ZYX Universe, Dynavector XV-1s, vdH Colibri, ??


Last Sunday i finally took the time to compare three cartridges; my Dynavector XV-1s (.24mv output), a friends ZYX Universe (.24mv output) and my vdH Colibri (.85mv output) with the darTZeel preamp and phono stage in battery power.

Some background. in a post from my system thread i describe the path that brought me to be experimenting with various cartridges. that post also raves about listening to battery power with the darTZeel phono stage. i promised to compare the Dynavector and ZYX to the Colibri on battery power.

so that is what i did.

the darTZeel preamp has plenty of gain (62db in the phono stage and 20 db in the gain stage of the pre itself) so even with the relatively low output of the Dynavector and ZYX there are no gain issues at all, i only needed to go to about 2 o'clock on the volume attenuator for very high volume with the 95db efficient VR9 speakers. in battery mode the darTZeel phono stage is extremely quiet; so the normal advantage the Colibri has over other cartridges with lower gain is considerably reduced.

the darTZeel phono stage is set with 100ohm loading that seemed to work well with all the cartridges but is not ideal. i know that the Colibri likes about 400-500 ohms ideally; and from what i understand the Dynavector and ZYX both are ok (if not ideal) around 100 ohms.

the Dynavector is pretty new and only has maybe 30 hours on it; so it has not yet openned up completely. i am told the ZYX is fully broken in......and my Colibri is most definitly broken in.

i am very familiar with the setup parameters of the Colibri. i run it with the arm slightly down at the back, and track it at 1.45 grams as measured by my ALM-01 Winds Electronic Stylus Pressure Gauge. with the Rockport there is no anti-skate issues.

i ran the Dynavector XV-1s at 2.70 grams and slightly down in the rear of the arm.......and the ZYX Universe at 1.95 grams and the arm level.

i had played around previously with the Dynavector for my 30 hours and had had the Universe in the system for about a week prior to get it dialed in. so i had a reasonably good idea of setup on each cartridge.

the Rockport does make it easy to switch cartridges very quickly as all you need to do is change the counterweight to the proper one for the weight of that particular cartridge. then adjust the arm length for exact stylus position (there is a groove in the platter that you sight the stylus exactly inside for perfect position), rotate the arm for visual azimuth (i can get it very very close to perfect), and set your VTF. in practice about a 20 minute job if you already know the VTF you want.

so i was able to first listen to the Colibri, switch quickly to the Universe, listen again, then switch quickly to the XV-1s, and listen again.

before i get into what i heard on Sunday i want to describe my perceptions of how the Dynavector and ZYX compared when i the Universe first arrived from my friend. for reasons described in the previous post i had purchased the Dynavector as an alternative to my Colibri and it had been in my system for about 6 weeks. i had been using my Lamm LP2 Delux phono stage with the Placette passive RVC and Tenor 300 watt Hybrid monoblocks. i liked the Dynavector; compared to the Colibri it was less exciting, less on the edge, less vivid and immediate and less explosive......OTOH although it had a little color it was fairly neutral, always natural, very involving and had very good detail if not quite like the Colibri. more of my favorite music was enjoyable compared to the Colibri.

when i installed the ZYX Universe my first impression was of slightly less smoothness and naturalness compared to the Dynavector but more of the excitement of the Colibri. i played some of the Lps that had been on the edge with the Colibri and the ZYX was more natural and under control yet considerably more exciting than the Dynavector.

on the Lamm/Placette/Tenor my initial impressions were that these were simply two good cartridges that had different perspectives. as i listened more to the ZYX i could never really get fully involved into the music as i had felt with the Dynavector or especially the Colibri. why? i'm not exactly sure. it was like i wasn't hearing as far into the music as i liked. nothing was missing from the 'checklist' but i wasn't fulfilled.

the Lamm has 57.5 db of gain, has 400 ohm loading, and is extremely quiet. it has a very slight warmth, just to the dark side of neutral; but has a textural richness and refinement that i have not heard from any other phono stage (until dart battery power). it should be an ideal match for the ZYX.

so that was how it was before i tried battery power (as described in my previous post). i hope this makes sense up to this point.

now to the three cartridge comparison.

first the Colibri. the Colibri can be a 'train wreck'. it breaks all the rules. the barrel and canteliver are out of algnment with the cartridge 'body'......so setting asthimuth you ignore the body and just align the cateliver and stylus. i have owned 3 Colibris and they are all different yet all inconsistent. they can have any length canteliver a customer wants, gold windings, copper windings, wood bodies, polycarbonite bodies.......they have such little play in their suspensions that they can 'buzz' on certain edgy types of music. they are the Formula 1 cars of cartridges. the Colibri is so immediate, so explosive, yet so natural and so incisive that if all elsewhere is not about perfect.....you will know it and there will be a problem.

OTOH when all is right the Colibri is magnificent.

long story made short; with the battery powered dart phono stage in my system; the Dynavector and especially the ZYX are not nearly in the class of the Colibri. as the system improves, the lead of the Colibri gets larger.

i used tracks on 7 Lps for this comparison.

1.Muddy Waters 'Folk Singer', 'Good Morning School Girl', Classic reissue.

the Colibri here made the guitar plucks real and there. the whole musical sense was vivid and immediate. there was not a sense of the recording chain.....just some guys doing their thing. totally involving. each note dripped with reality. brilliant colors in the vocals and guitar overtones. ALIVE.

with the Universe it sounded great, nothing missing, satisfying. but; the guitar pluck was not as vivid, the colors were less vivid, there was overall a bit of haze that only compared to the Colibri was evidant. maybe no other cartridge would expose that issue. the decay of notes was reduced which reduced the overall involvement. sounded like a different pressing. NOT ALIVE.

on the Dynavector this was more different. less energy, less edge. transients were softened. smoother and warmer. very nice. a great sense of ease but too buttoned down for me. this track should boggie. excellent bloom and note decay.

2. The Royal Ballet, side one, Classic 33rpm reissue.

Colibri; spooky good. i don't want to stop. an 'oh my god' about every 30 seconds. i try to critically listen but it's hard.....i just want to close my eyes and forget about everything. about the best reproduced strings i have ever heard. such a sense of venue, the 'subway' and 'buses' outside seem real. where am i?

ZYX Universe; a different realm......reproduced music. very good.....but less of everything. very, very good. specifically, less separation of instruments, less delicacy
and less clarity. the effortlessness of the Colibri in sorting out the complex textures is missing.

Dynavector; not the detail or energy of the Colibri but very natural. slightly veiled but warm and inviting. not
wholey real but still much beauty. good flow and pulse of the music.

it's getting late; i will continue tomorrow morning or evening as time permits.

the Dynavector and ZYX are excellent cartridges that by themselves are rightly considered SOTA. just because i hear what i hear doesn't invalidate anyone else's perspectives.

so as not to attract too many flames i want to clearly state that i limit my comments to my specific system and setup choices. there are many varibles i have not or cannot address; arms, cartridge loading, breakin, taste, settleing in. i did not do the tiny tweaking of these cartridges that one does over time to dial them in just right. OTOH the differences that i heard are considerable and not subtle.

it just one guys opinion on one particular system on one particular day.

with that said; flame away.
mikelavigne
Raul, Do you have experience with other VdH cartridges like the grass hopper IV and Black beauty?
I didn't want to move to Colibri due to its lower output which doesn't work well in my setup.
Dear S23chang: I have experience with the Frog but not with the ones that you named.
Now, the Colibri comes too in a medium output version where you will not have problems in your system.

Regards and enjoy the music.
Raul.
Back in 2000, given the same price range, I decided to stick with Black beauty at the time.
Black Beauty was the improved Grass Harper IV GLA and the latest cartridge before the Colibri was introduced in 2000. According to the person who sold me the Black Beauty, he claimed that the Colibri was even quieter than Black Beauty if I can live with the lower output and I was suppose to be able to hear even more detail.
I didn't see any point to switch then and even now since I'm very satisfy with Black Beauty.
thank you for your response.
I have just read Arthur Salvatore's "swooning synopsis" of the ZYX Airy III cartridge(he claims it to be the best he's heard,and clearly mentions "Doug's" comments on the other fabs design)with a yawn.Why,because I have been lucky enough to finally hear the flagship Universe.The truth is,that I have been able to detect,and EASILY,it's superiority of performance,in GENERAL, though NOT compared to other top performers.This ALL clearly heard in a system where the arm was CLEARLY set up(originally,and then tweaked)in an "almost" INEPT fashion(go ahead,hit me)bordering on the "CLUELESS",as I had suspected some months ago.To be off in anti-skate,by SO much margin,is inexcusable,and NO amount of rationalization can detract from that.Though the owners of the other two arms will,no doubt,exclaim I'm pissed off or too rapped up in the "far from perfect" 2.2!And,far from perfect it was/is!Yet it is still superior,in every way,to the Triplanar(I've owned that arm),and NOW I have my reservations as to the real superiority of the "OTHER" arm.Though the main system was fabulous,with a capital "F"!!

All in all,this tells me that the UNIV is a wonderful design,and that the 7 man listening session was,and is KAPUT!!Any comments about the three arm comparison can only be taken as "laughable",IMO(which I'm happy to stand by,BTW)!!I STILL love you guys,but I am compelled to "tell it like it is"!Or as in the case of the NOW "supremely defunct" 7 man listening session as it "WAS"!!

Best to all!!
Sirspeedy, how much time did you spend with the 7 man listening group, hearing what they heard, and seeing the set up they saw??? It is impossible for you to make these comments, and expect to be taken seriously. The people who were there have spent their own hard-earned money based on the sound they EXPERIENCED. Who sounds more absurd, the one who makes a decision based on their experience, or the person who rejects the results of their session, but has never heard what happened?

Sirspeedy how can you claim to have heard the TriPlanar and the Graham (which is inferior in every way) when you stated earlier that you had the TriPlanar on a Sota Cosmos on which it was IMPOSSIBLE to set the arm up correctly?!? There is a logical gap here. Besides, giving you the benefit of the doubt, I'm sure you would not out-of-hand reject the merits of an arm which you never gave a fair shake.

I borrowed a pair of Quad ESL 63 speakers to audition at home, but I could not use them since my amp protection circuitry kept kicking in due to the fact that it could not drive the load. How stupid would I sound if I rejected the quality claims of people who had a system in which proper set up and drive was a possibility???

A session cannot be 'Kaput' the word simply does not fit, a lot like your summary of the events which you did not experience.