Hi Lew, I just read the 505 manual or part of it. I see what you mean. Have you ever tried it with the sub arm not horizontal? If it doesn't function properly like that, your only recourse for SRA is to use an angled shim in the headshell. Not exactly convenient for working things out.
I think it would be more productive to consider this a different cart than your other Rubies, and it might well be. Is it difficult changing resistance in whatever you're using for this? It wouldn't hurt to try and it might be the solution. I'd also experiment with a different arm. I'm bothered if I don't have VTA on-the-fly. The 505 would drive me to distraction. BTW, have you tried the stylus on one of your other bodies?
Regards, |
Lew, Interesting arm. The sub arm is like the Souther linear tracker. I see no reason other than tracking warps, why you can't stray from maintaining perfectly horizontal arm tube. As mentioned previously, the SRA orientation of the OCL tip might not be in agreement with original F9, and the tip itself might have a more forward orientation. I can't confirm the later, but people have reported such.
I can't give you a mathematical reason for loading down, other than it's your only option for brightness with respect to LCR. Inductance is probably around 300 - 325mH, but adding capacitance will not help. A cart with lower high frequency resonance would normally get brighter as that resonance is lowered into the treble region, but that's not the goal anyway. LCR manipulation is specific to mechanical response and everything except playing with resistance is contraindicated. Mechanical response could be different with a different cantilever and tip.
There is a quasi-mathematical reason to try loading and stylus swapping. Albert Einstein said, insanity is trying the same thing over and over and expecting different results. If I remember correctly this is a NOS body or something like that? It could be a dud. You have a couple of good exemplars, so..... you could see what it takes to get results with a known entity.
Regards, |
Regards Timeltel, Thanks for the specs, most interesting. It seems that the neighborhood of 240mH is the practical limit for AT inductance lowering. Beyond that it gets too bright for the mandatory 47K load recommendation, but that doesn't entirely explain Signet. Did you ever have a TK9Ea or 9LCa ? 550 ohms imp. 85mH tapered beryllium. The 10ML also has 85mH. When new the 10ML II could make your ears bleed. Just wondering if you've ever messed with one of these?
Regards, |
Hi Lew, It seems to me that VTA/SRA has more to do with harmonics and loading is more about bright/dull. Of course they're interrelated. Wondering what conclusions await.
Regards, |
Hi Dover, The Koetsu Black is within 2dB, 20 - 20K ? That's the Goldline? The older Black seemed to have more bass than + 2dB, made it sound "mellow/lush". Their redesign really made a difference.
The Ruby was loaded at 100K and that's less rise than most MCs. I never owned one, but it seemed a little forward at first listen. In that respect one has an advantage with loading a MM.
Regards, |
Hi Nandric, You must have been angry when you wrote your last post because it's semi coherent. Once again you have me saying things I didn't say. Yes, I was somewhat embarrassed by that last set of exchanges between you and I on a public forum. Now you want to start again? Why is this nonsense worthy of everyone's time?
In the past you called me a clerk and now I'm arrogant, an arrogant ex clerk I suppose. Well, I know what I know and I know I never worked as a clerk. So what does that make you, mistaken? I worked in two different high end stores and was the "turntable guy" and the record buyer in probably the busiest high end store in the US. Besides working all day with record players I did such things as calling Scotland and buying out the Lyrita inventory. Now you know part of it, but who cares? This ended 25 years ago, why is this an issue? I was also cofounder and vice president of American Hybrid Technology. You can still buy the same phono stage, only now it's called Walker.
I also took a couple of logic courses in college. I might not be a logician but I know some faulty logic when I read it. I'm asking you to cease further name calling and personal attacks. When I said you are a lawyer and skilled at persuasion, or something to that effect, you took it as an insult. It was a compliment. Some of our most revered people like Abraham Lincoln were lawyers. Storyboy was right. This BS is inappropriate. If you have further problems with me not concerning cartridges, send me an email.
Regards, |
Regards Timeltel, Halcro, I bought the TK10ML II new in the '80s before I knew anything about loading. My MM phono input was 47K and I could select from three capacitance settings which seemed to do nothing with this cartridge. I played with VTA, checked alignment etc. I think I sold it before it was even broken in, a decision I now regret. How could this cart have response on test reports that looked like a ruler line, and sound like this?
The AT22 - 25 and Signet 9 and 10 series all had 85mH inductance! Dlaloum tells me they had toroidal type coils and were sort of experimental TOTL types. http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=88878.800
"The AT22-25 and TK9/10 were a generation earlier, they were more expensive to make due to having true torroidal construction... all the rest of the VM series have always used para-torroidal design - so the earlier generation were magnetically superior - but the difference may have been very minor.
The shorter cantilever on the ATML series made a bigger difference I think, than the torroidal structure on the earlier series...
Seems to me the ATML180 is up there as one of the all time greats.
My own measurements of the TK9 show a noticeable midrange trough (not a bad one, but not the best I have seen either) - which is caused (I think) by a combination of magnetic losses and cantilever flex losses - the low inductance is reflected in the high end rise to a resonance beyond the audio range (cannot recall right now the frequency - would have to look up my measurements).
The higher inductance of the ATML allows it to achieve a flatter frequency response at the high end - would love to get my hands on one to measure - and see what the midrange trough looks like... I have a feeling it will/would do better than the earlier series or the AT150 - mostly due to the shorter cantilever."
Low inductance carts are generally harder to load, but have great potential. All thing being equal, a shorter cantilever will have a higher resonant frequency. The Grace F9F has about the same HFR as a 6mm boron cantilever. Higher inductance MMs are voiced so that electrical resonance (LCR) moves HFR to a frequency that compliments response. If a MM has extremely low inductance, playing with capacitance loading is fruitless, but potential for transparency and resolution is high.
I recently purchased a Signer MR 5.0ML. This series has the same stylus fitment as the current 100/120 series, but the plastic stylus holder is a little taller and must be trimmed slightly to use on a 440/150. I tried the cart at 50K and 47K and it was decidedly uninvolving, underwhelming. I didn't expect much because DC was out of spec and it was inexpensive. Luckily, the stylus still has some life and sounds great on my 440. The stylus is beryllium/ML. I bought it for the stylus and got lucky. The MR 5.0 entire series has the same generator as the 440. For years this was the go-to motor for many ATs. Carts like the 160 have the same motor, and numerous others.
Regards, |
Hi Timeltel, I guess the database threw me another curve. 550mH and impedance 750Kohm?? Is that a typo?
The 5Ea, 7Ea, 7LCa are all 5mV, 550mH, 800DC, 900 impedance. That's from a Signet spec sheet. Apparently nice relationship between DC and impedance. Impedance is resistance with reactance figured in. Reactance includes the affects of inductance or capacitance.
The 440 OCC is 5mV, 490mH, 790DC, 3200 impedance. The MLa is 4mV, everything else the same. 150MLX - 4mV, 2.3K impedance. Looking at the relationship between DC and impedance is confusing. One would think the TK7 with more inductance would have greater impedance than the 440 or 150. Impedance is specific to 1KHz though, which could make a difference? They might have changed the way they calculate impedance? Clearaudio only lists DC and they call it impedance.
The 440 has a cantilever resonance around 16KHz which reinforces a rising high end and tends to give an unfortunate brightness loaded at 47K or more. I got acceptable response loaded at 32K, 150pF. I tried a 140LC stylus and no discernible difference. It sat on a shelf until I tried a 152MLP (beryllium/ML) stylus which transformed it with very nice performance at 47K.
My sample of the MR5.0 is nearly 830DC in one channel. Is that spec 750DC?
Regards, |
Thanks Tom, 780DC is pretty close to those other Signets. I think virtually all AT V magnets are paratoroidal. It's the TK9, 10, and AT22 - 25 that are supposed to be true toroidal. The difference is in the way they are wound. Toroidal are donut shaped and the wire is wound from inside to outside, instead of around the outside of a circle. I don't know the difference in windings between these toroidal and paratoroidal.
There's an interesting interview here by Roy Gregory: http://www.symmetry-systems.co.uk/Images/pdfs/Michel-Reverchon.pdf
Michel Reverchon talks about phase. Specifically, the need for phase integrity and extended bandwidth. There are implications for all kinds of music reproduction including phono, but that's for another day.
Regards, |
I was thinking, there might not be much interest in phase as it relates to a phono cartridge. People seem to want cart recommendations and have little interest in technical matters so I'll just say this: I base my conclusions on Ortofon measurements of phase in phono carts as appeared in an Audio mag article in 1983. These are actual measurements, not theory, and that's why most EEs get it wrong. Phase shift is determined by mechanical properties, high frequency resonance and mechanical damping. Electrical resonance only modifies this in MMs and has no affect in MCs. http://www.vinylengine.com/turntable_forum/viewtopic.php?t=33679
The thing is, if you consider this in "ultimate" terms, our older records were mastered using tape and phono carts to check SQ. Perhaps that helps explain playback preferences?
Regards, |
Hi Dover, Nice little primer on harmonics. Energy storage in speaker cables? Seems to be more about amplitude than phase, but I guess it could be both if they talk about arrival time. I didn't watch the whole thing. As Lebowski might have put it, Dude doesn't abide passive electronics in speaker cable. A zobel for ultrasonics might be the only exception and that could be considered a speaker crossover addition.
There's a better solution IMO. Put your amp between your speakers and use short speaker wire. A long interconnect is easier to optimize. It doesn't carry the current that speaker wire does. Interconnect still has capacitance and inductance, but with the exception of phono cables, I think it would tend to be less easily compromised in long runs.
Regards, |
Hi Nandric, I'm not familiar with JVC pulse train transducer analysis, but there's a lot I'm not familiar with. AFAIK a pulse train is irregularly shaped square waves and a pulse train is used for such varied things as radio frequency signal analysis, radar and optical guidance systems etc. I believe it's related to pulse code modulation which is the basis of analog to digital conversion.
The Ortofon article is based on analog data from a study they did sometime around 1980- 82. I think they were originally studying things like tip mass analysis. They mounted an accelerometer on the headshell. The article shows the relationship between amplitude and phase in phono carts and dispels some commonly held myths, namely the affects of electrical and mechanical parameters on phase linearity.
You were lucky to find an SAS stylus for that cart. Jico does not have a wide selection of SAS. The database has it listed as beryllium/shibata, 2.7mV, VTF 1.55 - 1.75g, 12cu (100Hz?), and response to 60K. Is this right? What else? Nice specs, similar to some 4-ch models with that output and low inductance? How did the stylus change the sound, more exact and slightly less sweet?
Regards,
|
It looks like Jico has a SAS for the Z1 - four or five listings, might be a cross reference. I don't know about these JVC styli. They are the same basic style and if the joint pipe and cantilever are the same, you might be able to trim some plastic on the stylus holder and get a fit.
Maybe someone at Audio Karma knows, or you could buy a cheap Z1 replacement to see if this might work. Regards, |
Hi Griff, Going by this limited info, they're not likely the same. BTW, do the owner manuals in VE library have more specs? The X1 has response to 60K. Maybe it was developed for 4-ch. The shibata stylus might be an indicator and it should have relatively low inductance for high frequency extension. The Z has 4mV out, as opposed to 2.7mV and extension is to around 30K at best. Two of the Z (Z-2?) are listed as 2.4K ohm impedance and 4mV - looks like a 150MLX. You could measure DC resistance with a digital (only) meter and see if they are close. I'd guess that the X is around 4-500 ohms and the Z is closer to 800. This is a wild guess based on very little information. Still, the SQ might be closer than you'd expect.
If you're not in the habit of measuring DC on carts, just hold the probes to the pins (not connected to anything else)of the cart just long enough to get a stable reading. Digital meter only.
Jico sold a complete MM cart w/SAS about 5 years ago. It was called the SAS MM1 and people raved about it. Anybody get one of these? At the time there was conjecture it was a Philips cart. The specs look like a JVC Z: http://stylus.export-japan.com/sascartridge.php You never know.
Regards,
|
A fitting end to the MM/MI thread? Nandric and Griffithds declare a winner with a "sweet little cart" rescued from obscurity. Who's to offer another opinion with only a few examples in the known world? Known to us, that is.
Raul has this cart, yet never declared it the best? Just got a mention? Maybe it isn't so great at 100K, but it looks like a 4-ch cart.
What do we make of this, a conspiracy of two who prefer MCs (at least Nandric), to have their way with the defenseless MM damsels? Is this sweet little cart a pawn in a power struggle for MC superiority?
Since Raul isn't here I want to tell you, it's plagued with distortions. These are insidious anomalies designed to mask reality and lull you into sweet stupor. This is a warning. Don't listen to the JVC Sirens. Cover your ears like brave Ulysses or you'll be lulled to your demise. You'll be doing crazy things and sabotaging your set-up. Nandric wisely bent the beryllium cantilever and broke out of his stupor, but the call of the Siren was too much to resist.
Regards, |
Griff, David Dlaloum has an original X1 stylus. It's the body he lacks. It would be interesting to see some measurements.
Did you special order your stylus from this Morita guy? Seems there's a consistency problem.
All Jico non SAS styli are bonded tips on straight aluminum cantilevers and some are more expensive than some other SAS models. It seems the regular ones are used to subsidize the SAS which are bargains. The regular ones are overpriced. That's why LP Gear switched the shibata to vivid line. They're made by another company and retail for a little more than half the price.
Regards, |
Nandric, I realize English isn't your native language, but really?
You might not think that post was amusing, and maybe it wasn't, but how could you possibly think I was serious? Can't take a little friendly kidding? Ulysses and the Sirens indeed!
No one posted on this thread for a week and now we have 15 posts in one day. My post was meant to be both provocative and facetious. I have no doubt the JVC is a good cart, exactly how good I'm not sure. Specs and test reports help some of us figure out the physical attributes of the good ones and how that impacts on preference.
Have a nice night. |
Nandric, No further comment on your post 11/20/14 because I realize you were angry. As Kant said, cogito ergo sum. I'm not sure how that fits in, but at least he said it.
**By my first I broke the cantilever copying Fleib by trying to bend the beryllium cantilever** This is inaccurate. I was performing a transplant and the bend was unintentional. The patient survived but the transplant part unfortunately did not. This happened not once but twice. The other time excess pressure by the compliance screw on an un-shrouded tension wire caused the break. Both times I was performing delicate surgery and not trying to bend a beryllium (the most brittle) cantilever.
So you see Mr. Serbian warrior, I am the king of beryllium breakage unless we hear otherwise. I'd bet there was someone who worked in a cantilever factory and greatly exceeded my record. They might be dead by now because beryllium dust is highly toxic and they stopped using it in the early '80s.
Regards,
|
Halcro, Inspired by your post on this subject I'm checking out a mono cartridge, a loan of a DL102. This is HOMC, a true mono with only 2 long output pins so you have to double up the wire connectors. VTF is 2 to 4g w/3mV out. Tip is a .7mil spherical.
I just got it set-up recently so no revelatory comments, but one old Blue Note (Kenny Durham) seemed to have a presentation that was much better than playing it with a stereo cart or even the stereo version of the same recording with a "superior" cart. I'm referring to the presentation only, stage, natural balance and such.
This seems like a worthwhile pursuit for anyone with a mono collection. Ortofon makes some high end monos with advanced tips which should be better for modern pressings.
Regards, |
Audio Technica has been raising prices for the past few years, but the carts are still a relative bargain. Some of the price increases are in the features you get for the price. The 33EV is a redesigned 33 series LOMC with a tapered aluminum cantilever and a .2 x .7 elliptical - more expensive than the older 33PTG w/boron ML. They just introduced the 33Sa. This sports a boron cantilever described as tapered, and a shibata. Price is $890 @ LP Gear.
AT has Japan only models for years and some seemed to be bargains for the Japanese consumer. The 100E was such a model. Its generator is almost identical to the 150MLX. It comes in a plastic body with a bonded .3 x .7 tip on a straight aluminum cantilever. Being a 100/120 series stylus fitment, you could use an ATN150MLX stylus or any from that series. The 100E is currently $80 @ Gear.
There's now an ART9. It's a higher output version of the ART7 (.5mV) and used the same low resonance body. The price is just shy of $1100. It's not on Amazon (yet?) where you can get an ART7 for around $900.
Regards, |
The Shure V15 replacement styli are not interchangeable. The V15III takes the VN35HE replacement and the V15IV is the VN45HE. It would be easier to see the different models at LP Gear, rather than Jico site. They have a separate category for Jico.
You'll probably get better results with the III or IV models paired with SDS. Dlaloum is probably the world authority on these and it seems they will work better on the higher inductance models due to an unusually low (for boron) resonant frequency.
Regards, |
**If I'm off roading, I take my Jeep.**
That's where the analogy breaks down. Going to change vehicles midstream, or carts mid-record? What if you're driving in your car and don't happen to see a larger than medium pothole?
While 50um will fall short of tracking some passages that are less difficult than cannon shots, most carts do at least a little better. David's Ortofon examples are exaggerated. A 2M Blue tracks at 80um, but so does a Quintet Bronze, so you don't have to get Anna to achieve 80um. Windfeld seems to be their best tracker - 100um @ 2.6g and 16cu. Trackability (Shure's term?) isn't just high cu, it's more complex.
Regards, |
Griff, yes Satin was the OEM for some Sony MC's.
Regards, |
David, "At 3mH this family of cartridges are relatively high inductance compared to MC's - but a couple of orders of magnitude lower than most MM's." ?
980/7500 = 0.3mV, < 1mH. Approaching 1mH is a lot of inductance for .3mV. Typical LOMC inductance is 20uH. I'm not sure if this is the reason these seem to sound like a MM (to me) despite low output. I can't quite put my finger on what it is.
In the BAS link provided by Lew, Cotter talked about moving coils vs. moving fields (bottom page 20) types. He attributes superior MC info retrieval to torsional affects on MM cantilevers, their being more susceptible to stylus drag and the cantilever rotating. Seems to me in '77 this conclusion is more of a distinction in cantilever/stylus design and material, than generator types. Still, the question remains. Is one type superior, and why?
Regards, |
"The whole idea of this cartridge design was to replicate a M/C."
What gives you that idea, the low output? Did Stanton say that was a design goal?
The suffix LZ and HZ relate to impedance (Z), like a microphone. A low impedance mike requires higher gain like a LO cart. Inductance is the number of turns on the coils and relates directly to impedance. Stanton designed the cart to work into a MC phono input, that much we know, but to say they were replicating a MC assumes too much IMO. They were made to compete.
The only thing the 981HZ and LZ had in common is both were TOTL and both had stereohedron tips. Stanton made 3 different LZ models. Stanton product catalogue: http://lcweb2.loc.gov/master/mbrs/recording_preservation/manuals/Stanton%20Product%20Catalog.pdf
neo
|
Griff, Maybe it's a matter of language, your quote from Richard Steinfeld proves my point. Stanton was not trying to "replicate" a MC, he was trying to build a better LO cart, not a replica or copy.
"To me, I felt the LO version more lent its presentation towards the M/C spectrum of sound. Not that I found anything to dislike with the HO version. But if forced to choose one over the other, I would have picked the LZS. The whole idea of this cartridge design was to replicate a M/C."
The Epoch carts came later. The Epic II LZ9S and HZ9S were reviewed 1/'85 in Stereo Review. I don't have a link.
Regards, |
Griffithds, "Only that he was trying to replicate what a M/C does to the signal it receives."
A MC doesn't receive a signal it generates a signal by a specific method. There are both LOMC and HOMC, differentiated by output voltage and impedance. Inductance is a product of generation.
Stanton was not trying to "replicate" a MC. "Walter Stanton did not like the moving coil principal that's been so dear to many audiophiles."
That's what I mean by language.
Regards, |
Griffithds, Isn't the nonsense you're writing now, language?
"The whole idea of this cartridge design was to replicate a M/C. I feel it accomplished this idea better in the LZS."
Replicate - to duplicate or copy (something) exactly.
You were writing about the sound quality of HZ vs. LZ not output, and the statement is wrong. The "whole idea" of both cartridges was to NOT replicate a moving coil.
Regards, |
Griffithds, Satin had an M-21 and M-21B in the early '80s. They might be the better ones. They made a lot of HOMC.
I thought the early Sony XL were Satin, but I'm not sure. David says no.
Regards, |
"Maybe it's a matter of language, your quote from Richard Steinfeld proves my point. Stanton was not trying to "replicate" a MC, he was trying to build a better LO cart, not a replica or copy."
Seems reasonable to me. Now you choose to qualify your statement, and in your colorful world a record groove is a signal.
Give it a rest. |
Griffithds, Slimline was Garrott re-tip service. Brown Grado might be a TLZ?
I understand that Slimline is particularly good at reading the signal, err... make that groove. (smiley face) |
David, "I do find my XL-MC104 very sweet, but clearly limited by its relatively ordinary cantilever (resulting in a noticeable resonance around 6kHz if I remember correctly from measurements a few years back) - I think the same beastie with a ruby or boron cantilever might be quite a magical cartridge... then it would be called an XL-MC3 (that is also LO rather than the 104 which is HO)"
6KHz ? Seems unusually low, does the 104 look like an MC2 or 3, but with a P-mount holder?
I just remounted my XL-MC2 (forgot I had it) in an Alphason HR100S. While not a world class cart, it is eminently listenable and has no glaring faults. I didn't measure the cantilever, but it looks to be about 4mm w/.2 x .7 tip.
I noticed the coupling between the cart body and the carrier benefits from some tack. I wonder if this could be the 6KHz resonance. It seems unlikely that such a low resonance could be from HO coil mass.
Regards, |
Griffithds, Garrott did/does repairs, mods and retip. Slimline was their name for a stylus type - think it was like a fine line or shibata. Here's an Excel ES70_ retipped: http://www.vinylengine.com/turntable_forum/viewtopic.php?t=27221
DIY mods are popular for Grados with replaceable stylus. They usually entail a drop of silicon somewhere near the end of the cantilever to dampen it, and an outrigger to stabilize tracking. The undamped or under-damped cantilever is actually a design feature, but the damping might improve tracking and the infamous Grado dance. Not sure what can be done internally to a plastic bodied Grado.
Regards, |
David, Re: Sony - The coupling on my MC2 seems less secure than your 104. That's why I mentioned it. I have a bit of tack on the cart body where it meets the carrier. Any resonance like that measured at the output would have to originate with the cantilever, so in that sense you're right, but the question is why. 6KHz seems too high for it to be that coupling and I noticed on the standard mount the output pins seem to be on a type of suspension.
Since the vast majority of mechanical energy is not converted to electricity, it could be just about anywhere in the cart/setup. Have you measured similar resonances in P-mounts, or are most on universal adaptors?
Regards, |
Haven't heard anything more about the JVC MM's. Griff loaned me an X1 for awhile and I found it most interesting. I haven't tried the Z1/SAS. It seems, there's much love for this combo. Nothing to say?
neo/fleib |
Thanks Griff. I thought there might be more discussion/opinions.
Awhile back, Luckydog posted on Karma that strapping a cart in series rather than parallel, will give true mono output. Can't say I understand this, but I thought I'd test it. I'll have to get another set of headshell wires. Hooking this up is a PIA. I assume you have to connect the red and white together and likewise the negatives, then connect it like two speakers in series.
Cart inductance/resistance should increase instead of decrease. Anyone know why vertical cantilever movements would cancel? Regards, |
Halcro, In fairness to Raul, I seem to remember specific criticism, why the TK7LCa was not recommended. While the 5Ea, 7Ea, 7SU, and 7LCa share the same body and your opinion may differ with stylus substitution, none of those other relatively high inductance carts are worthy of cart of the month IMO.
What's the appeal of a TK3Ea? It's an old Signet w/nude .3 x .7 and that makes it cool? An AT120E seems to be exactly the same even down to the nude round shank on a straight aluminum cantilever. Why wasn't the 120E cart of the month?
I didn't agree with all of Raul's opinions (of those I knew), but it was methodology to which I objected. Results differ and no two models of the same cart are exactly the same.
Regards, neo |
Halcro, Not sure how you established I never heard a TK7LCa, but the notion is erroneous. I chose the TK10MLII over any TK7 because of theoretical reasons, and it was TOTL. I sold Signet, we had it on demo and a friend had a 7LC, so I heard it many times. I didn't say it was a bad cart. I said Raul gave his reasons. If those reasons were about the 7SU, then that one was also on your list.
Anyway, what does my experience with a particular model have to do with Raul's opinion? I was defending his right to his opinion, not the content. Regards,
|
Professor, Not quite: TK7LCa - 550mH, 800 DC beryllium/LC TK5Ea - 550mH, 800 DC tapered/.2 x .7 TK3Ea - 490mH, 780 DC straight/.3 x .7 (nude)
The 20SS is lower inductance. All the 4-ch carts were low inductance, like the 12S and 14S. I don't remember all the figures, but they all have around 500 ohms DC and lower output. Higher inductance AT models are generally easier to load and sound "right". Yes, the beryllium/LC is a good stylus and while you can wax poetic I had a beryllium/ML - decidedly better IMO.
I'm sorry I posted here last week. Once again this thread was dormant for a couple of weeks... Regards, |
Halcro, I didn't suggest you were attacking Raul's rights. I merely stated that he addressed the Signet TK7_ etc. Your inclusion of the TK3Ea made your post an easy target. Perhaps I went too far in mentioning that, but it was accurate. The 490mH generator was an AT high end model for a long time and still resides in the 440 and 120. You'll find it in multiple models from the 160ML, 155LC, Signet 5.0 series and many others.
There's only one question mark in your quote of me. I wasn't sure about the TK7SU vintage. As it turns out, both the TK7E and 7SU ('77) are low inductance models and are the standouts on your list, which I overlooked. It appears the Professor was wrong about the 3Ea, but right about the 7SU being the same as a 20SS at least in body, and Raul's Signet survey was incomplete. If I remember correctly, he favored the 10ML II which is a whole other animal. BTW, the specs I previously quoted were from an '82 spec sheet. Regards, |
Prof, You can pretty much tell what it is from the output. The old 4-ch carts were 2.7mV, approx. - 350mH and 500 DC.
The desirable 15/20 family were all 2.7mV, but inductance ranged from 350 to 450mH. The 20SS was actually 450 (according to Dlaloum).
The TK9/10 family and the AT22 - 25 were probably some of the lowest inductance MM's ever made. Output is 2.2mV, 85mH, 240 DC. Get out your load resistors. Regards, |
Hi Prof, Distant? An unexpected description. Loading issue is doubtful, more likely a worn tip, especially if you're using the same stylus for both. I guess it's possible the magnets could be weakening, but less likely.
The elliptical tip has the smallest contact area of any, including spherical. AT advised checking an elliptical after 300 hrs. I used to check them with an AT scope (made the Shure scopes look like toys). Never saw one worn out after 300, but at approx. 500, some were.
Not sure of your exact situation with these. Those stylus assemblies are rare. I'd try a transplant or send it to Soundsmith for evaluation. Peter knows what he's doing and he's honest, although putting an OCL on a beryllium cantilever is $450, it might be worth it. He did a great job with my Genesis 1000 - sounds like new.
If this is a relatively unused stylus that should not be worn out, try the usual loading tricks. The ATN25 doesn't have quite the extended response of LC/ML, maybe adding capacitance will help?
BTW, they say those little band aids on the bridge of your nose help with snoring. Many of those studies are BS anyway. Look on the bright side, as you age you'll probably lose memory anyway. Regards, |
Timeltel, Although interrelated, I suspect it's really a problem of too little gain, rather than sensitivity. Sensitivity is the amount of voltage required for full output. Voltage varies with velocity, but assuming a high quality stage, if you had more gain it should be less distant - louder and hopefully, not noisy during quiet passages.
I have no idea what you're running, but for example if 40dB of gain were increased to 50dB with the same sensitivity.....
You might be able to compensate elsewhere. Line stages vary from about 10 to 20dB, and of course speakers. Regards, |
Griff, I'm also not a big fan of line stages. Your solution for gain is certainly novel. The BAT has built-in SUT's for additional gain, consequently you're running a head amp + SUT + phono stage?
Regards, |
Back in the day analog reproduction was all there was for the consumer, and records were pressed in the tens of thousands, even millions of copies, so why wouldn't most efforts back then be concentrated on analog?
Even with the resurgence records are now a specialty product and record playing is more of a hobby, but I doubt if the best tables/arms 30 years ago better all of todays'. If you were considering being a cart manufacturer today, would you want to compete with the big guys for a non-existent mass market, or tout your hand made $8K MC and hope you can survive or even thrive?
Japanese MC's started flooding the market in the '70s. The characteristic rising high end complimented many primitive speakers, and in all honesty some have superior imaging. This is due to that rising high end and/or more extended high frequency resonance, plus low inductance. Of course there are exceptions, but the situation was worsened by incompetent and corrupt reviewers who defined the gestalt. MM/MI carts require more careful loading, not less, and without it performance suffers.
On page 233 in this thread Dlaloum mentions Shure V-15/SAS. He says the V15 III and IV are best with SAS. |
Chakster, Any problems with tracking or the suspension on the MC500HS? There's not a whole lot of information out there. Apparently Argent went out of business after a few years.
Tracks 1.8 to 2.2g, 1.9mV, boron/HE ???
Thanks, |
Oh boy, where to start? There's lots of misinformation and/or apples/oranges comparisons the last 10 posts. We're presented with specs that ignore the generator and price comparisons that span 20 or 40 years. When I was a little kid gasoline was $0.25/gallon. As Miles would say, So What.
A .2 x .7 mil elliptical has the smallest contact area of any stylus. It's a tiny oval. The .2 mil minor radius means it's also very slim and can track high frequencies like a banshee. There were a couple of CD-4 carts that used .2 elliptical. The problem is lack of vertical contact area, and all things being equal it will wear the fastest.
.2mil = 5.08um - thinner than shibata. Shibata has greater vertical contact area. It's thin enough for high frequencies and will tend to miss less from tracing or worn records. It's also cut with different facets on the front and back. That gives it a curved contact area as the record spins past and the "romantic" sound. It's actually a softening of high frequencies. More later, |
Hello Chakster, You're talking about a modern 7" 45rpm record with a 1.5" center hole? Those are stereo microgroove pressings and normally played with a stereo pickup. If you have older mono versions you could play them with a conventional mono pickup. The only 45 dedicated cart I know of reside in juke boxes, but maybe there is?
If you're playing some vintage recordings you might want to use a slightly bigger stylus. Mono tips vary from modern advanced sizes and .6 - .7 spherical, up to about 1 mil. A very old or used record might sound better with the larger tip.
78rpm styli are 3 mil and inappropriate for microgrooves. Regards,
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Judging a cartridge from incomplete specs is like pissing in the wind - might not be what you had in mind. The 155LC has the same basic motor as the modern 440/120 or the 160ML. There's no arguing with opinion or value judgments, but don't try to pass it off as fact.
This 490mH generator isn't always loved when coupled with a tapered aluminum cantilever and a nude square shank ML, but in a deluxe body with a boron/ML or with a beryllium/LC, it might be a favorite. There also could be some generator modifications or "improvements" like laminations or stronger magnets, but everything old is better than new?
The 50ANV has a 350mH (150MLX) motor, the lowest inductance for an A/T MM today. Lower inductance means greater potential for transparency and extension. It's also harder to load. A/T first used titanium (body) in '89 with the ART1, a cart that set the industry on its ear. At $1200 list it competed directly with Clearaudio and Benz and outperformed them IMO. The ART2000 looks like an OC and has similar specs - .4mV, 12 ohms, boron/ML, 8g body. Is this different from an OC9II ?
Some express love for the Ortofon MC2000/3000. Were these coreless designs manufactured by Ortofon or Audio Technica? Strange that AT had identical models, they must have been the OEM.
What's the inflation rate for the past 30 years, 300% ?
No 2 phono carts of the same model are identical. Hand made MC's tend to be less so. Some companies QC is better than others. You pay your money and take your chances, but don't fool yourself thinking yours sounds just like all the others of the same model. |
Sorry, I meant 150ANV the MM. The 50ANV is still available and might be a good investment. It's now < $1.5K and seems to have slightly better specs than ART7. |