Is Van den Hul Frog Gold a good choice for my rig?


Hi!  I have what would probably be called a mid-fi system in these parts, although it's made up of components I really love with highish end used/open box parts bought because my tastes are Waygu, while my budget is nice brisket.

I recently acquired a gently-used VPI Titan (the older, belt-driven, model although still sold) with a 12 inch Fat Boy tone arm, in part because the price was fantastic.

After much study, albeit in complete ignorance, I am strongly leaning to the Van den Hul Frog Gold on my own, but a conclusion reinforced because my friend has it on a similarly-designed composite tone arm from Poland and the Frog sounds great. The rest of his system, however, is straight highest-end McIntosh.  (He lives far away or I'd ask to borrow his cartridge for an audition.)

In contrast to his stock top-to-bottom, system, my system is a bit of a hodge-podge of things I love, largely designed around streaming/digital, to wit:

Phone preamp (new to me): Parasound JC3+

Preamp: Evo Luna 400

Amps: Classe Delta Monoblocks

Speakers: B&W 800 D3

Subs: SVS PB-16 ultras (2)  (I have a dual hi-pass, low pass, up at pre-amp to divide between amps and amplified subs before amplification.)

(I do love base and low-end.)

Commercial 20 amp Furman power conditioner

Digital source: Lumin U1, Esoteric K-03XD SACD/CD player with excellent DACs)

This is a $3600 cartridge, which chokes me, but I could pay more or less, for the right thing.

Listen to everything, but mainly listen to classical while streaming (due to excellent choices) and rock/blues/jazz/something that pairs with Scotch while listening to analog.

 

davetheoilguy

Seems a single major upgrade brings longer reward. 😃 Although, I suppose you just upgraded as models were released.

Audio Research PH 2, 2SE, 3, 3SE, 5, 8, and finally an ARC Ref 3

 

Yes. But each time I upgraded, I first, researched the heck out of the current market to determine whether switching to a different company was appropriate, typically auditioning as well. Audio Research always led the pack.