MM cart on a fr24 arm


Looking for either a new design or vintage mm cart for my soon to arrive restored garrard 301 in which the left arm will be a fidelity research fr24.
The cart must be one that is easy to mount and get the best possible results from it relatively easy. Budget around $300-$400. Thanks.
icorem
Fleib
by the way you mention the Nagaoka mp-200 as one to consider. When looking at its specs I see 2 compliance numbers - dynamic compliance at 7.2 and static compliance at 20. Which number to consider as the 20 seems like taking it out of consideration with a 17g tonearm.
Icorem,
Dynamic compliance (cu) is the one to consider with arm matching. Standard calculations are with cu measured at 10Hz. Many Japanese companies measure at 100Hz so these must be converted. A 100Hz cu of 6.5 (AT95) = 15cu at 10Hz. A 100Hz cu of 10 (150MLX) = 18cu.
Conversion isn't straightforward. 100Hz cu is actually a measure of tracking ability at 100Hz, not compliance. The above figures have been verified for specific carts. VTF usually coincides with compliance. In this case recommended VTF of 1.7 to 2.25g should match up nicely.

This is not written in stone and results might vary. A high compliance cart on a heavy arm will have resonant frequency below the recommended range of 8 to 12Hz which makes it more susceptible to low frequency mechanical and acoustic feedback, woofer pumping and record warp problems. This is alleviated somewhat by a stable setup, high quality arm bearings, and arm damping. Either the MP200 or the AT7V should work out nicely.

Capacitance load is your preamp capacitance + cables + internal arm wire. If your phono is 100pF you should be okay with an AT and most supplied wires - they average around 100pF. If you have an audiofool tonearm cable, who knows? Nagaoka actually recommends 100pF load, but I suspect this is for a preamp setting.
The AT has a balanced sound and I think has more detail than the MP200. Even though the 200 has a boron cantilever the tip is .4 x .7. The 7V is sharper, nude .2 x .7 w/tapered aluminum cantilever. My experience with Nagaoka is limited, but I know the AT is a excellent cart, reminiscent of a Signet TK5Ea. That's what I recommend.
Regards,

Had the time to research a little bit on all your recs.
I'm not a vintage cart guy so i'll probably try to go with a new cart.
What seems to work with the high mass FR24 arm is either
Nagaoka mp200
Audio Technica AT7v

what do you prefer for a warm and dynamic but detailed sound ?
How the Clearaudio performer ebony fits into the competition ?Thanks