only with the rigth design to avoid its inherent problems can works in fabolous way. We implemented in the " rigth " way in our Phonolinepreamp and we can choose to use it or not through a simple special internal switch.
So, that's why one of the reasons that LOMC cartridges sounds more open: because almost all are not really flat on frequency but has an over-shoot in the high frequencies that in some way compensate for the RIAA inverse eq. curve and that's what happens with the 100kohms in the MM/MI response.
Years ago Ortofon ( still have it. ) started with a very special gold-ears team/group audiophiles whom were testing Ortofon LOMC cartridge with flat frequency response and with the " normal " LOMC over-shoot at high frequencies and over " thousands of tests in different sessions those golder-ears found out that always the quality level performance of the cartridges with that high frequency over-shoot sounds really better and Ortofon through the years decided through that kind of tests that its cartridges had and has around 3.5db on that critical subject.
It does not matters what any one of us or other manufacturers or any reviewer can think about. All those are facts and that's why we like it MM at 100koms and not at 47kohms or 60kohms and one of the whys we prefer LOMC cartridges.
Regards and enjoy the music, R.
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Dear @chakster and friends: It’s important to look for flat frequency response from 20hz to around 20khz to mimic what the RIAA eq. in the phono stage did it with the recording.
The issue is that " flat to "" around 20khz "" " and beyond it. We don’t look for that flat frequency response in that frequency range, always will be better a deviation over 1db to compensate in some way the fast " free-fall " of the high frequencies down there.
JG said that his 1db+ deviation at 20khz ( and perhaps higher deviations beyond that frequency. ) sounds better and Ortofon just confirm /even the JG opinion. No one of them tell the why’s about but the fact is that quality level performance is enhanced with.
I took in count the why when sevral years ago started our Phonolinepreamp design where for the first time in my audiophile life understand it the overall RIAA eq. and how in reality it works. That’s why we decided that this Phonolinepreamp can handled the Neumann pole.
Through the years I read posts after posts everywhere from internet forums and from reviewers through ST/TAS magazines and no one ever talked/touched expressely the why is a desired/necessity a deviation ++in the high frequency range.
To understand it in better way we have to think that MUSIC does not " exist " with out harmonics that are generated from the fundamental notes. So, the harmonics ( first 3-4 ) for the 6khz-7khz ( that are fundamentals that everyone can detect. ) are in a frequency range that almost no one really can HEAR but those harmonics ( as all music harmonics ) are the ones that gives the " life " to the MUSIC: are those harmonics what we like/feel on a music hall when we are listening the Firebird or the Bethooven 9n. We have to remember that all human beens " hear " through all our body: ears, skin, skin hair, hair, bones and the like and that to " hear " at maximum we have to dress clothes with natural fabric like: all cotton, wool or silk NEVER SYNTETIC fabric that does not permits to " hear ".
Btw, @pryso , in this overall, critical and so important subject ( high frequency + desired deviations. ) you don’t have to guide because some people said that Grado sounds better loadedat 20kohms. That’s is only what they said mainly because poor systems resolution and because are unaware of what I’m telling here and about distortion levels.
Btw too, when I posted for the first time in VE analog forum I posted that Grado’s and other cartridges has to be loaded at 100kohms and all the VE regulars " shout " me in different ways that I was totally wrong. We had very hot discussions there till I said: good bye stay sticky as all of you are accustom to " That happens in other net forums. I remember that a gentleman that came here from VE and whom I have in very high respect ( David/Dlaloum. ) because his high knowledge levels that discussed with me my findings on that 100kohms loading where he in theory proved I was wrong when in reality I was not. The difference was only that he did not take in count the inverse RIAA eq. overall role.
Independent of the cartridge overall frequency response all phono stages needs to have a well designed Neumann pole and if we are not listening through it then we are not really listening what is in the recording.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @chakster : I don't see the reason for your confusion. That article talks about the Neumann cutting lathe system and I'm talking on an after " market " phono stage 3.18u Neumann pole design and not op-amp kind of design. Forgeret, the Neumann cutting lathe system is one thing and what I'm talking about even that has some relationship is different and the more critical issue is to know the rigth way to implement/design in the phono stage with out any single detriment of the signal but only for the better.
It's not only to speak about " Neumann "" but to understand the whole RIAA and RIAA inverse eq. overall role.
I don't want to convince no one because facts are there and at least to regarded opinions: J.Grado and Ortofon that in theory knows more than you or me.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC not DISTORTIONS, R.
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@chakster : If I remember these are some phonolinepreamps manufacturers that integrated the Neumann pole in its designs:
Dartzeel, Aquovox, EMT. There are more. I think that over the time we will see more designs with that important characteristic and I hope those designs been a good design because is really dificult to deal with that pole.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC not DISTORTIONS, R.
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Dear @sbank : Thank's for your important contribution. I think is the first time you meet this thread. Good, I never imagine so many knowledge gentlemans like you read this thread when almost all are on LOMC cartridges.
Maybe an advantage in this thread is that many contributors " touched " and touch several non MM important/critical audio susbjects that could be interesting for any audiophile.
This is only the second time in this forum that I " touch " the Neumann subject that for me open something to really " think about ".
Audiophiles as almost all of us normally are busy on " simple " audio " things " trying more than other thing fun here and there but almost never we really are interested or analize in deep what is really important not only to understand it but to test or at least to intent to test to grow up in this hunting of MUSIC enjoyment.
Through the years I learned that that is crucial and more important that to " play " with the " cartridge of the month " or the " new kid on the block ". Yes this has some fun but does not helps in the mature audio learning serious day by day " task ".
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC not DISTORTIONS, R.
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Dear @chakster : I don't think that the Aquvox can help you because is a SS design.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear @chakster : I'm an owner of that tonearm and can read about in my virtual system and yes, the Sony cartridges are not missing here we posted about years ago. Where?, who knows.
regards and enjoy the music, R. |
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Dear @chakster : Good. The GST-801 is one of the true great tonearm ever made. Its design was " ligth's years " ahead everything in cluding several today tonearms.
Very well damped, magnetic dynamic balanced design ( no ringing as almost all dynamic designs. ), full magnetic AS, very good VTA on the fly, silver wire, etc etc.
Maybe the more misunderstooded tonearm but is a real jewel that was designed thinking in the true cartridge needs.
Btw, please check my new ad on cartridges for sale.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC not DISTORTIONS, R. |
Dear @chakster : You don't have to live with that set up if you don't want it. Let me explain it.
In those times I made the tonearm/cartridge set up with the protractor I had on hand ( maybe DB one or other, I can't remember. ) because I never had the original as you have. In tIhose times almost no one took really care about accuracy on that kind of set up.
Now, I don't know for surethe reasons Sony choosed that special set up but you know you can change it and I think it will be better if you do it.
Comparing the Sony set up parameters against Löfgren A ( Baerwald ) this one ( by numbers. ) outperforms the Sony one:
Sony average dist. %: 0.536 vs 0.405 in L A. "" Max. dist.: 0.965 vs 0.536
tracking error 2.81° vs 1.81°
As always, an accurate set up makes a difference with any choosed gemoetry set up. You can try the Löfgren A and decide about.
Btw, you need to test your Sony tonearm and cartridge combination with other headshells and of course make changes in the headshell wires and tonearm internal cables. The tonearm deserves it and of course the MUSIC.
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC not DISTORTIONS, R.
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