What Cart. for a Infinity Black widow


I am looking for suggestions on a cartridge for a Infinity Black Widow tonearm? MM or HO MC
bro57
Dopogue, If you have the means - and your JMW tonearm suggests you do - then I urge you to buy a Morch tonearm, which can be ordered with a variety of arm-wands of different masses: a crucial issue (or you can do like me and buy a variety of old and new classics). The Grado is truly a world-class cartridge, even the Platinum is awesome, given tubes and a low-mass tonearm. As to your Shure, I believe that overall, taking into consideration things of musical importance (tonality, timing in the more complex sense of retrieving the rhythmic interplay between instruments: the heart of the music), the Shure may be the best cartridge in the world. Of course, given the ridiculous prices of "high-end" (and musically flat) equipment, only the rare reviewer has the courage to say so, but it does get said. I notice you mention only MM cartridges. I notice that again in terms of the more complex timing issues, MMs are superior to MCs overall, but I don't know why. But since almost nobody is producing low-mass tonearms (the cowards), not many people get to hear them like they should. If you get the Morch, then you can hear both the Shure and the Grado as they should be heard (which will require two arm-wands), though in terms of mass-matching, and from your experience, the VPI is a good match for the Shure. I confess I am a vinyl junkie, I just love watching those platters spin around. And more and more, MCs simply bore me. Now I've done it, they're going to crucify me!
Johnnantais, Thank you for your thorough review of experience with the Shure, and Grado. Although my own view that these are reasonably priced, quality reproducers is from use on the Rega RB-300 with the Kerry F-2 Titanium Heavyweight Counterweight, I am now aware of even better results possible with your low-mass tonearm recommendation.
Since the Grado already sounds so terrific, I guess I will just get more confirmed in my opinion that vinyl pleasure does not always require spending more and more, but learning how to use what you've got.
I sell the Shure cartridge and own a V15 and it is a fine cartridge but, it sounds mechanical compared to the old Carnegie moving coil that I use for most of my listening.
I was just thinking about the Denon HO MC's DL-110 & the DL-160 they are very light 4.8 g's and the grados are 6 g's. Wonder how these would sound compared to the grado woods?
Bro57, the Black Widow tends towards brightness, so I would be leery of putting any type of MC on it, not because of lack of quality (I tried an MC on it and it worked OK, but did not sound terrific), but because it is bright. As well, I think the Grado is easily superior to the cheaper Denons, excepting, of course, the classic DL-103 which, being low-compliance (I believe), would be a poor match for your tonearm. Don't buy into the MC hype, get yourself a good high-compliance MM, you'll see, you'll be surprised at the amount fo detail and dynamics these can give when set up optimally.

Rwwear, if I remember, the Carnegie is a high-compliance cartridge, is it not? And as to the Shure being "mechanical" sounding, I have heard this said before, and this may be due to a mismatch with electronics and so forth. In my system and other systems, it was liquid and supremely musical, and I would just play record after record and forget all about audio crapola, and believe me, this was bliss. If the Carnegie was high-compliance, I would suggest it sounds as you say because of this. Perhaps this, after all, is why MMs are simply better than MCs at preserving/presenting that rhythmic interplay which is so important to the music (this has been noted by seevral audiophile acquaintances of mine, once we get over the flavour of the day stuff).

And Listener57, you're absolutely right, money is not the key to music: a little knowledge, and trusting your instincts ("Hey, I like this! as opposed to "Hey, this is really impressive") is the key. I find that truly musical "budget" pieces are far more numerous than musical "high-end" pieces. Musically flat but extremely detailed equipment prods the unhappy owners to buy ever-more expensive equipment in an attempt to justify the ridiculously high outlay for a lot of this stuff. The more information a piece retrieves, the more difficult it is to preserve the music, which ends up just getting dissected, and the timing evaporates. Without timing, stereo equipment is good for boat anchors. Find a used Grace or Mayware - both cheap - for your Grado, and you'll hear what I hear, an opening up of the Grados, greater slam, more information at the frequency extremes. On a Black Widow on an Ariston RD80 (not particularly notable, but very musical) the Grado Platinum is a bass monster. And don't forget, these cheap tonearms benefit just as much as Regas do by re-wiring. I've just bought an ASL Mini Phono stage for $250 with NOS tubes classics new, and I can't wait to hear the Grado through it! I'll be reporting on it in the ASL Mini Phono thread later.