Shure never made a moving coil cartridge. They are all moving magnet. Big difference! What is the model number of your Shure?
Moving Magnet & Moving Coil Cartridges Question...
Sorry to ask this but I have not found a definitive answer yet. I have a turntable I got a couple years ago and I installed a Shure Moving Coil Cartridge. At the time I had a pre-amp that would support it. I am looking at replacing that pre-amp with an older unit that matches the rest of me Carver equipment but it does not support MC. If I get an external amp for this situation, which I see online, can I use it in the regular turntable input in the pre-amp? I believe I am seeing no but again..nothing that seems definitive. I may have to replace my MC cart with a different one that the pre-amp supports...
Thanks in advance for your help on this.
Bill
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@yogiboy : You were posting while I was typing! |
RIAA Equalization of a phono cartridge’s signal (boost bass/cut highs) must occur somewhere, and a phono cartridge’s signal strength must also get boosted UP to Line Level strength, then thru a volume control then to the amp. Unless specifically noted as MC, built-in Phono Stages provide RIAA EQ. They only accept ’sufficiently strong’ Phono signals of two types: 1. MM Moving Magnet typical signal strength 2. HIGH OUTPUT MC Moving Coil, signal strong enough that it does NOT need any pre-preamplification. IF you ever get a LOW OUTPUT Moving Coil Cartridge, those signals need pre-preamplification, to get up to the strength of MM or High Output MC. After that, RIAA Equalization and normal preamplification up to Line Level must occur. Step-Up-Transformers (SUT) are made to increase the strength of LOW OUTPUT Moving Coil up to the strength of MM or MC High Output. That pre-preamplified signal then needs to go thru the RIAA Equalizarion process (somewhere). The SUT can be a separate device, OR, it can be incorporated in a Preamp, always labeled Phono MC. Either a separate Phono MC input jack, or a single jack that can be ’switched’ to either MM or MC. The switch can be in the front or back of a unit. Note: some preamps or receivers have a ’Phono/Aux’ input. They are not true MM Phono inputs providing the needed RIAA Equalization. They are simply NAMED Phono for convenience, they require external prior Phono processing elsewhere. |
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