Would a worn out needle cause both the distortion and the skipping?
Yes.
Newbie Issues: Grace F9 with Micro Seiki DD-40
Clean your stylus first with a brush. Dust around the stylus tip is most common problem for any cartridges. You can look at the stylus and cantilever, maybe? How people can comment on something they can’t see ? I have big collection of Grace cartridges and never had any issue with any sample. Tracking force for most of the Grace is 1.5g Do you know how to adjust tonearm for different cartridges ? Are you sure your tonearm adjusted properly? |
Do you know how to adjust tonearm for different cartridges ? Hey @chakster thanks for the reply. The way I adjusted the tonearm for the Grace is the same process I used for the Stanton I have. So that’s my frame of reference. Every time I switched between one to the other to test (probably a total of 7-8 times), the Stanton put out exactly the same (good) quality sound and the Grace was awful as described in my original post. I downloaded the original manual for the tonearm and followed the instructions each time... connecting headshell wires, adjusting overhang, tonearm height, counterweight and lateral weight adjustments, tracking force setting and finally antiskating adjustment. Then I use an alignment protractor to set the null points according to the tonearm specific specs. I then use a vertical height gauge to set the lifting arm to the proper height above the record surface as according to the TT manual (needle tip 1 cm above) and check azimuth and if the arm is parallel. Is there any step you can see that I’m missing? Assuming for a moment that I’m being clumsy as a beginner and not being as accurate and finely tuned with these calibrations as someone more experienced - could that cause such extremely different sound outputs? Especially because going through the same process with the Stanton turns out great every time? Will look into posting a couple pics now... Thanks! Yuhau |
Chakster, I did not mean to imply that Grace cartridges per se are prone to failure. Quite the contrary. I merely stated that this particular sample that the OP purchased on-line appears to be defective. This can happen even with reputable and completely honest sellers, as witness the fact that the seller has readily agreed to a refund. I do think the subsequent ideas about being sure the stylus assembly is properly seated and that the stylus is clean are good ones. I would add one more, be sure there IS a stylus at the end of the cantilever, although the F9 has an aluminum cantilever where it is possible to press fit the stylus, which is less likely to fall off the cantilever. Still, if the stylus has fallen off the cantilever, that can result in some or all of the symptoms the OP describes. |
@hauie88 I like Stanton cartridges too, in my opinion the Stanton SC-100 WOS is much better than Grace F9 (and many other top cartridges). Stanton has a brush in front of the stylus (same on Pickering) which is good for high compliance cartridges. This is my ex Grace F9L (Luminal Trace stylus), look at yours and compare. In my opinion top model Stanton & Pickering cartridges are much better than Grace F9. If your cartridge is defective you’d better return it for full refund and then you could find yourself top Stanton 981 or top Pickering 5000 model. |