Cartridges: Complete Scam?


I’m very new to analog, and researching my options on forums I keep coming across the same sentiment: that past the ultra low-end cartridges, there is very little gains in actual sound quality and that all you’re getting are different styles and colorations to the sound.

So, for example, if I swapped out my $200 cartridge that came with my table for a Soundsmith, Dynavector, Oracle, etc, I may notice a small improvement in detail and dynamics, but I’m mostly just going to get a different flavor. Multiple people told me they perffered thier old vintage cartridges over modern laser-cut boron-necked diamonds.

It’s possible that these people are just desperately defending thier old junk and/or have never heard high end audio. But if what they’re saying is true, than the cartridge industry is a giant SCAM. If I blow 2.5k minimum on an Air Tight I better get a significant improvement over a $200 bundler — and if just all amounts to a different coloration, than that is a straight-up scam ripoff.

So guys — are these forums just BS-ing me here? Is it really a giant scam?
madavid0
Okay guys, I'm a little confused here...the instructions for the AT-OC9ML/II say that if I'm using a MM/MC head amp that 100-Ohms resistance should be set...my Musical Fidelity supports this. But it ALSO says the recommended load is 20-Ohms and to use 20-Ohms in a step-up transformer? So, wait a second...how is it that a head amp is fine for 100-Ohms but if using a SUT you should use 20-Ohms? Does that mean I really need a SUT or a preamp with a 20-Ohm input? What does 20 vs 100 Ohms sound like anyway? I seem to be getting enough gain, so I don't understand what this means?
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"how is it that a head amp is fine for 100-Ohms but if using a SUT you should use 20-Ohms? "

Head amp is active and SUT is passive. The mfr specifies different loads for active devices and passive devices. Follow their instructions.
Life is a total SCAM
I mean really, you are born then you die?
What a rip off........