I have to add: untrusty reviewers.
R. |
Dear Halcro: Please do it.
I'm trying to get a 2M Black to give a full listen in my system hopping to find out a trend on the great performance road build by the Clearaudio Virtuoso. Good that Lyra take that " lower price " road in favor of gives their customers high quality for a reasonable price.
About reviewers I can't trust in them any more. The Stereophile people gives B rank to the Virtuoso when the SS SG the SMMC1 and the Voice received all an A. IMHO my Virtuoso outperforms easy all them. I don't want to follow speaking on ST reviewers.
Regards and enjoy the music, raul. |
I would like everyone to, for just a moment, reread the title of this thread. It does not say prototype M/M's, nor does it say experimental M/M's. And it certainly does not say vintage M/M's. I want to hear an honest review of all M/M's. Old. New. What difference does it make when it was manufactured or by who or what day. If it is a M/M, lets hear about it. Evaluate it. Hunt it out and purchase it. Wear it out. Repair/replace it or buy the next jewel that we discover. Thank you Raul for your HONEST report on what you found. Anything other than that would have been a disservice to not just us, but to yourself as well. |
Dear Fleib: Yes, I readed somewhere and that's why I posted in the review, thank's to confirm it. I own the AT-95 but I only heard it in brief way and I have nothing important to remember but the subject is in the Virtuoso performance. I don't understand you very well: do you own the Virtuoso?
Btw, this Clearaudio is not a reesemblance on any AT cartridge I know on tone and balance quality performance level. As I posted AT was a good choice for Clearaudio because its skills and very high quality on design execution but IMHO the main fact/subject with this cartridge was and is the extraordinary voicing made it by Clearaudio: There was IMHO the main merit in the Virtuoso design because I can't think that this kind of performance " appears " at random.
The voicing on top cartridges is what makes the difference, two cartridges with the same motor and stylus/cantilever assembly can be " tamed " with different " taste " and different quality performance. Those hand calibrated cartridges means not only tight specs but different voicing tone/balance color.
Anyway, for me this Clearaudio sets new reproduction quality performance level standards. From this moment it is my reference against any other cartridge alternative.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Lewm: +++++ " I was a little surprised to note the ease with which you have let loose of your previous venerable gods in favor of this new god. " +++++
ease?, do you think that was ease for me made that review after more than four years and 12K+ dollars and all my effort on all those vintage MM/MI cartridges that many of us are enjoying?, you can't be more wrong than that.
After be " touched " by the Virtuoso first than all I have to fight with my self part that support the vintage ones afight that was loosed from the very first moment due to the greatness of the Virtuoso but I can tell you that only because I first than all like to be honest with me I decide to share my experiences with all of you. The easy way could been stay silent and post/review nothing about but I'm not " made " for the easy-way but what is have to be.
Yes, my vintage cartridge hunt finish right now. There is useless with no sense to follow lookinf for when no one of my 80+ vintages can't even the in different league Virtuoso cartridge.
My hunt from here start to look for " something " that can outperform the Clearaudio Virtuoso Black Wood: nothing less, as I said makes no sense to me. I'm trying to " catch " levels of Excellence and the Virtuoso is my latest step to be nearest that target.
I have to test all my today MM/MI designs to know if the Virtuoso performance is unique or a solid trend with today cartridge designs, I hope could be in this way.
For years I supported that there were no significant advance in phono cartridge designs over the last 30-35 years. Well if the Virtuoso is a good example on what we have today ( I need to confirm it with other today cartridges. ) then I want to say that I was totally wrong on that subject because the Clearaudio cartridge is a clear advance that IMHO outperform in clear way any " thing " we know.
The world/universe/life is in constant movement with constant changes we can live for ever with those vintages, the Clearaudio gives me the opportunity to move on: welcome to this we have to move on to a better audio world.
Lewm, the King is dead: long live the King!. I already accepted after asimilate this " hard " fact.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Hi Fleib, The No.2 and No.3 stylus are OEM styli still available from WilliamThacker with the 2 being elliptical and the 3 being Shibata. What puzzles me is why Signet would go to the trouble of elaborate screen-printing on the top of each cartridge body designating either TK-7E, 7Ea, 7SU and 7LCa when apparently they all share the same body and generator? A change of styli thus changing a 7E to a 7SU and a 7Ea to a 7LCa? Surely they could more easily have printed these designations on the swiveling stylus protector of each assembly much like Fidelity Research did with their FR-5 and FR-5E?
Dear Raul, Your enthusiastic review of the Clearaudio Virtuoso certainly is tempting me to give it a try? It is encouraging to find that manufacturers are finally offering top flight MMs at reasonable prices instead of the constant stream of LOMCs at ever more stratospheric prices.......although J.Carr seems to be bucking this trend by introducing LOMCs for Lyra, at 'down to earth' prices.
Incidentally, Michael Fremer is promising to do a review of multiple MM cartridges currently available. Hopefully the Virtuoso will be amongst them? |
Dear Raul, The Virtuoso is indeed an AT. If you pull out the stylus plug you'll see an AT assembly with the 2 magnets. All the top Clearaudio MMs have identical specs (inductance and impedance), which means the generators are the same. There are some body differences with the Maestro, but they look insignificant. The big difference is the stylus/cantilever. Unfortunately only the AT3400 series, which includes the AT-95 share the same plug. Swapping styli requires transplanting. This has been very worthwhile for me. Thanks for the review. Regards, |
I was wondering where this thread could go, now that we have perseverated over nearly every good MM/MI made during the "vintage" years. Now I know. We can start all over with current and recent production MM and MI cartridges.
Raul, I was a little surprised to note the ease with which you have let loose of your previous venerable gods in favor of this new god. One good thing is that there need not be a race to find these on eBay. They are all readily available from dealers all over the world. Perhaps I need to unlearn my bias against Clearaudio products. IMO that (Souther) linear tonearm is an abomination. What about all the higher end Grado IM cartridges, still being produced? |
Dear Timeltel: If you can give a try to the Virtuoso. Knowing you IMHO you will find it better than anything you own. Of course you can lose the stylus inter-change fun but as a " side " advantage you could achieve higher quality performance level from your audio system for improve your music own enjoyment.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Halcro: ++++++ " This is currently the King in my collection " +++++
Could be that the Clearaudio Virtuoso can change that status. Try to give you an opportunity to hear it, it is a low price current model with manufacturer warranty.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
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Dear Siniy123: Through the Clearaudio Virtuoso Black Wood review you can read which are good part on my AT/Signet top model tests. Here it is the complete models:
all cartridges were tested in the AT-1503MK3 tonearm, all with 100 kohms alond 100-150 pf added on capacitance, positive VTA/SRA and AT recomemd VTF.
The TK10ML SeriesII and the AT-24 were mounted in the AT-LH13, the AT-ML 180-OCC and the 160 LC-OCC in the AT-MG 10 were the AT-20SS and the AT 155 LC in the AT-LS12. Was in these headshells were perform better.
As you can read on the Virtuoso review the TK10ML Series II along the ML 180-OCC are IMHO the better quality performers in that AT/Signet vintage models. Very near is the 20SS and the third step goes to the 160 LC-OCC where the 155LC as good it is IMHO has a lower quality performance level. Btw, these two latest models are not as good trackers as the three top models and it is not that were bad trackers because that's not the case both are very good but the top three are exceptional in this tracking regard.
I think that could be worth that you give a listening to the Clearaudio Virtuoso Black Wood, amazing performer for say the least.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Regards, Halcro: Hi, Henry. Same generator, different stylus? AT15xe, sa, ss, etc. IIRC, cart mass and elec. specs are the same. Someone correct if wrong, please.
Good to hear you're enjoying the TK7LCa/155lc stylus. I'm finding it performs nicely on the Yammie HS1 10.5gm ebony headshell someone thought I should try, it is a most attractive combination to both the eye and ear. IMHO, ancient gear & etc.
Peace, |
Hi Halcro, I'm not sure what a #2 or #3 stylus is, but as I understand it a 7E and 7SU are the same body. They would have the complete designation printed on it just like a AT-155LC or 155ML. I'm told the 7E or 7SU can substitute a ATN 15/20 stylus. The SS might be the ultimate upgrade, although I never tried it. I see AT-15 bodies for sale once in a while. They're very nice. Your 7LCA can take any modern 440/120 stylus. That would include a 150MLX. I imagine the 155LC sounds great on there. I love those beryllium cantilevers. Regards, |
Er Danny, If you DO find any OEM LCa styli......I may become a better friend than Timeltel?.......after all he already has one :^) I have a TK-7e which accepts either a No.2 or No.3 Signet stylus (the No.3 converting it to a 7SU apparently..... although why would Signet produce a separate body with TK-7SU printed on it as well?....perhaps the Professor could enlighten? I was also lucky enough to find a TK-7LCa body (without original stylus) which, with the 155LC stylus is as close to the original LCa (according to Timeltel) as one can come. This is currently the King in my collection :^) Looking forward to your impressions? |
Regards, Acman3: And thanks Danny, fingers are crossed. The errant Black Widow has an ADC XLM-11 Impr. on it now, a good combo. Until volume is turned up. The BW has never done this before. The resonance seems due both to the two near-by active subs and the small, untreated room it's now in. Too many hard surfaces but under the circumstances there's little I can do about it other than listening exclusively to tape or CD's. I like a challenge.
The TK7ea- good presence in the mids, convincing bass foundation (bass notes are seperate and insturments identifiable) and subtle but accurate transients with clear reponse in the highs. A non-fatigueing cartridge, a good one to listen to for long sessions. Be aware that in complicated passages it'll throw mud at your ears if setup is off. The TK7LCa stylus tracks at less VTF and sounds slightly more open than the ATN155lc. I've a suspicion the magnets are stronger, too. I anticipate you'll like it with the 155lc stylus but if you find TWO of the OEM Signet styli, don't forget your friends (but let me be the first to know). :)
Peace, |
Dear Griffithds and friends: These are my current experiences with the Clearaudio Virtuoso Wood:
http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/frr.pl?ranlg&1313624221&&&/Clearaudio-Virtuoso-Wood-Cartridge-
Btw, Lewm you need to experience this cartridge, worth the effort.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Acman3: I did not but seems to me that this one could be even better and I understand is compatible with the XLM: http://www.williamthakker.eu/ADC-RSA-Astrion-Original-Tonnadel_c10-13-201_p5316_x2.htm
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Hello Raul, I picked up a ADC XLM3 the other day and noticed during internet homework that you owned one. The cartridge arrived in a baggy with no protection of stylus. It seems and sounds OK but I would like to replace the stylus. Have you are anyone else heard this cartridge with the XLM 2 Super with the Shibata stylus from Thakker?
Hello Timeltel, Good luck with the PL-7OL.
I finally found a Signet 7ea body and will use the AT155lc while looking for the legendary 7lca stylus. |
You're welcome, Griffithds. I'm happy to hear you're enjoying it so much. It's a great cart. |
Banquo.363: I want to personelly thank you for refurring me to the audiogon ad for the Azden YM-P50Vl. Being NOS it came with the mounting adapter. This is an absolutely amazing 3 demensional cartridge. My smaller system which I listen to in the near field, is a 3 pc. The sound stage literally fill the entire room. Depth, height, absolute magic. It sounds so real it's almost scarry. And to think this cartridge has been out of production for years. Sad really. |
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Raul, Thanks for taking the time to respond. I agree with the logic. The whole system was brand new, including the Insider Gold, when I listened to it, surely that could have been a factor in the sound. However, Lloyd Walker himself came my friend's home to set everything up, so I doubt there was any issue around improper adjustments of the turntable or tonearm. Did not much care for those von Schweikert speakers, however. (They would now be 6-8 years old.) Every several years von Schweikert undergoes a sea change in their design philosophy, and this was not one of their better efforts. So what I was hearing that made my ears bleed could largely have been a function of the speakers per se. Still, "lush" is not a word that I have heard frequently as a descriptor of Clearaudio MCs. |
Regards, In_shore: Thanks. The loyal SP25/Black Widow is otherwise adequate for the purpose but in the small home office it's in and with the 170 yr. old pine board floors, both acoustic and mechanical resonance is causing woofer-pumping and feedback distortion. A servicable "plug & play" deck with a fluid damped arm is an attractive proposition and I do appreciate all the input.
AT15XE/headshell arrived today. For those who'd like to know: Fine tapered alu. alloy cantilever & nude .2 x .7 ellipt. Two hours in, this is a nice sound. Soundstage is starting to tighten up as channel balance improves. Hopefully leading edge attack will pick up definition as the suspension loosens up, a cart with this pedigree has no business sounding so, ummm, romantic.
Raul, the 15XE will stay mounted on the 12gm AT HS until run in but I'm looking forward to trying your suggestion, the 20SS on what seems like a good headshell matchup for the EPA-250.
Peace, |
Raul, Thank you for your advise with the AT 20SS,.. you made out o.k. on your birthday? I understand you Mexicans are similar to the Italians when it comes to celebrations, great food and drink, no doubt it was memorable.
Timeltel , If you get your hands on a PL-70L II I hope it turns out to be a fabulous step up in performance for you, very handsome looking too.
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All thanks for your very informative responses I should have described the mistracking better. Of all the lps played in the 70 or so hours I have on 4000d3 only 2 or 3 have jumped on nicely warped lps. The suspension is fine and the sound is wonderful. I have played with vta and prefer 1g. Like was mentioned marking the severey warped seems the answer. Thanks to all of you again and believe this I am not looking back when it comes to MM cartridges. |
Regards, In_shore: The P-10 is reputed to be second only to the P3 in Pioneer's Japan only offerings. I thank you for your interest. If the not quite mega-table PL-70L 11 offers a real improvement over the SP-25/BW (I suspect it will), then an upgrade to the main rig may be considered but would first need to compare the Pio. to the versitile EPA-250 or alternate high compliance friendly EPA-500H arm. Perhaps, like Henry with his eight arms, I should consider becoming an octopod?
Interesting comments about the AT20SS, finger lifts and headshells. The 20SS was tried on both a Jeweltone 8.5 gm headshell and one of my "go-to" ADC 7.5gm magnesium shells. With both, midrange resonance was unacceptable but settled down with the boxwood Yammie. Dynamics at the extremes were retained but the stylus was then still in the break-in process. Over 50 hours on it now, it's probably time to revisit options. It's not inconcievable it'll be found overly damped now but at the time I did like what the Yammie HS3 did in bringing coherence to the mids.
Raul, thanks for the input. Now my curiosity is up. Will try the 20SS with a 12gm AT shell that should be coming in soon, an AT15XE cart as part of the package, but 20+ total grams pushes the 250 arm to it's max. If I understand T_bone correctly, the PL-70L should handle that load without breaking stride. Elements of varying tonearm/headshell mass, material and how resonance is distributed or contained make set recommendations difficult but the sharing of information is always valuable and for me, welcome. Two carts, two styli, two headshells, eight variations possible there. Aha! An experiment!
Peace, |
Dear Lewm: I almost concur with you on the Dyscovery model that's is a little on the analytical side and not an easy cartridge with tonearms on choice.
In the other side my experiences with my Insider Gold is different and if not the best cartridge for accuracy I can tell you that in my system I can't detected a thinh/steely or cold " color ". I had a two days experience with the Reference ( a model in between the Insider and Dyscovery. ) in a Rockport TT and if I detected something on the steely side was only that because the cartridge was not fully settled-down I remember it as a little on the bright side but this and the Insider are good performers in the bass and mid.bass frequency range where the Discovery is more analytical.
Now, the Clearaudio are a little jelaously on the tonearm and phono cable and asked for very precise VTA/SRA set-up. Maybe the Walker tonearm is not the best match for the Clearaudio cartridges and you have to remember that even with tubes those speakers are alittle" agressive " on the highs.
Yes, I agree with you that those Clearaudios did not match the richness of the MM/MI but all we know: which LOMC can do it?
Last Clearaudio I listened in my system was the Stradivari and I did not found out with a thin sound but all we know that in this quality performance cartridge behavior things are system/set-up dependent, with the Clearaudios load impedance can be an issue.
Anyway, I posted that I like it but that does not means that I prefer over top MM/MI cartridges.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Hi Raul,
I didn't mean to inply that this is a MM/MC comparrision tracking issue. My Clearaudio Virtroso Woods which is a MM, tracks ever record I've ever played it on. But then it tracks at, and I have it set at, 2 grams. If you don't have records that skip (tracking at the recommended 1 gram or less),on the lead-in groove pinch warps, great. I do have records that skip when tracking at 1 gram or less on the lead-in groove warps. Not a problem at 1.5, 1.75, 2.0, or even in case of my Denon 103R, 2.5 grams settings. By the way, I long ago stopped looking at the red dots and just played my records. It wasn't until resently, I had a skip on a lead-in groove. The cartridge was tracking at 1 gram. It just happened to be a MM. Lately, because of this thread, I have been having a steady diet of the MM's. But perhaps your right Raul. Perhaps it is a set-up issue. My Adzen should be arriving soon. I'll tear down the 4000DIII and pay extra carfull attention to the Azden set-up. |
Dear In_shore: Aluminum headshells as the AT LS-12 makes a very good match with the 20SS. This cartridge is very sensitive on what is mounted but when already is like it like it it is a great performer.
regards and enjoy the music, raul. |
Dear Henry, Perhaps my language was a little too strong in describing my feelings about the Clearaudio, but suffice to say I would not buy one based on what I heard more than once in my friend's very expensive system, which includes an all-Walker front end, tube amplifiers, von Schweikert spkrs. But obviously ancillary components, no matter how expensive or carefully selected, can sometimes have a very large positive or negative effect on the "sound" we perceive to be inherent to a phono cartridge. I am still wondering about Raul's opinion. |
Dear griffithds: I never had that kind of trouble with any cartridge and I own too many LPs from the 70-80's.
Now, the higher or lower VTF value is not what determine the cartridge tracking ability. IMHO any LP that a MC cartridge can " read " any MM/MI can read it too and if not then there is a mistmatch down there on the cartridge/tonearm set-up.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
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Dear Stltrains: For happened what you posted with yiur 4000D3 IMHO or there is a severe mistmatch between tonearm/cartridge combination or that cartridge came with a big suspension problem or that tonearm has a bearing trouble.
Here you can read about that subject: http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?ranlg&1275323834
where I normally run at 1.0grs but even at 0.5grs there is no problems with this Empire cartridge.
I have to add that in all my years of audio experiences I never had that kind of trouble with any cartridge either MM/MI or LOMC.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Timeltel , Just for price and condition comparisons regarding your interest with the Pioneer line. Tommy Cheuk of Top Class Audio out of Hong Kong has a few Pioneer tables up for sale, PL-70, PL-70LII, Exclusive including a separate sale of a Pioneer Alumina ceramic wand.
T_Bone would certainly know better then me regarding going street prices however Cheuk does have a Exclusive P-10 with the EA-10 arm overall in 9 out of 10 condition for $4.200.00 bucks which maybe quite reasonable. I would of snapped it up but I have other expenses going on in my system now.
A breif mention of the AT 20SS, it does not like wood shell heads, well the only two woodys that I have at least. The Yamamoto boxwood and a Koetsu rosewood head shell. I sense the music wants to burst out but it can't.
Further about wood head shells I mentioned above that I removed the finger lift from the Yamamoto for reasons that I did not do a forensic analysis why,just that something was bothersome. It turned out I can hear the thing vibrate also the head shell itself without the finger lift, you will hear it.
This was confirmed using the head phone jack of a active Placette preamp with the stunning Sony mdr ryos headphones. .....Good Lord I have problems I need to address with my speakers and room.
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Hi Stltrains, According to the cart database the 4000D/I has a max VTF of 1.75g. The others max at 1.25g. Why 1g? They all have a dynamic cu of 30. I'd think you could probably go a little higher than 1.25 if necessary. I don't have one of these so I'm just going by the VE info.
FWIW, MOI generally goes up or down with eff mass. Regards, |
Thanks, T-bone. Have found a source (Japan) for the PL-70L's C-F straight pipe, ceramic version too. Reading btwn the lines, the curved wand is massy? Info. on these decks is scarce unless one reads Japaneese so I appreciate your experience and willingness to share it.
Peace, |
Dear Justjb: No I don't think you are doing something wrong. Any cartridge set up to achieve top performance depend on the tonearm match and what the audio system " has to say ", so it is dependable on that.
In my system both cartridges performs very good at 47 but a little better at 100k. Other factor that has influence is loading capacitance where you need to " play " a little as with VTA/SRA. Both cartridges are very good and not lifeless at 100k but if you are achieving good performance at 47k then left in that way and enjoy it.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Stltrain's comment on 8-14-11 about MM tracking forces I feel is the main reason the MC became the desired cartridge to have . I remember the horable QA contol issues that were present back in the 70's and 80's pertaining to record albums. Not just warps, bet some so were thin you could almost hear what was on the other side. As MM's touted how low they could track, most at less than 1 gram, they were shooting themselves in the foot. The only thing at the time that could track this crap was the MC's. With their rising high frequency responce and demands they put on the phono stages at the time, is it not a wonder that CD's were able to step in and damn near kill analog! Records are no longer mass produced in large quainties, therefore QA has improved. Materials are better. This thread has revitilzied the use of our beloved MM cartridges. I don't think it could have happened if all we had to listen to was the warped, thin noisy crap of the past. I have records in which I have placed a red dot on the plastic sleeves that I use. It means can't play with MM's. Thankfully I have multiple arm wands (Graham), and can quickly switch to a MC when I want to play these. |
Stltrains, as The Good Professor suggested, I'd bet you need more MOI but that will get me in trouble around here :^) so instead I'd suggest checking the resonant frequency and trying to get a better match at the other end of the range... :^). (phew) |
Please forgive the off-topic wanderings... I have had the PL70LII, the PL-50L, PL-7L, the P10, and the P3. I think there is excellent bang for buck in the whole line of Stable Hanging Rotor tables if you can abide the strong yen and shipping costs, both of which make them less attractive in USD terms than just a few years ago (but in yen terms, prices haven't moved).
As a general rule, I would not buy a TT with two removable armwands as standard unless I could get both with it. With the PL-70LII and higher, the straight arm is the one suitable for high-compliance carts.
An issue with these tables is that motors are less easily transplantable to other plinths, and in the case of the P3, a plinth change, while not absolutely impossible, would require some CAD work, and multiple pieces fit around the structure in order to make it work. You'd also have to be careful not to overload the springs too much as it would change the resonant frequency of the under-structure. An arm change on any of them in stock form is not likely to be easy outside the possibility of the AC4000/4400, for which there is an adaptor which works with the P3, and could probably be made to work on the PL70 and above.
The motors are generally nice. I think the P3 is a stonking bargain.
And now back to your regularly-scheduled program.... |
Dear Professor, I love the looks of the Pioneer PL-70L......particularly that cool ebony lush veneer. I'm sure T_bone will have some pertinent experience to pass on? Good luck. Henry |
Regards, Stltrains (T_bone, are you still there?): Stltrains, is there evidence the Empire's suspension is bottoming out on these extreme warps? Resonance is the usual suspect but the recently discussed MOI in the vertical plane could be a factor, too. Just wondering if your arm is static or dynamically balanced and if you can damp it. VPI?
T_bone: I've three arms. No, I've three TONEarms. EPA-250, EPA-500H and a Black Widow. Low med, low and low low mass, statically balanced and never (Stltrains) a tracking issue with any high compl. cart. Anyway, I'm lusting after a gorgeous DD Pio. Exclusive PL-70L 11, the P3's little bro. It's equipped with the carbon-fiber "S" arm, not the straight pipe. Although the low-mass CF straight pipe (or ceramic) is available I prefer the removable headshell option: Enjoyed four cartridges today, an ADC XLM-11 improved cart, an AT20SS, a Signet TK7LCa and also a TK7SU with a fresh AT14 Shibata stylus recently transplanted into an OEM Signet grip, an unanticipated treat for the ears.
So the intention is to replace the second-system Tech. SP-25/Black Widow, an old compadre from the late '70's which would then go to my son's basement rig. I like the prospect, he already has my SX-980 and four even older original Large Advents, all rebuilt and with the SP-25/BW would be a reunion of my 1978 rig. (Raul would cringe) :).
I'm fairly sure the AT20SS at 10x6cm/dyne-100Hz (about as low compl. as any I run) will be OK on the PL 70L arm, not so sure about the other carts. Any thoughts? Lateral improvement? Poor match for the above carts? Keep the bullet-proof SP-25/BW?
I suspect you know the PL-70L 11 so your thoughts (and of course any others' opinions) are welcome.
Peace, |
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Lewm, Your description of the Clearaudio cartridges surprises me."Thin and steely" is certainly not a characteristic I would use after having the Clearaudio Insider Gold and Concerto in my system over several years. Lush and coloured would be more like the sound I heard from them ...especially the Insider. This is not to say that this describes the sound of the good MM cartridges but rather that the Clearaudios, unlike most of the other LOMCs I had heard, were more akin to that quality of 'presence'. |
Hi Raul,
Seeking some advice please.
I have tried both Grace F9 Ruby and Garrott Brothers P77 at 100 setting and the results are quiet, dull and lifeless compared to 47 - am I doing something wrong?
Kind regards John |
Hi Stltrains,
Shure discusses the issues of tracking in their technical seminar paper from 1978...
They resolved it with the introduction of the damping brush...
ie: to at least some degree the solution was found to be damping...
Also where the arm/cartridge resonance is a mismatch - mistracking is a likely consequence as the resonance not only shifts in frequency but also (apparently) increases in magnitude. (I have not measured this aspect - so it is hearsay)
But it is clear that a high compliance cart. in a heavier arm will place the resonance close to the critical warp frequencies, and if that resonance and the warp frequency get close to coinciding.... then your stylus starts to take ski-jump lessons....
If the resonance is damped... this goes away - if the arm/cartridge are well matched (f=10Hz or thereabouts) the frequency is far enough away for the stylus suspension to handle it on its own. (although damping the resonance can still improve things)
I've seen a Shure V15VMR track spectacular warps on a light arm with the brush down.... On the other hand many cartridges have a reputation of requiring flat records to track properly on the ultra light revox linear tracking arm. (I will be checking this shortly with several cartridges.... with an without damping brush...)
My gut feeling from my own previous experience is that it is a matching and damping issue...
bye for now
David |
A fact of lighter tracking MM cartridges would be lps that are not flat. My 4000d tracking at 1g has no problems on relatively flat lps. Records that are more than slightly warped it will skip. I have a idea using the hot Louisiana sun and some12X12 marble floor tiles to flatten a warped test lp out. My previous MC tracking at 2g had no problems tracking these lps |
Dear Raul, Do you really like the sound of Clearaudio MC cartridges, or is it their "design" and construction? I ask because I have disliked the sound of every single Clearaudio MC that I ever heard, and this includes the Insider Gold (in a Walker Proscenium tt), etc. They all sound thin and steely to me. None portray the harmonics and richness of real music, IMO. Also, I think of their sound as the antithesis of what I like about these vintage MM and MI cartridges. |
Dear Griffithds: Interesting what Expert people said because I like the Clearaudio LOMC cartridge designs.
This week I will try to give a listen to my MM Clearaudio and see what I hear.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Royj: How I wish to have in home a fully laboratory with the right tools to make this extremely interesant cartridge/tonearm in motion relationship research and the why's of the perceived quality sound and determine which are the precise trade-offs with different cartridge and tonearm choices designs.
I was trying to remember any experience I had with a low compliance cartridge mounted in a low effective mass tonearm but I can't remember of any, maybe is time to confirm ( comparing. ) what you stated about. I have to give me the time to test it.
Good to hear from you again.
regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Dear Travbrow: Could you share your experiences with your Supex SM-100MK3? and one question: its stylus has the SMM/38E ID?, thank you.
Regards and enjoy the music, Raul. |
Roy, What a nice, clear explanation - an excellent contribution to this thread and to understanding of tonearm/cart interactions. I agree it makes perfect sense (again, to me). I had certainly left out the aspect of sub-10Hz resonance, partly because I was specifically trying to limit the discussion to flat, perfectly-centered records (I don't think talking about ideal tonearm design should be centered around the problem of dealing with warps). Your comment about too-low MOI (vs. compliance) effecting a higher range for phase shift was especially interesting. Thinking about it in physical terms certainly brings the concept of 'phase shift' to the fore.
In_shore, There are any number of arms which do admirably well with high compliance carts. Many date from the same era as the relatively inexpensive MMs discussed on this thread, and many of those are now relatively inexpensive too. The Micro Seiki MA-505, the Victor 7045/7082, the original EPA-100, the Audiocraft AC-3000/4000 were all made to be able to deal with the carts which were popular at the time in Japan, and there was, as Dlaloum pointed out, an era when high compliance was King (but I will point out also that the era did not last forever... The King is Dead! Long Live the King!).
Dlaloum, I am not sure I said LT would be the 'ideal solution' but it certainly has it's place. I might agree with you about making the distinction between short arm LT and long-arm LT, but I think i'd have to think about it some more. A friend reminded me earlier today of some of Teragaki's efforts in linear trackers (which required flat, centered records in order to work). I have never seen one in person but the concepts seem valid. |
Thanks Roy, Your summary of the forces and relationships makes perfect sense (at least to me). And from that, I can see that formulae may be derived to calculate and prove all that you say.....after all, it's not rocket science?.......or with the calculations of forces on moving masses and their reactions.....perhaps it IS rocket science :-) |