The Mutech RM Kanda Hyabusa
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- 37 posts total
The Following is a review from a Forum Member that I Trust their experiences and reports. It is a Translation, so will be best read with a Broader Mind. ________________________________________________________ The time had come this morning, DHL delivered it Mutech Hayabusa Breakfast was postponed and the tools unpacked. In the meantime, I was still in contact with Asian Hayabusa users who suggested I use the 12 'gloss tonearm, so I had already released the gloss over the weekend. These are at least the settings of the initial assembly, that may change after a few hours of play. The first sonic impression brings the system close to the family sound of My Sonic Lab and related brands, whereby I really like the very beautiful and expressive mid-range and immediately noticed. In my chain I will leave the Hayabusa in the gloss tonearm, but I will probably switch from the also very full and round sounding gloss tonearm cable to one from Nordost or JPS, as my current chain is currently rather warm and the tonearm cabling is therefore more neutral may. With My Sonic Lab and other pickups from this company, you usually have to pay twice as much as the Mutech Hayabusa for the Boron needle carrier. In this respect, I find the price-performance ratio of the Hayabusa very good, a successful entry into Germany Now I'll continue to implement the system and enjoy it, I'm curious to see how it develops. |
The Reviewer in my view can be trusted with their perception of the Sound Qualities on offer. The Sonic Labs is a Reference Cartridge Again the following is a extract from the same reviewer, comparing the Audio Technica Art 9 XI. This might be a Good Competitor to Trial as well, with money left available. _________________________________________________________ Now I enjoy playing records with a cello or a violin, for example. The vocal range of the XI is very precise in terms of its spatial representation and, overall, more in the warm range. Tonally not dissimilar to my My Sonic Lab systems. |
I don’t know which Transfiguration cartridge this might be comparable to, but the very low internal resistance with the relatively high output (although still in the low output category) reminds me of another Japanese cartridge that has been on the market for a few years. The company name or the cartridge model name begins with "H", I think, and is not "Hana". The one I have in mind has an internal resistance around 1 ohm and an output of about 0.3 to 0.4mV. It got good reviews but is rather faded from the scene these days. I’m searching for the identity but no luck so far. Edit: Found it! The Haniwa HCTR-01. This cartridge has rather astounding specs: If I am reading the specs correctly, internal resistance is 0.4 ohms and inductance is 0.3uH (micro-henry). The inductance is 30 to 100 times LESS than a typical LOMC cartridge, which is in turn about 1000X lower than a typical MM cartridge. The Haniwa website does not state the signal output voltage, I think because the cartridge is designed to drive a current-mode phono stage, specifically their own product, the Haniwa HEQA03, which presents an 0.25 ohm phono input impedance!!! Now I realize the Haniwa is totally unique, probably not related to the cartridge you want to discuss. Sorry.For anyone who is interested, here is the web page: https://haniwaaudio.com/products/analog-front-end-system/ |
- 37 posts total