Nandric, Plaudits for the use of linear arms and high compliance MM's should go to Harvey Rosenberg of New York Audio Labs who demonstrated at an audio show about 30 years ago the following system - Linn Sondek, Eminent Technology ET2 air bearing arm, Shure V15 with NYAL preamp, NYAL OTL power amp directly driving a pair of Stax electrostatic panels ( no interface transformers required ). In theory the matching of a high lateral mass linear arm with a high compliance cartridge shouldn't work, but it can. A few of the Absolute Sounds staff members started running Grado's with ET2's. I myself ran a Sota Star/ET2 ( modded, stripped, lightened )/Shure V15V about 20 years ago for a while. The addition of electromagnetic damping to control lateral movement on eccentric records improved the sound considerably. |
Nandric, I too enjoy and appreciate contribution and sharing of experiences from all, just put post up for general interest, cheers. |
The brain is a terrible thing to waste on mediocre cartridges. On the contrary, running a mediocre cartridge gives one the opportunity to extend their imagination into the netherland and beyond.... Living down under here must give us an upside down perspective. |
Lewm, I prefer people to describe what they hear, and ascribe characteristics, even if others disagree. To me if you read someones review in the context of their system, or other comments, then that is more useful than "like" or "prefer". So let rip... . I think one of the great losses in magazine reviews compared to 20-30 years ago is the comparison between competing components. It's often through comparison's that we gain a more in depth understanding of a component, its strengths and weaknesses. Halcro's and Rauls comments on specific records are really useful in understanding where I am in my system development. |
Or in Holt's case, one hopes that his (g)ear evolved such that he could hear the different between analogue and digital. I wonder if the MC2000/transformer combo mimicked the brick wall filters in his ears. |
I tested in several tonearms/headshells including my " universal " self design tonearm and I did not found out something that could justify to buy a linear traking tonearm for this cartridge This is an illogical rationale. How can you conclude that trialling a linear tracker would be a waste of time from your experiences with pivoted arms. That's like me saying you are wasting your time trialling LOMC's because you have a solid state phono stage. As an example my Shure V15VxMR sounds vastly different on my ET2, Dynavector DV501 & Naim Aro. You wouldn't even recognise this cartridge when moving it from one arm to another in my system. Each arm elicits a considerably different presentation of soundstage, bottom & top end extension and harmonic structure from the same cartridge. IME finding the optimum arm can generate as big a difference as going from say a Koetsu Black to an Onyx Gold Vdh - which is massive. It would seem to me to be useful when commenting on cartridges that we state which arm we used primarily with that cartridge. I do wonder if potentially MM's are even more arm sensitive that LOMC's due to the higher moving mass on the cantilever slewing around. I also note that in the vintage MM's we are discussing the compliance varies quite a lot from borderline low to high, which suggests arm matching is critical as well as output/impedance - possible overload on some phono's. This suggests we need to take an educated guess as to type of arm the designer had in mind to get the best out of any particular cartridge. |
Nandric - boron cantilevers used to come in both tube and solid rod. The Technics EPC 100 hollow boron cantilever was formed on an aluminium rod, and then the aluminium was removed with acid to leave the ultra thin boron cantilever. So yes you can have an hybrid aluminium/boron cantilever. At least one of the super MM's referred to in this thread had a boron splattered aluminium cantilever. |
Nandric, Why would you go to Ogura to buy a micro ridge diamond. The microridge profile is patented by Namiki Precision Jewel Company, and as far as I know Namiki still manufacture this. Namiki also used to make cantilevers and complete cartridges as OEM for some of the smaller boutique "cartridge houses". They have offices in Germany and Switzerland. Did you follow this up from my post a while ago ? |
Raul - Some time ago you asked me about retipping the Dynavector Nova 13D. Last time about 10 or 12 years ago Dynavector rebuilt mine and said last time, no more generators available. Now fortunately as a special favour they have rebuilt the Nova 13D into a Nova 17D for me, new guts everything. The B&K frequency response printout is ruler flat from 20hz to 20khz apart from a wobble of +-1db between 27 & 30hz. Well its pretty good, it decimates the Koetsu Black Goldline in the top end, producing details non existant from the Koetsu. It is more coherent from top to bottom and musical timing of individual notes much better. There simply appear to be twice as any notes. I'm very happy. Koetsu was running on a Naim Aro which produced much more air and detail than when mounted on a Dynavector 501. The Nova 13, now 17, I am running in on the Dynavector 501 arm. I removed the Nova 13/17 from the integral headshell and mounted it on the Ikeda headshell, it sounded much better this way. The Ikeda headshell has the advantage of the strongest joint with the Dynavector arm than any other headshell I've tried and as the headshell clamps onto a short pipe, you can adjust asimuth and overhang easily. I can achieve Baerwald rather than Stevenson which I prefer. The other tweak I have done and can recommend is to remove the copper plate from inside the heavy counterweight at the rear of the 501 and replace with teflon tape. This means the only metal connection the counterweight has with the arm is a single point through the grub screw.
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Raul - as 2 of my friends run only digital, one of which is state of the art, I have used one of the systems to help develop my own analogue system further. We have a matched set of records & digital recordings for cross referencing. It has been very useful even though the analogue is better, and I dont listen to digital at home much. I can only listen to simple recordings on digital, anything like full orchestra in my view is where digital collapses. |
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Thucan - go and wave your handbag somewhere else. We dont want the vitriolic diatribe from the headshell thread invading this thread. This thread is read by many new audiophiles and is a great reference for MM research. Raul - ignore everything other than on topic. |
Orsonic headshell : The Orsonic AV101b I have is most definitely original, not Chinese. The Orsonic AV-101b that I have is crap. It has a single bayonet that is too small and allows the headshell to rotate as you tighten it onto the arm, it doesn't butt up solidly to my Dynavector 501, that is, the joint with the arm is not rigid. Thirdly, if you try to adjust azimuth, when you tighten the clamp, the headshell rotates again. The azimuth screw behaves more like a worm gear than a clamp. If anyone wants to pay big money for a genuine original piece of crap let me know and I'll list it. This is the full post I posted on the other thread - http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?eanlg&1347802090&openflup&87&4#87 |
Stiche Nandric We have all agreed that handbags should be left at the front door. No more posts on "D" or "Bavarian mafia" - it's boring as all hell. If you still have issues you need to discuss, talk it over with your therapist. If it will help maybe we can start a fund to replace the choo choo train you lost when you were a small boy. |
Thanks Lewm, I've often wondered if my Orsonic is a dud one. I know you prefer Stevenson, but I've reinstalled the Dynavector to run the Nova17D and I made a jig to ensure the pivot to spindle was spot on. Using the Garrott Bros protractor, which uses Baerwald the cartridge alligned perfectly "almost" dead straight in the headshell. I rechecked the calc's for the arm in the Vinyl Engine tonearm database calculator and found that theoretical ideal was only 1degree out from Stevenson, which is where I ended up. Tracking, lateral image definition is very good, so I'm sure Baerwald is fine for Dynavectors. In my system Stevenson doesn't sound as good, and imaging is off. One thing I have come across is that the Dynavector arm, with it's high lateral mass, is very intolerant of any deviation, even tiny, in the horizontal/vertical bearings from level, ie the armboard is not congruent to the platter. |
Timeltel, I am no guru. My main experience is MC/Arms/Decks having been an importer and retailer around the advent of CD. Typically in this era we would have Sota/Linn/Roksan/Pink Triangle/Well Tempered /Townsend /Oracle in the shop at the same time along with a myriad of arms - ET2/SME V/Zeta/Alphason/Syrinx/Sumiko to name a few. TT/arm matching is as big a mystery as arm/cartridge combo's - there is no substitute for suck it and see. I note that your cartridge is low mass 6gm and low compliance 10cm/dyne, have you tried a more massive headshell or added weight to one of your headshells. One product I have used but which is unfortunately no longer available was the old mod squad tiptoes for cartridges, this could sometimes cleanup resonances. There is a seller on ebay selling carbon fiber spacers which could well be worth trying, I used carbon fiber in my modded ET2 headshell to good effect, it tends to dissipate energy as heat. I do not ascribe to the spongy pudding school of energy dissipation such as the cartridge man's cartridge spacer, in my mind soft compounds tend to store energy and release it out of time with the music, thus smearing the sound. Personally I wouldn't use either a magnesium or wooden headshell, my preconceived view would be - one light and wispy and lacking substance, the other an unpredictable tone control. I could understand the magnesium being used with a light and very compliant cartridge. |
With regard to the Arché SRA headshell - from the pictures there appears to be a couple of weaknesses - it only has a single bayonet ( undersized too, I'm very particular on size ) and there appears to be a gap between the body of the headshell and tonearm in which resides the ubiquitous rubber washer. Can one of the owners confirm if this is correct. I'd be curious to know if some sort of floppy suspension is part of the design brief. By the way did Peggy Lee get the fever, she seems to have disappeared ? |
Timeltel, Interesting discussion on the wood properties. Some of the tonearm manufacturers should be articulating this. I can see some of the advantages you point out. I generally follow the Goldmund mechanical grounding concepts, getting unwanted energy to ground as complete and as fast as possible, minimising reflected energy back towards the cartridge/vinyl interface. I would prioritise maximum speed and articulation over frequency response, hence aversion to dampening, which general smears the sound. Our ear brain can compensate for frequency aberrations but cant replace lost information. In theory the material used in the headshell should be quicker in propagation than the plastic used in the cartridge, but slower than the armtube as energy wicks from slow to fast. The larger the disparity in propogation speed of the two materials then there is more reflected energy. Ideally you would have an infinite number of materials with increasing propogation speed between cartridge and ground such that reflected energy is minimised. I guess if you have a cartridge that is very resonant, there may be a tradeoff compromise between damping the cartridge body and introducing more reflected energy from the boundary of the cartridge/headshell and the headshell/arm versus providing no dampening but wicking away the energy. How about a radical suggestion. Looking at your cartridge there is a large proportion of mass forward of the mounting points that is unsupported. Can you get a headshell long enough to drill and tap a hole in the end forward of the 1/2" mounting holes, angled back toward the cartridge, and insert a tuning screw between the front of the headshell and the top of the unsupported front of cartridge. This would stiffen up the mounting and provide variable dampening to the body. |
Thucan - thanks for the update. My only suggestion would be if the washer is rubber, to provide a metal spacer/washer alternative to fix the end of the arm tube to the rear face of the headshell, such that if a tonearm has slightly oversized tube you can still achieve a rigid coupling when tightened up. |
Timeltel, few more suggestions Loading resistor, using nude ( or nacked as some might say ) vishay's generally will lower the noise floor and remove gunge. Also an old trick we use to do with Decca London cartridges, which liked to be loaded at 22k was to mount the loading resistors onto the cartridge pins. This does give a different result than loading at the phono stage. I haven't tried tantalums as loading resistors. Have you thought about phono cable LCR optimisation in terms of inductance ? Magnesium headshell, try a combak harmonix tuning dot on top of the headshell, these can be very effective at cleaning up resonances. If you want to push the envelope read up on Peter Belt, another form of tuning dot. These are very subtle compared to the combak. |
Lewm - thanks for that confirmation, fortunately I haven't binned the Orsonic, although I came close. |
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Nandric - be patient - "they cling to their own point of view, as though everything depended on it. Yet their opinions have no permanence; like autumn and winter, they gradually pass away..." |
Nandric, you are so modest, I thought you left Yugoslavia to distribute peace and goodwill.. |
There is no way that any audio system can get close to a live sound...period. Anyone who thinks their system is close is living in cloud cuckoo land. However, as Frogman says there are many poor live performances, and let us not forget that with the advent of technology and digital engineering, these insane architects, sound/acoustics engineers and accountants are responsible for screwing up the sound in most new concert halls and sadly renovations of old ones with their new improved theories../read shortcuts/cost savings that can be construed as "improvements" given enough imagination. For me the whole raison d'etre or value added proposition for audio systems is the ability to sift through all the mediocre recorded performances, find the definitive performance and listen to those performances when we are in the mood. As in Frogman's case, I would rather listen to a recording of Heifetz version of the Bruch Violin Concerto in my flawed system than listen to some mediocre performer, with a second rate orchestra in a concert hall with bad acoustics. |
Yet more than 30 years ago I believe......tests were conducted by Quad (I think).....where behind a curtain, a real violinist stood between two speakers and played the same piece as contained on the record.Most listeners on the other side of the curtain were unable to reliably pick the live violinist From whence the expression "cloth ears" is likely derived. |
or you prefer the ginormous distortions of higher output MM's, ideal for listening to Mr Whippy tunes, than the tiny distortions in LOMC's, which is quite reasonable if you like the Mr Whippy flavour..... just saying.
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Hi Timeltel/Lewm, re the "ginormous distortions of higher output MM's". Was a response to the previous comment by Halcro who seems to think that LOMC's are inherently inferior to MM's. I dont have a preference myself, hence the reason I follow this thread. My own view is that all cartridges have distortions and tradeoffs in design. Whether you swipe a magnet across a coil, or a coil across a magnet, there are going to be non linearities, resonances and phase anomalies inherent in the movement. Many folk here talk about tip resonances, resonant peak, tracking etc, but how many here would have a truly phase coherent system including amplification/cables/speakers that are capable of really telling us what their front end is doing. Now in terms of output I have compared the same model of Benz MC's with 3 different outputs - 0.3, 0.8 & 1.1. I have always run full valve MC phono stages with no fets/transformers in the path. The only exceptions to this were a Burmester phono, Klyne System 7 & and a few others. Even with a 60db total gain which many would consider marginal for MC's the loss of speed and coherence with the increased output was clearly audible on a wide range of speakers from Martin logan CLS ( modded ) to Proac Tablettes ( modded ) and Tannoy 15" Monitor Golds ( modded ). Similar results were gleaned from listening to 2 Grado's with medium and low output. Would I generalise that I prefer low to high output - yes provided the phono stage is decent and capable. As Lewm suggests, if the phono stage is not optimal, then a higher output cartridge may be better suited. Now what about compliance ? Well if we think about speed and coherence, the two standout designs I have heard extensively are the Decca moving iron and the Ikeda MC both of which dont have cantilevers slewing around. So that begs the question on high compliance - is a cantilever more prone to slewing around going to increase the probability of phase anomalies. It would seem to me to be more logical that a low compliance cartridge, provided that it is mounted in a tonearm capable of ensuring decent tracking, has going to have more controlled or less phase and timing issues from non linear movement between coils/magnets/magnetic fields. Note this independent of whether it is MC or MM or MI. One of the gists of this thread seems to be that after sifting through hundreds of moving magnet cartidges we have found about 10, that with 30 year old rubber suspensions, with a new cantilever material and stylus shape chosen by god or by guess, without regard to the original design paramaters of coil layout etc, that these 10 examples prove that MM's are inherently superior to all LOMC's. This is simply not the case. So I like to be provocative from time to time. |
Dgob, thanks for feedback. I have shortlisted the best MM's on the thread for trial. I have had Garrott P77, Andante P76, various Stanton's, Grace F9E Ruby, Shure V15V's, Clearaudio Virtuoso and none of these approach my Ikeda, Dynavector Nova 13 or Koetsu Black, not even remotely in the same league. The likely candidates - Glanz , Acutex 320/420, Technics EPC100, Signet TK7 - are either unobtainable, and/or unable to be restored to new. I suspect if the Technics EPC100 were produced today it would be a $2000 cartridge at the very least. So we are not comparing apples with apples. The question of how cheap are these cartridges really are when $200-300 ( or $600 for the Technics ) buys you a knackered used cartridge that may or may not be usable or repairable, it's like throwing US$300 into a lucky dip, how many times do you have to try before you get lucky. And then of course if you put a value on your time then they may well be $2000-5000 cartridges anyway. My 25 year old Dynavector Nova 13 has been rebuilt completely from the ground up, new generator, diamond cantilever etc, by Dynavector, recently for less than the price of a Clearaudio Virtuoso. |
Lewm, I am struggling with cartridges at the moment. I had a hiatus from audio for a few years, during which I ran a heavily modified ET2/Shure V15Vmr which was perfectly adequate. Then I got sick of the air pumps and after some contemplation I bought a Naim Aro in preference to the Graham of the day. The Shure did not like this, so I then I got the Dynavector Nova rebuilt and this combo worked very well until I knocked the arm and broke the cantilever. Then mounted a NOS Denon 103D onto the Aro and this was fantastic - fast, lucid, excellent soundstage - the owner of the Technics SP:10mkiii/ET/Shelter 901 that designed yours and Alberts mods used the word amazing when he heard this. My system has evolved considerably since then with MIT Oracle cabling and updated crossovers for the Tannoys - Teflon boards, Duelunds etc. Then I wanted to up the ante, so I bought the Ikeda Kiwame, as I had previously owned the Ikeda before, and considered it to be the best cartridge I had ever heard other than a Garrot modded Decca London. Unfortunately the very low gain and requirement of a heavy arm put me off. Tried various step ups, both passive and active, bought the Klyne ( which was less transparent than any of the tube pres I had, and got a bit frustrated. Went back to the Shure V15 mounted in my Dynavector 501 so I could forget about everything and just listen to music. I considered the Denon 103D even though it was excellent to be of concern in terms of suspension given its age. Then I bought a new Koetsu Black as a stopgap measure. Mounted in the Dynavector 501 it was just ok at best. Remounted in the Aro and the Koetsu Black opened up - more transparent, more space, air, soundstage and speed. So this was my daily runner until a few weeks ago when the rebuilt Dynavector came back. Mounted the Dynavector in the Dynavector 501 arm and was surprised at the speed and articulation, much better than the Koetsu/Aro combination. So this is what I am currently listening to. I suspect that if I mount the Dynavector back into the Aro the system will lift again, but cant be bothered at the moment. Looking at your system I like the combo of tube pre/OTL's/stats. I cant understand why you cant get a good sound out of the Koetsu Urushi. The wood and stone Koetsu's I have heard can be a bit "slow" perhaps, which is why I bought the Black - I had previously run a Black with a Zeta arm which had speed and impact. I think so much of the cartridge sound is arm/phono dependent - hence the variations in results. I never cottoned to the van den huls and the Benz's although they are quite good. With both these brands models sound quite different - there doesn't seem to be a family sound. I do wonder if the MC's of today have really progressed. Some such as Benz where the original proprietors have left may have declined. The Sumiko's from the Bluepoint onward were a disaster to my ears, they were substantially worse than the preceding Sumiko Talisman range and yet I have huge respect for David Fletcher - so I dont know what's going on. At the pointy end of the market - I have recently heard the Zyx Omega which sounded pretty good - transparent, detailed, no grain - mounted in a Raven tonearm. The Zyx Airy by comparison just sounded ok, but according to the importer, who is a personal friend, the Airy varies quite a lot depending on arm and additional cartridge mass applied to the headshell. When Peter Ledermann visited here recently I had a good listen to the Voice and the new Strain Guage cartridge. I was impressed with the lack of grain these cartridges had - thought they were pretty good. Coming back to your system, personally even though I am running the Dynavector arm I dont think it is a world beater. As discussed above, with some cartridges the Naim Aro bests it by a long way. We have quite a few L07D's down here and noone uses the arm on them. Most of the Kenwood arms I have seen either have seized bearings or loose bearings. The Triplanar to me looks the best option for a MC but given its light to medium mass of 11gm in my mind you would be best with lighter medium compliance MC's. Another friend of mine imports the Miyajima's but I haven't heard one yet. My gut feel is it needs a heavy arm. Have you considered upgrading the arm on the L07D ? Perhaps something more suited to your MC's. I would have thought even something like an SME V would get much more out of your MC cartridges than the Kenwood or Dynavector arms. As an adjunct the Zyx Omega was a new replacement for one that had a diamond mounted on a particlularly oblique angle unknown to any arm designer. Would I buy a MM - yep if I can find one with the speed & transparency of the Dynavector at least. Thats why I keep reading these posts. Would love to try a Glanz, Technics EPC100 or Acutex at some stage if I can find a decent one. Coming back to what I own - the Ikeda still remains the best but I do not use it. The new Ikeda with a cantilever may be worth investigating, I would probably take punt on it if I didn't have the cantileverless model, and an appropriate arm - read heavy. |
Nandric, I probably shouldn't have mentioned the rebuild as it was done as a special favour. I know that they have refused others, so I am quite fortunate. I can confirm that it was completed by Dynavector Japan. I dont know if mods were made to the generator system from the original design, but the cartridge seems better than ever. The current model 17D3 is the closest they have today. What cantilever material did you use ? |
If you send the FR-7f to Axel.....for €179 extra, you will have the best LOMC anyone has ever heard Do you know everyone, or is this the collective "we" ? or the royal we ? Glad you like Mr Ikeda's early designs. By the way I agree with you on the CLS's with tube amps. You may or may not know the early CLS were also produced in Australia, with slightly different crossovers & Australian hardwood frames. These went lower and did not have the 50hz bump the american model had. With Quicksilver 8417's this combo reproduced recording acoustics unlike anything I've heard, which includes Dave Wilson's own monitoring system. |
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Halcro - one of the original co-designers was either Australian or moved to Australia. I imported the 1st CLS into NZ. The first few came from Aussie to get over import restrictions and then later we imported directly from the states. I think they had a falling out but not absolutely sure. The Aussie guy imported the panels complete, and used Aussie made interfaces and frames. My memory is fading, it may be that the Aussie mods were the source of a difference with Gayle Sanders and the license pulled. To my ears I preferred the original Aussie version, due in main to the slightly different interface. Unfortunately cant remember the guys name. |
Halcro - re FR-7f (Axel version) - thanks for clarification. Hopefully someone will compare the new Ikeda with cantilever to the FR-7f at some stage. It would be interesting to know if they are of similar design or whether some new developments have come about. |
Raul - you misrepresent my position on MM's. I dont think there is a definitive answer on which flavour has most "distortions" as you like to call them. They all have different strengths and weaknesses. I have been consistant in that I prize speed, timing, coherence, transparency and want to get the maximum possible out of the groove. I dont mind colourations, dont mind a rising or falling high frequencies. I cant stand compression or phase anomalies and I cant enjoy the music if there are timing issues. My 2 favourite cartridges in this respect are a Moving Iron ( the Decca ) and a Moving Coil ( the Ikeda Kiwame ). Hopefully I may be able to add a MM to the list one day. |
Fuses - You can also eliminate fuses and all the push fit connections and additional joints by just soldering in fusewire in series. Anyone try this ?
Raul can you confirm your best Virtuoso with boron cantilever - does this sound any different to the Maestro.
Nandric - the Aluminium/boron combo is what Garrots use to use on some cartirdges. On my Denon 103 it was superb.
If you guys check out Youngs Modulus you will see that Aluminium/Boron/Beryllium/Diamond have quite significant differences in hardness, and the ones with the lower Modulus number ie aluminium, will self damp more, the harder ones send much more energy into the cartridge generator and body.
Lewm - re the Urushi - most of the Koetsu's I had sounded significantly better all round with a microscanner diamond installed. Have you thought about retipping. I'm convinced my recently rebuilt Dynavector Nova 13 is pulling more information and has better separation of instruments than before, and one of the differences is it now sports the micro ridge diamond instead of the PA line contact. The other outstanding Koetsu amongst the 30 or so I've used/set up the van den hul rebuilt onyx was outstanding - I see that the Expert Stylus Paratrace is very similar to the van den hul shape. I'd be nervous about sending the K to van den hul as I cant believe the old man does these personally any more ?? The new "Garrotts" do a microscanner retip and cartridge checking, but I have no experience of their service level. |
a) $43 b) $43 less the marginal tax rate of your business c ) $43 plus or minus freight and sales tax differential d ) $2500 actual savings, assuming the purchase of said audiophile fuses saves another trip to the therapist. e) All of the above |
Nandric - when I was in the business in the 80's I heard a full home theatre system in the US - Infinity IRS V's for the fronts, IRS 1B's for the 2 sides and IRS V's for the two at the rear. Top Gun was the movie of the day and I was lucky to get out alive - planes were dive bombing me from all directions. I still have a photo somewhere of a rack of Audio Research amps with a "No Smoking" sign on the top - obviously they missed the irony. |
Raul, Lewm - the in line solderable fuses in the military link above that Raul provided look like an interesting option, particularly in tube power amps that use fuses to protect output tubes. Elimination of additional connections and push fit joints with contact resistance should be helpful. Surely the elimination of fuseholders and soldering the fuse in line would be better than most fuses out there. http://www.cooperindustries.com/content/public/en/bussmann/electronics/products/cooper_bussmann_overcurrentovervoltagecircuitprotection/fuses_and_accessories/axial_leaded_fuses/mcrw_series_fast-actingwire-in-airsubminiaturefuses.html I see the Quantum redo the end cap material as well. This seems more scientific than most audiophile solutions. I have a friend who manufactures audio cable and in trialling connectors the removal of all plating yields significant improvements along with machining and polishing at all connections points. In other words go and get those lovely WBT's, Furutech's or whatever and remove the gold/silver/rhodium plating and polish the metals and you will get a significant improvement, assuming the base material is copper. The use of cold welding technique rather than soldering so that you are not destroying the cable at this junction, and the use of ceramic based composite powders for resosonance control all yield significant improvements, although now he has developed a solid air matrix for dampening instead of composite powders to maintain an air dielectric. These techniques should be equally applicable to power cable and fuses. I wonder with the Quantum when they will come out with a fuseholder of the same material. |
10-21-12: Rnadell This is a response from Roger Modjeski re: fuses. Rnadell - excellent post that everyone should read. So, how do you make your own silver fuses. Simply wrap the right size silver wire from post to post of the fuse holder and solder. « Last Edit: 13 Apr 2012, 06:03 pm by Roger A. Modjeski » I distinctly remember that Julius Futterman used hair-thin wires as fuses on his OTLs. I did suggest this about 40+ posts ago and was pooh-poohed. Never mind, I'm sure in post number 14684 or thereabouts the same discussion will be had again. |
Lewm, My suggestion was not to replace the fuses with wire. It was to replace the fuses with "fuse wire" which operates the same as a fuse. Fuse wire can be purchased in the same values as a "glass" or "ceramic" fuse. Fuses - You can also eliminate fuses and all the push fit connections and additional joints by just soldering in fusewire in series. Anyone try this ? The advantage is you can solder it in and remove a number of connections and changes in material the signal or power goes through. I think some people even read the above suggestion as removing the fuses completely which is not what I wrote. By the way I spent an enjoyable Saturday afternoon listening to an Ortofon M20FL which produced a very nice open sound on Jazz. |
Lewm, I managed to pick up a mint FR64S, silver wired with B60 VTA base on the weekend. I fitted it yesterday - I would encourage you to try your FR64?? out. It produces quite a different result than the Dynavector arm.
PS I thought the inline solderable fuses in Rauls military link above were a perfect solution for this application - particularly in output stages. If you want to use silver wire - why not ask Roger M for gauge suggestions. |
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Nandric, thanks. I'm not generally a fan of silver, but it doesn't seem to be doing much wrong in this instance. I have put in a MIT phono cable ( my owned stripped out version ) which may help. Ikeda himself recommends a copper arm cable with his silver wired arms to balance the sound. The arm came with a FR1MK3F cartridge which I'll try at some stage. |
Lewm, I was keen to get your view independently, but since you asked. I removed the Dynavector Nova 13 from the 501 and mounted it in the FR64S. The FR has opened up and fleshed out the midrange, bags more info through the mids than the Dynavector 501 and I suspect the Aro as well. Reminds me a bit of the Sumiko The Arm/Koetsu Onyx Gold vdh combo I heard years ago – bags of rich and ripe harmonic structure. Soundstage is big deep and wide, similar to the Naim Aro but with more precision. The soundstage from the Dynavector arm is more compact, has very good lateral precision of instruments within the soundstage, but soundstage depth is truncated ( in my system ). I read through some of the historical posts and noted J Carrs comments about arm tube resonance in the FR and the need for dampening, but I'm not hearing any resonance, more a lack of resonance. At first I thought it a bit slow, but its getting better all the time. I had a good Jazz session last night and the pace and timing were fair humping. Halcro was right about the fit and finish, I cant imagine many moderns arms looking this good and having such beautiful bearing feel after 20+ years. Ikeda also has an aversion to jewelled bearings - maybe he has something there. I wouldn't be inclined to change the grease in the B60, I normally favour rigidity through the arm/cartridge/tt/platter loop and VTA adjusters usually are quite sloppy. The FR B60 is quite impressive to me that you can do VTA but the mechanism seems quite rigid, if a little stiff. |
Lewm, The Dynavector Nova is a medium compliance cartridge - 15-18 cm/dyne and only weighs 9gm despite the Ebony body, so should favour the Dynavector arm if anything. I agree comments are subject to this tt, arm, cartridge, phono, etc.... Raul, as always there are no definitives - ET2/Naim Aro/Dynavector 501/FR64S all radically different sound, there are sonic attributes that you can ascribe to these in general, but of course different cartridges will interact differently. |
FR64S arm resonance - I am not getting any resonances that impair the playback from the arm thus far. I am getting more information, better harmonic structure and the decay of piano notes, bells, etc goes on forever, seemingly free from interruption of unwanted resonances right through the mid to top end, which is where I would expect the worst resonances to appear. Minute changes in VTA azimuth etc are magnified greatly with this arm which suggests the resolution is very high given a decent TT, cartridge and system. I'm using the Ikeda headshell. Note here my other current arms to hand are the Naim Aro, Dynavector 501 & ET2 and have previously owned SME V, Zeta, Odyssey, Sumiko, Hadcock, Helius Omega & Well Tempered to name a few. Maybe it's working exceptionally because my turntable is specifically designed to sink energy to ground. Final Audio also sold their own version of the Fidelity Research FR7f that was more than twice the price of the FR - 230000yen vs 100000yen for the FR7f. It is most likely that the FR64 was one of the arms used in the development of my Final Audio TT. The FR66 doesn't fit so thats out of this equation. The designer of the Final rejected the Dynavector 505 as unable to transfer energy, but with the introduction of the 501 with the stiffer front bearings and the conventional spindle and collet clamp, he changed his mind and purchased a 501 for use in the Final Audio test system of the day. Raul - re the tonearm arm wrap - yes it was called the "Sumiko Analogue Survival Kit" which included a very thin fiber tt mat & a tonearm wrap to dampen the tonearm. All it did was warm up and smooth out the colourations from substandard or poorly matched arms and cartridges.
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Lewm, just to clarify my comments on the FR64 - "highs go on forever" - I dont mean extended or highlighted. I am talking about the natural decay of each note. I'm sure others will have their own views, but if I was to try and describe a "resonance" in a hifi context I would say it is an excitement at a particular frequency. What I would expect to hear from a resonance would be a peak in the response at a particular frequency, time and phase distortions around that frequency, and masking of detail, natural overtones etc. I cant see any "resonance" being an enhancement. As I suggested at the outset, try it. I would expect it to produce quite a different set of outcomes than from your other arms. |
Nandric -if I was looking for criticism, yes I would say the bass is slightly "fat", but it is quick and without loss of information. The female vocal roughness, cant hear that. Thucan - how do these vintage arms work without antiskate ? |
OK I refrained from answering yesterday but here goes my 2 cents - Curently own Meridian 508.24 - the only CD player I've ever owned. Players listened to in system - EMM Labs XDS1 - massive deep soundstage, very smooth, reasonably detailed, very nice. Wadia 861SE GNSC mods - warm good boogie factor, low on resolution, unreliable DCS Debussy - very nice, good resolution, not particularly musical to my ears Havana tube dac - warm fluffy sound, very low on resolution Electrocompaniet - ok, but not particularly involving Moon DAC's - awful Benchmark DAC - dry as a bone Cambridge 840 - quite good, but keeps getting blown away by my Meridian Eximus DAC - this is what I would recommend, it is the only one that I thought actually was a big step up, apart from the EMM Labs, from my Meridian and I think you would have to spend 2-3 times the price to get marginal improvements. It is very smooth and quite resolving. I have a couple of friends who have built systems around this DAC and they are pretty good for digital. The Mytek is very close to the Eximus, but the Eximus is smoother and more relaxed. At a higher price I would look at the Meitner DAC, at a lower price the Grace DAC sounds ok. If you think getting a meal at McDonalds is nutritious, then by all means buy an Oppo. |
Nandric - thats very sad on the Shiraz. The original Van den hul modded EMT is still in my mind one of the great cartridges for reproduction of the speed and weight of a full orchestra. The Shiraz would have been very interesting. Why dont you check with the Expert Stylus Company or North West Analogue before you give up. Alternately perhaps if you ask Raul to send his cartridges elsewhere, Axel will lose 80% of his business and might change his mind !?^ |
In_shore - let me guess, you used the back arrow on a Mac ?? |
I use to do a bit of sound set up at live concerts when I was a student. One of the most common problems in trying to get a balanced sound was the muso's themselves, individuals in a band would typically want their individual instrument amped up and overblown, and they couldn't comprehend that they sounded worse with the instrument hyped, and that the band sounded tighter and much better musically when everything was balanced. |