Koetsu Urushi stylus shape


I have to re-tip my Koetsu Urushi, I am most likely to have it done by a private re-tipper, rather than to send it back to Tokyo. Does anyone here know what is the original conformation, e.g., line contact vs microridge or other? Thanks for any info.

lewm

I bought my Urushi in Tokyo.  I still have the dealer warranty card, and I am sure that I could submit it to Koetsu for rebuild under the auspices of the Tokyo dealer, which would probably be less expensive than going through the US distributor, who probably would not want to handle it anyway. for the foregoing reason.  However, I am not a patient man. The cantilever on my sample is fine and OEM, so all I need is a new stylus.

Expert Stylus was the go to rebuilder for Koetsu cartridges in Europe during the transition time between the elder and son. Seems like the best choice for service if not using the factory rebuilder. 

Dear @thekong  : "  about 20 years ago...." or today no re-tipper will make that your original cartridge performs the same, no one.

 

R.

 

Hello, I came across this thread a bit late but I have first hand experience with what is being discussed so I thought to chime in - if a bit late. I have a small collection of Sugano built Koetsu which I am rather fond of. My favourites are two MKI Urushi which were the swan song of his personal production. These were the first to feature platinum magnets and unlike the Urushi of today have aluminium chassis with the Urushi lacquer on the outside much thicker than you see in todays models. This cartridge weighs 13g and I prefer them to Jades and Coralstones. I used the first one for several years until the stylus departed and being of the opinions stated above I sent it to Expert Stylus. It came back with the stylus grossly askew and when I mentioned this they said it must have been my mishandling and I would have to pay for another retip. I went forward despite the fact that I had not mishandled the cartridge. Upon return the cartridge in no way sounded like it had before, all the magic was stripped from the presentation, even after 50 or so hours of break in, and thus I shelved it. I pulled out its stable mate, only several serial numbers apart, and the difference was gross, night and day. The rebuild had none of what I seek in Koetsu. Eventually I sent it back to Koetsu and it was more than fully restored exceeding its older and more worn stable mate on its return. There are a lot of opinions floating around. The real life experience above means I will only be sending my Koetsu off to Koetsu for rebuilds. It is common to see third party rebuilt Koetsu for sale and this is for a reason - you lose a beautiful cartridge along with the cost of the cheap and disappointing rebuild...