Ahhhh...breaking in a cartridge.


While I'm pretty sure most loudspeakers and components do have some break in period, I KNOW cartridges do break in because I've heard the diminishment of surface noise (and other stuff, which may be more subjective) over time. 

I'm breaking in a new Audio Technica ART9 cartridge.  I'm 5 hours in and my ear is either getting used to it or it's sounding better. :)  This is not much time, I know.  I am trying to listen to the same records (about 5 albums) over and over, of which I'm well familiar to see how things go.  If I had to sum up the break in thusfar in one statement I'd say things don't sound as tight and reserved. 

By the way, this cartridge is going to be killer.  It's tonal balance is superb.  Not one region of the spectrum is emphasized. 
128x128jbhiller
With all the praise and gushing the ART 9 has earned over these last couple years, imagine the hysteria it will cause for owners if AudioTechnica releases an MKII NEW AND IMPROVED version.


Its been done with all their popular carts, so perhaps it’s just a matter of time...

Theres a huge price gap between the ART 9 and the ART 1000, so maybe there is something on the drawing board that kills all those Lyra,Koetsu and other exotics.

Im approaching the 2 year mark, and too comfortable with mine, about time to blow the refund check!

Enjoy the music, gentlemen.
why not to record those 5 albums on tape or digitally during "break-in period" and then realize what is break-in (if you have not changed cartridge settings) by listening documented material, not your memory. If it works the last file must be much better than first file. 

Carts ''tuning'' seems to be the prerogative of ''carts masters''.

This imply that those ''masters '' are clairvoyant because they

know how their cart will sound ,say, 100 hour later. The question is

what their  tuning means. To my knowledge only Van den Hul is

willing to (re) adjust his carts after 300 hour of use. Why should

he do this? Is he less clairvoyant than his copmetitors? My guess

is that people accomodate to a particular sound and think that

not their hearing but the cart changed. ''Self-deception'' is the

name of this phenomena.

@tablejockey 

I agree wholeheartedly!  I love your posts.  Your positivism is just what is needed on the forums!

I'd love to try an "exotic" cart next to this ART9.  I scooped mine from LP gear for $900.  This cart is a steal at the price.  

One thing that I really like is the evenness of this thing.  That will keep me listening for long periods and avoid a honeymoon phase, wearing off to reveal weaknesses.  

Oh, this thing tracks amazingly well.  It handled the antibiasing torture tracks on my setup record better than my Ortofon 2M Black and Dynavector 20XH.