0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 10540 times.
your scout is 90% there already to gain another 5% in performance would cost you a fortune lapsan
I'm going to disagree and say upgrade the table first. it all depends on the end goal though and how much you want to spend. I just made a table change, within the same price point actually, and the difference was pretty great.
I have a Scout and I feel upgrading the tonearmallowed to hear differences in cartridges compared to the VPI arm, first I used a Lyra Dorian wich was very accurate and detailed.Went to a Benz Ace Sl which turned out to be a warmer sound I am now using a Denon DL-S1 which combines both warmer and detailed sound. I think linear tracking tonearms reveal the differences between cartridges very obvious.
Not necessarily. I was able to buy a well maintained Acoustic Signature Final Tool and sell my VPI Scout for a total layout of about $700. The Final Tool provides considerably more than a 5% performance upgrade, believe me. Are you seriously suggesting a Scout is a platform offering 90% of what's possible in vinyl? If so, I respectfully suggest broader listening experience would change your mind. A better cartridge will provide an immediate fix of increased audio goodness, but it will still be compromised in its ultimate potential by the limitations of the VPI table and arm. Galyon really has the correct answer though. In all things audio and especially analog, ultimate performance of a system is limited by the weakest link.
not saying i need to but, i have a VPI Scout and a dynavector 10x5 cartridge.in the future if i was to upgrade, what should i upgrade first, the VPI Scout or the Dynavector 10x5 Cartridge?which would give me the most improvement in theory?