Jim,
I would say uberwaltz but his starting threads like .."is it all worth it" doesn’t resonate well with my brain that’s decoupled with springs
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Seeing a 8 year old thread that's still going with the OP is encouraging. Having a little time on my hands, the thought of my own franken table(10 year old VPI Classic) with a linear arm, intrigues me. Who in SoCal has the knowledge to do such as mod?Since Berdan is a different place now, who is the linear god in LA? Just kickin around random thoughts... I haven't done anything audio for awhile.
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@slaw I know, I gave Kevin a PM about it on day of discovery- the inside track on the spring spiral UP ! So to speak
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Tom - I believe that is the one that we were discussing earlier with UberW - Kevin. Buyer/Seller negotiations did not go well ? *************************************** Re; My "Room is the Master" -comments .....of course there will always be exceptions. In my situation....one Savannah Cat....has been known to shutdown whole rooms and prevent ESL speakers from being charged up. **************************************** @bdp24 bdp24 - Yes, the RM-10 is great on speakers other than the QUADS, but it is totally inappropriate for, say, Maggies (the RM-200 is good on Maggie ribbon tweeters, though). Plus, Roger used the ESL (and the Vandersteen Model 2) for his load in the design phase of the RM-10. Eric - I wasn’t referring to the RM10 amp. The amp I was referring to was this one.**************************************** bdp24 - The Decca/London sound is SO different, and unique unto itself. No other pickup I’ve heard makes LP’s sound so alive, so much like live music, and that is true regardless of the arm it’s mounted on, the amount of wear on it’s stylus, etc. Ok so what is your honest opinion Eric, of these reviewers opinions.....please. I ask because I have no opinion, never owned, and their reviews imply it is not an every day cart. Martin Colloms re:Jubilee
Good, well-modulated recordings contain peak amplitudes that are beyond the compass of Deccas—even the Jubilee. The cartridge sounded pretty wonderful until it failed to track, when all hell broke loose. It doesn’t mistrack in a subtle manner—you know immediately from the edgy, ringing rattles it produces that something is wrong. Nothing I could do with respect to setup or ancillary components did much to push the trackability envelope. However, this is also a significantly flawed cartridge. This may not prove fatal—it just depends on the demands you plan to make on it, and the care you can lavish on both system-matching and alignment. As in the old nursery rhyme, when it’s good, the Jubilee is very, very good; but when it’s wrong, it can be horrid.
******************************************** Michael Fremer - London Reference
You have never heard a snare drum or cymbal retrieved from a vinyl groove until you’ve heard what the London does. When tracking correctly, its transient delivery was nothing short of astonishing—by a laughable margin, the most realistic I’ve ever heard. The entire drum kit, in fact, from the kick drum up, left my mouth agape. The same with voices, which were delivered with a coherence—a wholeness—that was scary with the lights out. Rhythmically, dynamically, and, to a lesser degree, spatially, the London Reference is in a league of its own. It speaks with a single voice of authority as has no other cartridge in my experience.
But not everything fared as well; in terms of both music and noise, it was difficult to predict what I was going to hear when I dropped the stylus in a groove. Some records that are silent when tracked by the Lyra Titan were full of pops, ticks, and other garbage through the London. Some think the London tears through vinyl, but after playing some discs repeatedly, I didn't find that to be the case. Setup, however, is critical—the utter lack of "wiggle room" is made more of a challenge because you can barely see the stylus tucked underneath the body, and there's no cantilever with which to reference the zenith angle. And the London horribly mistracked some records and had difficulty with sibilants on others. Would I make the London Reference my primary cartridge? No—its performance is too unpredictable. Would I recommend it for use as an auxiliary cartridge on a second tonearm? If you can drop $4495 and not worry and you play lots of jazz and rock, don't hesitate—you'll get your money's worth with every play, and you'll play it more often than not. There's a mono configuration available, and as a mono cartridge—its original purpose in life—it must be stunning.—Michael Fremer
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