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What an INSPIRED choice, Andy I owned one (I think maybe it was a Mark II) in 1988-89 and it made some of the sweetest sounds I've heard at my house. With a Grado at the helm (Grado's enjoy fluid damping and the Townshend has it in the best place I can think of - at the end of the 9" arm) it kicked out some serious tunes.It had an old Helius Orion as the arm. A nice Rega RB-251 and a <$200 Grado will have that deck singing - and, you, too Bass that put CD to shame (still would I think) and smooth as silk with the oft-ragged Grado tames with fluid damping.Setting in up on feedback resistant base or feet is a MUST. The masonite/concrete Max uses for the plinth does trap a fair amount of energy in it. Enjoy, John
" I'm a little pimp with my hair gassed back.........pair a kakhi pants and my shoes shined black"
I have folks that have offered to sell arms that range from ,origin OL-1, michell, and several regas, and Origin Encounter, and a Hadcock 228.These have ranged from $250 to $450 with one I was asked to make an offer. Any of these stand out as a good match to the grado?
With trepidation, and donning flame retardant suit, I'd opine that there's been a good bit of theoretical nay-saying about matching Grados and mid mass arms that flies in the face of dealer and manufacturer recommendations. I've used Grado Sonatas and Master cartridges in VPI JMW9 (11 grams effective mass,) Rega 300, and now an Audiomods arm without any hint of a mismatch. Harry Westfield of VPI has recommended the Grado Sonata as one of his best picks for the VPI arms and the designer of the Audiomods arm also recommends them as a fine match. Stepping out on a suppositional limb here, I would wonder why it is that if the majority of modern arms are mid-mass designs ill matched to the Grados, Grado would deliberately maintain a higher compliance that rendered them unsuitable to the majority of currently manufactured arms? I don't dispute the physics of IDEAL effective mass and cartridge matching, but it seems to me that this can all be obsessed over to a degree that scares folks away from arm/cartridge combos that are going to work wonderfully, even if they are not theoretically ideal. One knowledge gap in my reasoning (or lack thereof) is not knowing if the less expensive Grado cartridges being recommended to the original poster differ in their suspension characteristics from the Grados I've used. I know they all have a compliance spec of 20, but sometimes numbers don't tell the whole story.