Eight months ago, a package arrived from a dear friend in Kentucky, which contained an unannounced……and unheralded phono cartridge, the Signet AM10s….but with an AM20 stylus ready to attach.
Sometime later….another package from the same source appeared but this time containing an Ortofon LH8000 wood headshell?
As I was then….and for some months after…..embroiled in a multiple upgrade of power conditioner, interconnect cables and speaker cables….I placed the cartridge in my ‘to do’ audio drawer whilst the empty headshell has sat forlornly in one of my Fidelity Research K5 cartridge cases.
Fast forward to last week when…….remembering this cartridge…..I mounted it in the LH8000 headshell attaching it to the Micro Seiki MA-505s on its own bronze pod surrounding the Victor TT-101 DD turntable.
Now I’m not about to proclaim this unassuming gem as ‘the best cartridge’.
It is not the Messiah…….it’s just a very naughty boy?!
I released the armrest, settled into my couch and pressed the ‘mute’ button on the remote to ‘off’.
Oh oh…..something is wrong here……there is no sound?
I pressed the ‘mute’ button and hastened to the nude Victor to raise the arm.
Checking that I had the correct phono cables plugged into the preamp…..I repeated the procedure.
No sound again!
As I leapt to again raise the arm….this time without pressing the ‘mute’ button……music suddenly erupted!?
The complete silence of this cartridge in the ‘run-in’ groove was startling!
Now I have heard several cartridges which have displayed low surface noise on ‘run-in’ and ‘run-out’ grooves……but nothing ever like this? And it’s currently winter in Australia with low humidity and plenty of static in the air!
So what was the sound like after the eerie silence?
Straight away….without any running in……this was a ‘voicing’ with which I was familiar.
This was….after all….a Signet cartridge and gee……I think I have….oh…maybe ten other Signets?
But all those others, are ‘top of the line’ Signets.
The AM10s is ‘bottom of the line’ (it is not even listed on Vinyl Engine and its replacement stylus is only $36.95 from LPGear).
And here’s the thing…….this cartridge does things, in my system, which no other cartridge yet has?
Before I elaborate……you should be aware that the ‘Signet Voicing’ for me in my system….is a preference.
I do love the ‘Empire Voicing’ (4000D/III & 1000ZE/X) as well as that of the Fidelity Research (FR-5 & FR-6).
But if I had to live with only three cartridges……they would all be Signets!
The first impression of the AM10s…is one of extreme high-frequency extension.
I have a guilty confession.
For nearly 30 years….to test the high-frequency capability of an entire system….and especially cartridges…..I play the last track on side 1 of George Michael’s ‘Faith’…‘One More Try’.
Behind the synthesiser/bass, guitar/drum-machine foundation and breathy vocals….there are the gentlest, softest cymbal ‘taps’ which with some cartridges, cannot even be heard? With others…..they are so faint that they appear to be illusionary whilst with only a handful that I have heard…..they are ‘clear’.
I was once startled when listening to this track on my friend’s Rockport Sirius III with Lyra Titan i through the 3 chassis tube Aesthetix io Signature phono stage and big Peak Consult speakers…..to hear the cymbal’s strike and shimmer with a clarity and prominence that I had never heard before…..or since!
But why should this be?
Is the cymbal such a high frequency that systems and cartridges which are flat past 20K Hz are not able to do it justice?
The fundamental frequency "clang" generated by most types of cymbals is actually in the midrange (under 6 kHz, sometimes as low as 500 Hz). However, because cymbals are about as close to an impulse as you get with musical instruments (and also because they exhibit a lot of ringing), there is an enormous amount of spectral content above the fundamental, all the way to ultrasonic frequencies. Some types of cymbals are only down -35dB at 25kHz.
In simpler terms, you'll hear the "clang" of a cymbal even on a cheap clock radio that can only play midrange frequencies, but all the shimmer and tone of the cymbal will be lost. Most of the tone of a cymbal is in the high frequencies.
Please indulge me for a moment whilst I explore this quixotic phenomenon which has plagued the ‘House of Henry’ for 3 decades?
Assuming that the cymbal fundamental is 4KHz (it’s probably lower)…..then its first harmonic would be 8Khz, second harmonic 12Khz and third harmonic 16Khz?
Surely there are few cartridges with boosted frequency responses from 4K to 16K Hz?
And surely the fundamental is the ‘driving’ frequency which should be heard equally clearly on all cartridges through all systems?
Why is it then…..that this peculiar delicate tap on a high-hat cymbal can vary in audibility through every cartridge I have ever played it through?
Now I’m not saying that this test ‘proves’ the worth of any cartridge or system….particularly as the aforementioned setup was painfully bright and unmusical to my ears?
And indeed…..some of my favourite cartridges do very poorly on this particular challenge. The FR-5E and FR-6SE as well as the Empires struggle to produce any decent sound of the metronomic cymbal taps.
Interestingly……almost all of the nine LOMCs I have had in my system also fail to impress?
And this has been constant through 3 turntables, 10 arms, 3 preamps and 4 amps?
What I can say though…..is that my 2 or 3 favourite cartridges all succeed in clearly portraying these ‘taps’.
So back to the AM-10s (with AM20 stylus) which started this diatribe.
The cymbal taps are loud and clear……..the best I have yet heard in my system!
Now usually with a cartridge ‘tilted’ to the upper frequencies…..the bass is often deficient in my experience?
Not with the AM-10s.
To match its excellence in the higher registers….the bass is stunning.
Powerful, solid, commanding and accurate. I have heard no LOMC cartridge to beat or even equal the AM-10s in this department.
Massive Attack’s ‘Protection’ delivers satisfying stomach thuds whilst Jennifer Warnes’ ‘The Hunter’ reveals much more than ‘single note’ bass throb.
So here’s the trade-off.
The midrange, whilst certainly not recessed or thin…….is not as full, rounded or satisfying as the top range Signets, Empires, Fidelity Researches or Garrott P77.
But then nor are any of the LOMCs I continue to listen to?
Could I live with the midrange of the AM-10s?
I think I could?
But there’s yet more to this ‘bottom-feeder’ cartridge…….
It imparts ‘excitement’ to every recording.
What is ‘excitement’ and how does one cartridge have it and another doesn’t?
Is it ‘rise time’? Is it ‘resonance’? Is it ‘colouration’? Is it ‘good’?
Having listened to a Koetsu Urishi and Technics EPC100Mk3 in my system……..I have to come out in favour of ‘excitement’.
Even my favourite Signets, the TK-7LCa and MR 5.0Lc sound slightly laid back and relaxed compared to the AM-10s whilst the Empires sound like Dean Martin on Valium…..or was Dean Martin always on Valium?
As I wrote at the beginning……the AM-10s is not the Messiah.
It is ‘coloured’ in that it sounds unlike every other cartridge I’ve heard….but here is its charm….its value….its raison d’etre.
The AM10s gives a presentation of your vinyl that you should hear….if only to put into perspective, everything you think you know about your favourite discs?
My friend in Kentucky obviously knows his ‘onions’?
Now if only Signet was still a ‘brand’ and could bring back the AM10s with a price tag of $4590……..audiophiles would actually get to hear one?
As it is……I suspect no-one ever will?