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Hi Mark,Check out Soundsmith. Their top-of-the-line retip is half Sumiko's price. I've had two carts redone by Soundsmith and have been very happy with the work. I wouldn't be at all surprised if the quality of the stylus they use is far superior to what you'd get from Sumiko.
... To my eye it looks as though I have lost part or all of the tip of the diamond. Does this happen (I'm very careful with my system)?? I figure the Blackbird has about 1500 hrs on it, and have read that there are some quality problems with the Blackbird.I want to re-tip ($900) or replace, so at this price point ($1000) what are other good choices for my set-up.?Thanks for your patience and good advice.Mark
Hi.First off, I never own any phono cartridgs cost over a grand. So I can't recommend any.I'd have heart attack should yr very short-lived cartridge issue befell me. It may also scare off many audio fans who want to start playing vinyls.My big question is: how come expensive brandname cartridge can got worn out of its tip for only 1,500hours? It should be a major Q.C. issue. Wonder if you want to launch a claim against the cartridge manufacturer?Thanks goodness. I've been enjoying my LP music bigtime for a few years now, using an old vintage Swiss made TT + a cheapie no-name MM cartridge with a conical stylus, tracking on mostly old recyled LPs picked up dirt cheap from thrift stores. Yet no worn-out stylus tip nor any detectable drop of music quality after these long years. Consistent quality music.I must be a lucky duck or what? Mind you, I play masters from Pavarotti, Domingo, Victoria de los Angeles to the Beathles, the Eagles & Elvis. Or whatever LPs worth me picked up from thrift stores for as low as 75 cents a pop!Or has my otherwise very luck vinyl experience already busted the well-adopted myth of having to drop big bundles to acquire hi-end brandname cartridge+TT, in order to really enjoy durable quality vinyl music??Let our wise consumer readers to judge.c-J