Lewm - I'm not sure myself sometimes, but I'm glad you enjoy them. One part of my ancestry is "it must be correct" the other is more pragmatic "as long as we get there". I have heard the Grace sound quite good with a Garrott P77 but I dont think it's in the league of your other arms or some other unipivots of the same era. Grossly overvalued in my view. Best wishes for the festive season. PS The oxymoron is one of your own invention - 02-03-12: Lewm One of my curiosities about this arm is based on ownership of a Reed tonearm and auditioning of a Talea tonearm. The two have a certain something in common, which you might call a coloration but which I call a kind of euphonic hyper-clarity. |
My dear Dover, The most fun about your posts when they follow mine is that I sometimes cannot figure out whether I am being insulted, or not. In any case, "euphonic hyperclarity" could be seen as an oxymoron and certainly did not attract me to the Grace 714, since I have never heard a Grace 714 in action in my or anyone else's system. (Is that now hyperclear to you?) As to the rest of what you wrote, was that sarcasm? If not, I apologize. I gather you are not a fan of the Grace 714. Cool. You may be correct in that opinion, so far as I know. Based on internet comments, some do seem to like it. |
No you dont want to stiffen the headshell, that will destroy the euphonic hyperclarity that attracted Lewm to this arm. Based on the latest studies of the Guarnerie's it would be advisable to take to the arm with hammer and chisel, pop a few chips and dents, maybe a nice neat fracture that you can glue up, and you too will get that lovely sound of a Guarnerie in full stride. The best one I heard had the headshell dampened with bluetack, horsehair & nicotine - sounded wonderful. |
Dear Lew, Your Grace (what a name!) 714 was in high regard in Holland in the 80is. I would not mess with the pivot but only stiffen the headshell and than try. A friend of my owned one and was very fond about this tonearm. As far as I remember it was not about the looks. But there must be something special with those wooden wands.
Regards, |
One tonearm I bought just for looks is a Grace 714, the wooden one. I found a mint one with box and accessory parts. I don't really think it could compete with my two or three best, but I like having it. I also think that with a few tweaks it might indeed come up several notches in performance. (Based only on reputation; I have not heard mine in my system.) The joint between headshell and arm wand could be stiffened easily, and I would like to put outrigger weights at the unipivot to both stabilize the pivot (weights on either side hanging below the pivot point) and to add mass in the horizontal plane. My very positive experience with the Reed 2A has led me to wonder whether wood is the way to go as a material for tonearm wands. |
Dear friends: I have not to much time today to be more specific/wide on the Precept 440 ( AT especial design. ) but right now all I can say is to recomend that if you look out there do it a favor and buy it. IMHO has and belongs to a cartridge reference level niche.
Yes, was designed and build by AT but is a " new " AT kind of performance.
Latter I will try to find out time to be more specific about.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear Henry, You got it wrong again. I am an Dutch lawyer but from Balkan origin. Otherwise I could not afford all those tonearms, not to mention all those carts (grin).
Regards, |
Dear griffithds: Well, stay " calm " only means that I will not following Stanton/Pickering cartridge hunt with what I own I think is enough.
Of course that the fire of new experiences never expired or expire, exiting/adrenaline is part of our audio life!.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear Nikola, Retired Balkan lawyers in Holland must have some good superannuation......or else the state is very generous with its benefits? Regards |
Dear Henry, Nikola does not agree with the 'curse'. On my Kuzma there are the Reed 2A and the Triplanar VII in constant use.They just got as present Miyabi and Benz LP S. On my SP 10 there is (one of) my beloved FR-64s. So no problems of any kind with those. My problem are those which I own for the looks only. This number just increased because Thuchan seduced me to buy some old I-A SME arm, Raul seduced me to buy this JVC kind while I seduced myself to buy the IT-345 . The last one looks fantastic and is beautifuly made but I am curious if anyone knows anything about those first (steel) SME arms?
Regards, |
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Dear Professor, As Nikola will agree........having 2 turntables and 6 tonearms is both a blessing and a curse. The Virtuoso is on R&R whilst I listen to the Signet MR5.0LC, the UNIverse, the FR-5E, the Signet TK-7LCa, the Signet AM10/155Lc and the FR-7f(Axel). I have been known to listen to all these cartridges in one listening session......but not today. I'm off to neuter a nearby abattoir :-) Regards Henry |
Regards, Halcro: FYI, my crystal ball is calibrated to two nines. You slept through some great weather. :)
The Virtuoso is holding your interest?
Peace, |
Greetings Professor, Your crystal ball needs refreshing.......it's summer here and more like 28°C (82.4°F).... Power is clean at the moment :-)........but 'fire up the barbie' season sounds good! Haven't seen a typhoon in Sydney since...........??? All the very best to you and everyone over the holidays and into the New Year. |
Yes, there was the use of the terms "IHF Power" or "Music Power", which meant a highly inflated number compared to steady state or "RMS" Watts, which leads us back to where we started. High Fidelity magazine was a culprit in the spreading of inflated power numbers for amplifiers. |
Regards, Lew: Not sure of the exact date, CE 1977/78? Claims for output, "bigger is better" became so outrageous that truth in advertising laws were invoked. Ratings were tied to continuous maximum output for one hour without clipping and statement of distortion of all species were required to be lab validated.
Sometime in the late '80s, televised ads were supplied to broadcast stations with elevated bias. There was an FCC edict that this would cease. In the hey-day of loudness wars, compression was substituted for volume.
Last week this was reaffirmed. How quickly we forget.
Crystal ball says 64* F & a chance of rain in the Sydney NSW area. Clean power for the next several days. I understand Aussies have four seasons; street paving, elec. service repair, typhoon & fire up the barbie.
Peace, |
Raul,
After thinking a little more of your stay "calm" statement, I think I'm beginning to understand how you are able to come to that conclusion. With all the cartridges you have and have had, perhaps the excitement has dulled a little. I, and I would imagine others on this forum still look for and get excited over finding that stone cold bargain in a market of multi-thousand dollar cartridges. Your bar of "also ran cartridges" is much higher than most. This fact has to diminish some of that excitement factor that you have eluded to with your stay "calm". Your entire thread is based on NOT staying "calm" but getting excited and spreading the word on great finds. Keep the fires burning Raul. This is a great hobby! Regards, Don |
Raul, I also took note of Lewm's comment and found this on eBay (350668391609). For $21.75 it was a no brainer. The shear number of Stanton/Pickering M/I bodies that are out there, is stagering.
"I think that I will stay " calm " about Stanton/Pickering with my two Stanton 981 L/H version , the Pickering 5000XVS and the TL-4S."
Raul, with that group of cartridges, staying "calm" will be rather hard to do.
Regards, Don |
Timel, I love those car ads that tout a "500W" Bose stereo system. Of course, Mr. Bose or his heirs are laughing all the way to the bank. The lay public does think that the more "Watts" the better it must sound. |
Dear Griffithds/Timeltel: I decide to go for the TL3/4 cartridge body for my TL4S stylus. As Lewm said it: it was with those cartridge body the designer intented the best of both.
Stanton/Pickering are so " wide " in models that intent to test an almost " infinite " stylus alternatives in between could be not only " boring " and time consuming but maybe with small rewards for the huge " job " to do it and remember that to do it we have to buy cartridges/stylus.
I think that I will stay " calm " about Stanton/Pickering with my two Stanton 981 L/H version , the Pickering 5000XVS and the TL-4S.
Is there any reason to go on with? , I think not.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
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Thanks, Tom,
I will be looking for some Gold XV-15 motors. This DTL-4S is the top "P mount" Pickering stylus. Would not its twin be the top Pickering stylus in the XV-15 line. Is that not the XV-15/1800S! The Stanton twins to the TL line/XV-15 line was the 681 solid mount and the L7x7S "P" mount. There top stylus was the 681EEES and the D84S. You and I have a D74S which is a step down from the D84S. There is no doubt in my mind that the DTL-4S is better that the/our D74S. Like is said earlier, this DTL-4S is a winner. Thank you for bring it to my/our attention. Quite a find and I'm looking for another! Regards, Don
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Regards, Griffithds: Thanks again. A reminder, the painted white, gray, then silver and gold XV-15 motors are of increasingly tighter spec., calibrated 681 bodies (this also implies a lab-matched stylus) will be engraved with a registration #. Twin sons from different fathers, both are four coil generators.
Peace, |
Regards, Lew: Apologies for not having qualified that figure, leaving you in the position of an informed audio enthusiast deliberating the merits of a Soundesign "1,000 watt Peak Power" boom box at the supermarket.
Peace, |
Nandric, "Corpora", or "corpuses" will do. I think it's a second declension noun in Latin. |
Dear Lewm: +++++ " By the way, you guys would get into a lot less trouble, if you would only stick to the stylus assembly that the audio gods intended for use with your particular cartridge. " +++++
yes, less problems but less learning/discover " new and exiciting " experiences too.
My latest 981 HZS experiences confirm my statement because thank's that I'm not sticked to the 981HZS and tested with the 5000XVS many of us learned about.
I think that each one of us are looking for the " best " we can achieve and that's why some of us are hyperactive on that subject.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Tom, The following quote is from a person on the Lenco forum in reply to a question I put forth to Richard. What he has said sort of snaps everything into focus.
"Your Stanton L747S, and the other L7x7 models: Stanton 680 in a P-Mount. Exact model designation differs according to stylus.
The equivalent Pickerings are the TL series which are the Pickering XV-15 in a P-Mount. Exact model designation (TLE, TL3-S, etc.) differs according to stylus."
Save yourself some money and just get the stylus. You already have 2 usable (identical), bodies.
Regards, Don |
Timeltel: To quote Wikipedia: "Because of their usefulness in carrying out power calculations, listed voltages for power outlets, e.g. 120 V (USA) or 230 V (Europe), are almost always quoted in RMS values, and not peak values."
I know all about RMS. Breaking down the AC into maxima and minima is not really to the point, if you are worrying about over-voltage frying your gear. It's RMS that counts. If your RMS voltage goes well above 120V, it is a given that the positive going peak of the sinusoidal wave form will also have gone way up. I guess you know this; I do too. I think I just mis-read you original post on the subject.
By the way, you guys would get into a lot less trouble, if you would only stick to the stylus assembly that the audio gods intended for use with your particular cartridge. |
Regards, Halcro: Humidity at 76%, barometer is 29.66 millibars. Outside temp. 48F, foggy this morning. Elec. service is holding a steady 125v. Old rig is cranking out out some pretty good soundstage, dynamics & ambience.
Running in an AT ML150 OCC on a Yamamoto HS-2, bronze plate above cherry/10.5gm mass. Crystal clear optimized line contact on ruby. Sounds good, Soundsmith does beautiful work & everything's "in the groove".
Turning over every stone for a DTL-4S, have both XV-15 & 681 MI generator bodies (thanks for that info, Don), keeping a sharp eye out for a TL body. Vinyl Engine Data Base is a WIKI, caveats apply.
Horoscope says Justin Beeber loves me today, crystal ball says if your name is Henry it's a good day for vinyl in Oz.
Life is good, best wishes for this holiday & any other season.
Peace, ALL. |
Dear Raul, Even your errors have value for us. The stylus error in particulare has the therapeutic value. I bought at least 8 single styli but actually thought that this is very smart thing to do. Those are namely much more difficult to get then the 'bodies'. I have no idea how to write the plural by corpus.
Regards, |
Dear Halcro: Thank's for the clarification about. I was thinking something really bad because even you started a thread only for that " event ".
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
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Dear Travbrow: Good, now you are " calm " because with no answer to our email we go on " desesperation ", at least is what happen to me in that situation.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear Griffithds: I understand what happened there. With cartridge manufacturers like Empire/Stanton/Pickering/AT/Signet/AKG/Acutex and the like there are always some kind of mix-up. In this same thread almost all of us time to time made it mistakes because so many different cartridge models of those vintage manufacturers and no one knows everything of everything especially with this " new " vintage cartridges. I remember " problems with the Empire series 1000 and 900, with the AKG too and we all know the confusion with those flat nose/long nose Acutex.
My first Acutex was a flat nose one and before arrived I bought a stylus replacement that when I received was for the long nose version but both cartridges has the same model so whom can imagine Acutex designed the same model description in two versions????
After some errors from my part I took the task to research always before take action but this time I did it but maybe even with that research could be happened the same.
As I said I'm not angry with you or really worried about because now a new journey started to me : the TL-3 cartridge body.
To fix the VE cartridge data errors I think you have to put in contact with them and in specific with the persons that mantain that data bases.
I don't receive yet my TL4S stylus replacements but I saw at the picture is the flat Pickering version.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Update, Axel sent email explaining the situation. Things work a little different in Germany. He picked up the cartridge at his customer office after receiving letter notifying that package is there for pick-up. He needs to drive 60KM to pick-up his packages.
I am confident that every thing will go well. Just was confused about the tracking info and the different way Axel handles his mail. |
Dear Professor and Raul, Sorry to give the impression that my phono-stage is 'down'.........I was merely sympathising with the Professor's frustrations at his system sounding poorly from time to time? My Halcro preamp is working perfectly......however last week.....outside work on the power cables caused havoc with the 'sound' of the built-in phono stage despite the intervention of the Shindo power conditioner? All is back to normal at present :-) |
Raul,
Do you know how to correct data on the Vinyl Engine Cartridge Database? It states all Pickering TL-(x) cartridges are M/M. Lets not allow history to repeat itself! Regards, Don |
Raul,
Over the last few years, I have been following various forums discussing the Stanton/Pickering cartridges. I have a little note book on just them. Before the Richards handbook, the only information/knowledge I had was from my notebook of statements made by forum members that I trusted or just felt had correct knowledge. Richards handbook greatly added to that data base. I also bought the stylus thinking (from my notes), that the M/M line is what this stylus supported. Once I realized something was wrong, I went looking in Richards reference handbook for answers. Thumbing thru, I found nothing pertaining to the TL line. I had to reread the handbook from page 1. When I got to page 48, at the bottom of the page is a small list of cartridges/styli with cross-References to the line of like Stanton/Pickering cartridges. The TL-4Super cross-ref. is to the Stanton/Pickering M/I line. This little tidbit of information is the only mention of any of the TL line of cartridges. Like I said, I had to reread the entire handbook to find it. I have proven it to be true. There are two Stanton Guru's (ex employees), on that forum you reference. They both readily admit to not knowing everything but they are far more knowledgeable than I. For you, this cartridge journey will be like the Goldring G800. Cheap body (Stanton/Pickering M/I series), with surprise stylus (DTL-4S), = goldmine. You will not be disappointed. Regards, Don |
Dear griffithds: Stupid of me because now I will have a Pickering stylus with no cartridge to hear it.
I'm not angry with your wrong statement that I followed but with my self because I always make a research before I to take any single audio action but this time. My mistake was the Richard reference you did because he is the real Stanton/Pickering guru ( that I know him very well through Lenco forum. ) and if he was your reference then I take your statement for sure.
Never mind as I said was my mistake. I hope that in the future that error by my self could give me some reward: who knows?
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
My post Dated 12-16-12 took 17 hours to get printed! Moderator states 4-8 hours. When is the high speed improvement suppose to take effect? |
Hi Acmam3
I have not tried a TL-4S cartridge, but I do now have my eye on a TL-3 body. What I'm trying to determine is if the TL-(X) bodies are any different than the TL(X)S bodies. Until Timeltel mentioned the DTL-4S stylus, I had not given the cartridge line much thought. I owe Tom a thank you for mentioning it in a previous post, thereby peeking my interest. From Richards handbook, it appears the TL-(x)S cartridge "bodies" are all the same. Only the stylus quality being the deciding factor for improvements in the "S" line. I am quite awe struck with the DTL-4S stylus top flight performance. I think it being thought of as a "P" mount type, has allowed most of us to overlook it. That is until now! Regards, Don |
Griffithds, have you tried the TL4s cartridge with it's own stylus? |
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Regards Griffithds: The Stanton/Pickering carts have me puzzled. Vinyl Engine Data Base is often incorrect, glad to have a Stantering Guru on board. That would be you, Don.
Thanks for keeping us informed.
Peace, |
Raul,
"Btw, I already bought a DTL-4S in NOS condition for the non-Pmount Pickering cartridge version,"
Is yours the tall Stanton looking version, or the short flat Pickering looking version. Mine looks like a Stanton housing. Regards, Don |
Thanks for the recommendation Griffiths, unfortunately I can't send the P100CMKIV anywhere because I don't have it. I sent another email to Axel to ask for acknowledgement if he picked up my cartridge and stylus. Will update on further developments, funny he answered all my emails when I inquired about sending the cartridge to him. As of now I would not recommend anyone send a valuable cartridge to Axel. |
Dear Halcro: It's weird what happen with your DM10 because normally that kind of audio level electronics were designed to protect the differeent stages against that kind of events and many others. I understand this is the seond time in the last few months that your DM10 ( for different kind of events. ) was out of work. I don't like it that situation and maybe is time to think in the possibility of a change of Phonolinepreamp.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Dear Giffithds: Shibata, Stereohedron and several other cartridge manufacturer stylus as the analog6 from AKG and the like at the end was not eliptical but more as line contact with " superior "/wide contact groove. There are several manufacturer " line contact " versions. It's right the name " line contact for them ? well is IMHO not important what is important is that as the Shibata or the analog-6 or even the MR the Stereohedron has a wider groove contact.
What is more complicated is that some manufacturers had 2-3 versions of the same stylus shape where some of them disclosed it but other noprmally did not.
Btw, I already bought a DTL-4S in NOS condition for the non-Pmount Pickering cartridge version. I think could be a difference aginst my XV5000/981 or the 7500 that are S2 versions on the stylus shape.
Could be a quality performance diffrence in between the S2 and the S stylus versions?, we will see when I have on hand but you already own all those stylus shape versions, could you share with us the differences that you experienced on the 981 ( H ) with the TL4S against the 981 native one stylus?, thank you in advance.
Regards and enjoy the music, R. |
Correction: Statement I made on 12/10/12
"Before anyone misunderstands, the TL4S that Tom (timeltel), and I have been talking about is a M/M type stylus. That means 880/881s and above line of cartridges. Anything below, XV15, 680/681 are M/I. I would hate to have someone with a 681EEES buy a TL4S, on our recommendation, only to discover it doesn't work!"
The TL4S is NOT a M/M. It is a M/I. It will NOT work on the 880/881 and above. Anything below that line of cartridges, the XV15, 680/681 is acceptable. Just the opposite of what I stated. My deepest apppolgies to all for my mistake! I received the TL4S today and mounted it on a HLZ body. Dead quite. Nothing. That's when I started to compare my notes with Richards "Stanton/Pickering handbook" and discovered my notes were not correct. I then mounted my XV-15/750E, verified that everything was working, then swapped styli. The TL4S just creamed the much regarded 750E. More authoritive bass, greater dynamics overall with cleaner and more extended highs. This was with "0" hours of break-in. The best Stanton/Pickering M/I that I own is the Stanton L747S (D74S stylus). Stanton only had one M/I above it and that was the L847S (D84S stylus). I have mounted the TL4S on the L747S body. No contest there either. Easily bettered the highly thought of D74S which BTW is also a Sterohedron styli. I now have just over 7 hours on the L747S/TL4S and have to state, this is one hell of a stylus. My posts have been taking 12+ hours to appear on this thread so by the time you read this, I will have compared it to Stanton's top cartridges, the 981 LZS and the HZS. This stylus is definitely a winner. Regards, Don |
Regards, Lewm: That surprising bit of data is from Boston University, Department of Physics. In the most sincere manner possible, if anyone can supply other figures it would be appreciated. AC is measured on a time scale (Hz), cyclical & there is an average at the receptacle. Here it averages 124v AC. A quote, again from Boston College: "Voltage from a wall socket is known as the root mean square, or rms, average. Because the voltage varies sinusoidally, with as much positive as negative, doing a straight average would get you zero for the average voltage". Voltage is then an average of the range from positive to negative. BTW, 117v rms is my observed low, 128v rms for high. R(oot) m(ean) s(quare) value is obtained: first, square everything second, average. third, take the square root of the average. For a clear description: http://www.raeng.org.uk/education/diploma/maths/pdf/exemplars_engineering/8_RMS.pdfHaving dabbled around with pencil & paper for a tormented moment, the broadest possible expression is that rms voltage is a (nom) 70% of peak. 67% was a repeated outcome. As this is a square root calculation involving infinite variables, neither figure should be taken as correct. Peace, |
I have now posted twice in vain. Neither post appears here.
To repeat: Jim, You may well be correct, 2S, not 4S. Timeltel, Have you really documented 170VAC at your wall socket? That's a real indictment of your power company, but it is not typical of the USA as you suggest. Living all my life in the NE corridor, I have never ever seen or heard of such high AC voltage. Nor has anyone else ever reported similarly high voltage. So I think the situation is location and power company dependent. The highest I have seen in my home is 125V. The lowest about 117V. Raul, If you will supply Guillermo with my email address, I will be happy to discuss with him ways in which he can dramatically improve his 845PXs, some of them quite simple and cost-free. |
Tom and all interested. The folowing is my question and the reply from PickeringUK.
__________________________________________________ Reply: Stereohedron is Pickering's name for their line contact tips.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: griffithds@jaws.bz To: eSales@PickeringUK.com Subject: Stylus question Date: Sat, 15 Dec 2012
Good Morning, You have a DTL-4S for sale stated as a line contact. I have a original Pickering DTL-4S that is a Stereohedron. Is the difference between the two styli a matter of mine is from New York plant and yours is from the Flordia plant? If there is some other reason (unnown to me), for the two styli profiles, both being a DTL-4S. Thank you for your reply in advance. Regards, Don Griffith ____________________________________________________
First time I have ever heard of a Stereohedron refered to as another name for line contact! Shibata, yes, but line contact? |
Tom,
Just received a reply from Turntableneedles.com. It was a confirmed NOS Stereohedron styli. Still waiting for PickeringUKs reply.
Regards, Don |