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Just thought I would throw this out for others to chime in.I have found in my limited experience that MC cartridges like to see a step up transformer do the stepup.Having experimented with a few devices I have settled on using Dave Slagles silver wound stepups. They are 20:1 for use with my Lyra cartridge. These are expensive stepups, but even using modest stepups I have found the stepup transformers adds a sense of dimensionality that an active device just does not. Of course core material and windings make a huge difference, but I still find the SUT to be a great way to stepup a voltage for use with MC carts.Vinyl is crazy in that there are so many ways to make it sound great or not so great, it is tweaky, and requires a lexicon all to itself, to explain what is going on. It seems complicated but it really isn't.Stepup transformers are one of those tweaky crazy devices that are required, and can also make all the difference in the world.I prefer a MM phono pre. This allows me to stepup the voltage anyway I desire.Phono preamps with all sorts of adjustability certainly are convenient, but you are married to what transformers or resistors or gain device the designer chose to use. When using an expensive cartridge, and you have that much skin in the game, do you want the phono preamp designer limiting your choices? The best Phono pre I have heard was the Ypsilon which is an LCR which is only MM. It requires a stepup device of some sort.Then we get into the game of loading a cartridge, which is a whole nuther world!Crazy but funmike
Well I've never used a MC cartridge for the following reasons:1) Never owned any.2) Tracking of most MC's is usually 3 g. which is enough tons of force to wipe the record after two or three plays.3) Use of transformers into the MM input gives normal RIAA Eq. that can't be bypassed, but the impedances seen forward affect the frequency response depending how badly or goodly the MC Cartridge is loaded. Most MC's are supposed to be loaded with 100 ohms, instead of 47K ohms, if I recall from some 30 years back.4) Don't have any MC level inputs, modern stuff doesn't even have MM phono inputs.Still, Mike, if I get the drift of what you're saying, maybe I should hook up some small shielded transformers, connect up my MM cartridge(s) and turntable, and try that into my normal PAS-3x Preamp, or my slightly modified PAS-3x (both use 1960's Telefunken 12AX7 tubes) or one of many transistor preamps. However, since the PAS is tubes, it has a wide overload capability, and I think I once measured a PAS as putting out over 30 volts P-P before clipping, then I'd get the so-called advantages of "Input Transformers" and none of the Moving Coil Cartridge "minuses". Anything close to 1:1, or between 1:1 and 1:4 or 4:1 would probably work. Hooked up after the PAS could be any half decent receiver, Mosfet Amp, ULT Amp, SET Amp, etc. and usual speakers system.So does this sound like a good idea? Anybody ever try this? Chirp in with suggestions!-Steven
"Stepup Transformers. What do you use? "a Denon AU-300LCSo how woud I change the primary loading from 47K to 100 for my 103R which "will provide a little less top-end and deeper bass"
I use a Hagerman Piccolo that I have modded and upgraded. It powers my Transfiguration Temper LOMC cartridge into a Hagerman Trumpet MM phono stage (but you know this already Mike).Is it the quietest step up/head amp? No, but it has lots of adjustability for loading and gain (I need 26db boost for the .2mv output of the Temper) and has rediculous performance for its cost. I would love to compare it against the better Bob's devices or Slagel's or Jensen's. I have heard it vs the venerable TX103 transformers and thought it was better all around. More dynamic, better soundstaging and imaging, better bass and transparency.And I have pride of building it myself and experimenting with different caps and resistors in the signal path to tune it to my ear. Not something that can be done with a transformer.
A phono preamp is basically a RIAA filter. And it is MM. 47k.What makes a phono preamp a MC phono? well the gain stage of course!
(1) Some of your premises are off, really off. (2) The idead that an MC must be loaded at 100 ohm is completely fallacious, some like that load, some like higher loads, some like lower loads.
Well I've never used a MC cartridge for the following reasons:1) Never owned any....Maybe I should hook up some small shielded transformers, connect up my MM cartridge(s) and turntable, and try that into my normal PAS-3x Preamp, or my slightly modified PAS-3x (both use 1960's Telefunken 12AX7 tubes) or one of many transistor preamps. However, since the PAS is tubes, it has a wide overload capability,So does this sound like a good idea? Anybody ever try this? Chirp in with suggestions!