Excellent sounding cartridges for Rega P3/24?


I need some advice since I am not too learned about tonearm mass and proper resonant frequencies etc. Can someone guide me to a couple good MM cartridges for the P3/24. I now have the Rega Exact II and I am looking for something else. I like the Clearaudio Maestro wood but will it work well with this table and arm? I had also been looking at the Ortofon 2M black but then I read a post that said this cartridge is not a good match with the Rega tomearm. Thanks in advance.
fido
Maybe Dynavector 10x5. Some say that this is the best cartridge for Rega P3. This is high output MC cart, so you can use it with MM input.
I have found that audio components have a company sound. I suggest you find a sound you like and get as close as you can to the top of the line. That arm will pretty much accept anything.
Thanks Roole....I will investigate the 10x5 I have heard some good stuff on that one too.

Stringreen: Yes, that is good advice and that actually is my logterm plan. I am just muddling through right now til I can afford to splurge on a nicer TT.
My brother is running the Benz Micro medium output Glider with the Rega P3 / RB 300 combo. His phono stage is the ARC PH3. The combination of these components is very musical - excellent value for the money.
I wouldn't take a little Internet "buzz" or speculation based on the tonearm mass/compliance formula to rule out the Ortofon 2M Black. At the very least, talk to somebody at Needle Doctor or Acoustic Sounds. I believe there are several online vendors that sell both Ortofon and Rega products.

10 Hz may be the ideal resonant frequency, but the tonearm database matching grid seems to indicate that anything from 8 to 11 Hz or so is ideal. The 2M Black on an RB300 comes in at about 8 Hz.

And another thing: The formula may be able to give you the resonant frequency, but it can't tell you how strong the resonant frequency is, because that depends on other factors such as tonearm design and damping. I'm not sure how vulnerable the RB300 is to mass/compliance resonances.

There are certainly some designs that can dampen most of the resonance back down. For example, a cartridge's damper brush (such as is on the Shure M97xE and was on the V15 series) reduces the resonant hump by around 5 dB. Ditto for tonearms with fluid dampers. I'd rather have a 0 to 1dB resonant hump at 8 Hz than a 5dB hump at 10 Hz.