Agreed all around. I have a relatively new standard mount Prestige Black that replaces an older Shure M92E precursor on a Mitsubishi DP-12 belt drive turntable. Aside from having to shim the cartridge so that the stylus holder tracks level with the record surface, setup was simple and the result quite good. I have the stylus set to track at 1.5 grams, and the cartridge seems very happy there.
The high end and midrange produced are light and lovely as played through my AMC 3050a integrated amp using the high level phono input and my home brew Moral/Vifa driver bookshelf speakers. The bass is a little wooley when compared to my CDP, and even though I have gone through some lengths to isolate the plinth from vibration, some overhang remains. Not sure how much to attribute this to the cartridge and how much is the fault of the lightweight and fairly flexible plastic headshell and tonearm. In any case, it doesn't really detract from what this cartridge does right.
The cartridge/turntable system is remarkably quiet for such a budget rig, and there is only the very slightest of hum noticeable at the end of the recording as the cartridge approaches the motor on the opposite corner of the plinth, and then only at very high volume and in the absence of signal. I do not notice the loss of soundstage reported above as the stylus moves toward the center of a record.
I love this cartridge and listening to all those strings on David Grisman's Hot Dawg recording just sounds about as sweet as you can get. Overall good dynamics, good air around instruments, and would agree that vocals are very well rendered. Cartridge is so good, makes want to get a different table that has a little better timing and a little stiffer tonearm. But ain't that always the case with a solid upgrade?
The high end and midrange produced are light and lovely as played through my AMC 3050a integrated amp using the high level phono input and my home brew Moral/Vifa driver bookshelf speakers. The bass is a little wooley when compared to my CDP, and even though I have gone through some lengths to isolate the plinth from vibration, some overhang remains. Not sure how much to attribute this to the cartridge and how much is the fault of the lightweight and fairly flexible plastic headshell and tonearm. In any case, it doesn't really detract from what this cartridge does right.
The cartridge/turntable system is remarkably quiet for such a budget rig, and there is only the very slightest of hum noticeable at the end of the recording as the cartridge approaches the motor on the opposite corner of the plinth, and then only at very high volume and in the absence of signal. I do not notice the loss of soundstage reported above as the stylus moves toward the center of a record.
I love this cartridge and listening to all those strings on David Grisman's Hot Dawg recording just sounds about as sweet as you can get. Overall good dynamics, good air around instruments, and would agree that vocals are very well rendered. Cartridge is so good, makes want to get a different table that has a little better timing and a little stiffer tonearm. But ain't that always the case with a solid upgrade?