Dear friends : Over the time on this thread and along the MM/MI vintage ( mainly. ) cartridges " discovery " came too the cartridge cantilevers/stylus shapes subjects that if we analize both cartridge parts we can " follow " its important role/history in the cartridge industry developed through the years.
I would like to start talking about cantilevers and first than all is important to be aware that cartridge cantilever does not makes MUSIC but is an important part in the cartridge design because at the end it's whom hold the stylus tip and this is its main target but things are that the cartridge stylus LP grooves tracking modulations develops the movements of those groove modulations along other " movements " to the cantilever and the best cantilever is the one that does not develops any kind of additional resonances/vibrations by it self ( this is the ideal cantilever but just does not exist. ) .
We all know that in reality all cantilevers ( it does not matters its build material/shape/lenght used. ) develops additional resonances/vibrations/movements that the transducer convert in " sound " and this " sound " unfortunatelly degrades what is recordedd on those LP grooves so in the cartridge manufacturers " hands " is the cantilever build material of choice for its different cartridge models and ceratinly to the market price point they want it.
In our beloved vintage MM/MI cartridges the " rule " ( for whatever reasons. ) was aluminum material/aluminum alloy where its Young Modulus it's to lower as it's its value in the Mohs scale making aluminum more resonant that what could be desired for and obviously putting colorations in the final MUSIC reproduction by the transducer.
Aluminum alloys normally could comes with choice of alternatives as: cooper, silicon, magnesium, manganeso, etc, etc and those kind of alloys helps for the self cantilever resonances can goes a little lower. Example: Sumiko Talisman uses magnesium in its cantilever alloy.
The manufacturers due to the very high competence for the cartridge market really figth in between trying to get the higher part of that market t and we can see that some manufacturers used aluminum diamond coated cantilevers or aluminum gold plating cantilevers as Empire or as Empire whom used " aluminum with boron vapored internally inertial damped, tapered alloy cantilever ". In theory for the cantilever self resonances could goes lower.
Then appeared beryllium cantilever material in the top cartridge models that been better than aluminum for that task but stilll was not the " ideal " one.
Almost all of us like it a lot the beryllium colorations even that degrades the cartridge signal.
Btw, Audio Technica used too ( as Empire ) the cantilever gold plating.
In the task to lower the cantilever music/sound degradation came other technical better materials than beryllium like ruby ( Grace ), sapphire ( B&O, ADC ), titanium (ADC) and then technically the best cantilever material ( by a wide margin. ) boron ( Technics,AT,etc. ) that's in second place down diamond for that kind of cartridge task.
There is no MM/MI with diamond cantilever and Boron had and has a wide success used in cantilevers by any kind of vintage and today cartridges: MM/MI/MC.
In the other side the stylus shape " history " is way interesting and all of us are witness of that developed history.
As aluminum was the rule for cantilevers spherical/conical was the " rule " for stylus shape till Grado patented the elliptical shape.
Even in those times manufacturers had on sale cartridge ( Supex ) models that came with 2 different stylus shape ( this is that when a customer bougth the cartridge when the box was opened inside came two different stylus: conical and ellipthical.
Other manufacturers gave the choice of stylus shape to their customers taking advantage of the cartridge replacement stylus.
Elliptical stylus shape were manufactured with different dimensions , example>: 0.3x0.8, 0.2x0.7, etc, etc.
Yes, normally cartridges with elliptical stylus shape performs not only with better quality performance but more important is that pick up LP grooves recorded information that conical shape can't do it. So, it puts us nearer to the recording.
But what for me was an still is not only a " departure " in the cartridge industry that puts it at a way higher spot that maybe no one could imagined was the invent made by Noiro Shibata ( JVC. ) with the " outstanding " new Shibata stylus shape that with out that gentleman invent maybe the Replicant 100 does not existed today.
For me the Shibata created a revolution in the cartridge industry followed for an evolutions that still continue..
What happened and followed the Shibata starting in the cartridge market and industry? well all manufacturers wanted that their models could been marketed with the Shibata stylus ( especially for the CD4 recordings. ) but using the true Shibata stylus means all those cartridge manufacturers must have to pay a Shibata fee to JVC and I think that other than Audio Technica no other manufacturer was willing to do it and then started to appers a lot of different " new stylus shapes " that all of them ( with little modification. ) try to mimic the original Shibata but no one had success about and original Shibata stylus stays as " the one ".
Manufacturers wanted that Shibata shape in their stylus cartridges..So, customers started to buy cartridges thinking that they bougth a cartridge with a " better " stylus shape that even the Shibata one and that performs better when that was not true.
As me you can remember some of those modified Shibata stylus shapes : AKG analog 6, Empire LAC and paralinear, Stanton stereohedron, Empire " 4 dimensional " ( series 4000. ), Azden Vital lineal ( Azden had the model with: conical, elliptical and Shibata like stylus shapes. ), Acutex STR, Astatic parabolic, Grace luminal trace and other with names as: fine line, hiperelliptical, micro point line contact, etc, etc.
But no one of those modified stylus shapes had true success, Shibata was the only one that did not disappeared as all the other stylus shape and still today is used by very well regarded manufacturers as Ortofon in its top of the series model Cadenza Black and used too in the Jubilee.
My " hat off " to Noiro Shibata great contribution to the cartridge industry where we all are part of it.
A.J. van den Hul was and is important part of that stylus shape evolution that in those old times and other than the VDH own MM designs his stylus shape was present in the AKG Supernova VDH model and in the Goldring Electro.
Ogura was and is too an important contributor to the evolution with his Line Contact.
Next link is a wide research about the stylus shape history made it by a gentleman through VE forum and that maybe some of you already knew of its existence. From this forum I want to say to that gentleman: thank's for it really appreciated, it's the " bible " about and I hope be of interest for all of you as was and is for me:
https://www.vinylengine.com/turntable_forum/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=22894
Btw and from the net: " Until 1977, diamond stylus tips used to be made from actual, natural, diamonds. After that, the industrial diamond made its entrance. Made in a lab and chemically identical in structure, artificial diamond is nevertheless said to be slightly less durable than real diamond. ""
That could means that the Denon 103 or ADC 25/26 and maybe other before 1977 design cartridges used natural diamond ? I can't know.
This is a photo of the FG S used in Allaerts cartridge. The photo came from an ex-Agoner that I find out in the net and the interesting issue is that Allaerts play time spec for this cartridge is: 10K hours ! ! : ( maybe Allaerts use natural diamond in its stylus tip? )
http://i586.photobucket.com/albums/ss301/jloveys/Afbeelding006Large.jpg
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.
I would like to start talking about cantilevers and first than all is important to be aware that cartridge cantilever does not makes MUSIC but is an important part in the cartridge design because at the end it's whom hold the stylus tip and this is its main target but things are that the cartridge stylus LP grooves tracking modulations develops the movements of those groove modulations along other " movements " to the cantilever and the best cantilever is the one that does not develops any kind of additional resonances/vibrations by it self ( this is the ideal cantilever but just does not exist. ) .
We all know that in reality all cantilevers ( it does not matters its build material/shape/lenght used. ) develops additional resonances/vibrations/movements that the transducer convert in " sound " and this " sound " unfortunatelly degrades what is recordedd on those LP grooves so in the cartridge manufacturers " hands " is the cantilever build material of choice for its different cartridge models and ceratinly to the market price point they want it.
In our beloved vintage MM/MI cartridges the " rule " ( for whatever reasons. ) was aluminum material/aluminum alloy where its Young Modulus it's to lower as it's its value in the Mohs scale making aluminum more resonant that what could be desired for and obviously putting colorations in the final MUSIC reproduction by the transducer.
Aluminum alloys normally could comes with choice of alternatives as: cooper, silicon, magnesium, manganeso, etc, etc and those kind of alloys helps for the self cantilever resonances can goes a little lower. Example: Sumiko Talisman uses magnesium in its cantilever alloy.
The manufacturers due to the very high competence for the cartridge market really figth in between trying to get the higher part of that market t and we can see that some manufacturers used aluminum diamond coated cantilevers or aluminum gold plating cantilevers as Empire or as Empire whom used " aluminum with boron vapored internally inertial damped, tapered alloy cantilever ". In theory for the cantilever self resonances could goes lower.
Then appeared beryllium cantilever material in the top cartridge models that been better than aluminum for that task but stilll was not the " ideal " one.
Almost all of us like it a lot the beryllium colorations even that degrades the cartridge signal.
Btw, Audio Technica used too ( as Empire ) the cantilever gold plating.
In the task to lower the cantilever music/sound degradation came other technical better materials than beryllium like ruby ( Grace ), sapphire ( B&O, ADC ), titanium (ADC) and then technically the best cantilever material ( by a wide margin. ) boron ( Technics,AT,etc. ) that's in second place down diamond for that kind of cartridge task.
There is no MM/MI with diamond cantilever and Boron had and has a wide success used in cantilevers by any kind of vintage and today cartridges: MM/MI/MC.
In the other side the stylus shape " history " is way interesting and all of us are witness of that developed history.
As aluminum was the rule for cantilevers spherical/conical was the " rule " for stylus shape till Grado patented the elliptical shape.
Even in those times manufacturers had on sale cartridge ( Supex ) models that came with 2 different stylus shape ( this is that when a customer bougth the cartridge when the box was opened inside came two different stylus: conical and ellipthical.
Other manufacturers gave the choice of stylus shape to their customers taking advantage of the cartridge replacement stylus.
Elliptical stylus shape were manufactured with different dimensions , example>: 0.3x0.8, 0.2x0.7, etc, etc.
Yes, normally cartridges with elliptical stylus shape performs not only with better quality performance but more important is that pick up LP grooves recorded information that conical shape can't do it. So, it puts us nearer to the recording.
But what for me was an still is not only a " departure " in the cartridge industry that puts it at a way higher spot that maybe no one could imagined was the invent made by Noiro Shibata ( JVC. ) with the " outstanding " new Shibata stylus shape that with out that gentleman invent maybe the Replicant 100 does not existed today.
For me the Shibata created a revolution in the cartridge industry followed for an evolutions that still continue..
What happened and followed the Shibata starting in the cartridge market and industry? well all manufacturers wanted that their models could been marketed with the Shibata stylus ( especially for the CD4 recordings. ) but using the true Shibata stylus means all those cartridge manufacturers must have to pay a Shibata fee to JVC and I think that other than Audio Technica no other manufacturer was willing to do it and then started to appers a lot of different " new stylus shapes " that all of them ( with little modification. ) try to mimic the original Shibata but no one had success about and original Shibata stylus stays as " the one ".
Manufacturers wanted that Shibata shape in their stylus cartridges..So, customers started to buy cartridges thinking that they bougth a cartridge with a " better " stylus shape that even the Shibata one and that performs better when that was not true.
As me you can remember some of those modified Shibata stylus shapes : AKG analog 6, Empire LAC and paralinear, Stanton stereohedron, Empire " 4 dimensional " ( series 4000. ), Azden Vital lineal ( Azden had the model with: conical, elliptical and Shibata like stylus shapes. ), Acutex STR, Astatic parabolic, Grace luminal trace and other with names as: fine line, hiperelliptical, micro point line contact, etc, etc.
But no one of those modified stylus shapes had true success, Shibata was the only one that did not disappeared as all the other stylus shape and still today is used by very well regarded manufacturers as Ortofon in its top of the series model Cadenza Black and used too in the Jubilee.
My " hat off " to Noiro Shibata great contribution to the cartridge industry where we all are part of it.
A.J. van den Hul was and is important part of that stylus shape evolution that in those old times and other than the VDH own MM designs his stylus shape was present in the AKG Supernova VDH model and in the Goldring Electro.
Ogura was and is too an important contributor to the evolution with his Line Contact.
Next link is a wide research about the stylus shape history made it by a gentleman through VE forum and that maybe some of you already knew of its existence. From this forum I want to say to that gentleman: thank's for it really appreciated, it's the " bible " about and I hope be of interest for all of you as was and is for me:
https://www.vinylengine.com/turntable_forum/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=22894
Btw and from the net: " Until 1977, diamond stylus tips used to be made from actual, natural, diamonds. After that, the industrial diamond made its entrance. Made in a lab and chemically identical in structure, artificial diamond is nevertheless said to be slightly less durable than real diamond. ""
That could means that the Denon 103 or ADC 25/26 and maybe other before 1977 design cartridges used natural diamond ? I can't know.
This is a photo of the FG S used in Allaerts cartridge. The photo came from an ex-Agoner that I find out in the net and the interesting issue is that Allaerts play time spec for this cartridge is: 10K hours ! ! : ( maybe Allaerts use natural diamond in its stylus tip? )
http://i586.photobucket.com/albums/ss301/jloveys/Afbeelding006Large.jpg
Regards and enjoy the MUSIC NOT DISTORTIONS,
R.