Vinyl Lovers-- Cartridges!!!! Do you have a daily driver?


About a decade ago, some kind soul told me that the phono preamp was ever so important and that I could keep spending here and there, but to get to Oz I'd need a good one.  Since that time I've had a Manley Chinook and now Modwright's reference phono stage. 

These pieces have allowed me to get deeper into vinyl.  I have a lovely LTA Aero DAC (tubes and R2R), which I adore. Yet, nothing is the same as vinyl.  Ok--maybe my reel-to-reel stuff but I only have about a half dozen albums. 

At any rate, here's my dilemma.  I'm finding cartridges just don't hold up that long.  I keep a clean shop and my records are in very clean shape. I do not, however, have a laboratory clean room here. I run VTA generally at the middle of the spec. Still, cartridges are easy to run through--or so it seems to my ear.  

I've had mixed results retipping moving coils.  Sometimes it's fabulous!

I think I'm getting a little tired for buying cartridges only to wear them out. I've run through a Benz Micro LPS, Kiseki Purpleheart, Dynavector 20x something, Audio-Technica ART9, Ortofon 2M black, and a few others I cannot recall.  The initial outlay doesn't bother me. What's getting me is they just seem to fade off.  I doubt I'm getting more than 1000 hours before they sound raggedy. Yet, I've never counted. 

I've noticed with a high quality phono preamp you can use a lower priced cartridge to amazing results. So, I just scooped up an $800 Nagaoka MP-500, hoping I could use it as a daily driver to spare my Goldring Ethos (fantastic cart by the way). I don't have the Nag yet to evaluate.

What are others doing? If you're someone who plows through lots of vinyl in their listening sessions, do you just pony up ever year for a new $2k, $5k cartridge?  Do you run lower priced, value carts? 

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"How about a threesome?" Is what it might say.  Cartridges can be kinky.

The only cartridge I use on my main table is a Lyra Kleos SL. I have close to ~1000 hrs on it now. I listen ~500-600 hrs/yr; if it’s anything like my three previous Lyra carts, I’ll easily get at least 2500 hrs, so 4-4.5 yrs total. Pretty good.

The new table coming in has a tachometer with a run hours counter, so that may be pretty useful down the line.

Next cartridge updgrade will likely be a Soundsmith Sussurro MK 2 Gold or Hyperion MK 2, as they sound fantastic and I want their rebuild deal. The high end Lyra’s (Etna, Atlas variants) are just too much dough for the hours I put in and have high corresponding retip costs.