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I am running 3 tables. Io is with Teres. Toshiba is the dedicated mono player or will be once Gary delivers on the phono stage. Hope his health is better. The arm in the picture is the original which I removed -- had to desolder the hard wiring inside. There was a lot of hollow space under the plinth. I bought a few lb bars of electricians putty and had to run out and hit 2 Home Depot stores (as one ran out) to get all the putty I needed to complete the job. It's solid now.
That's a little more like what I was expecting, which inspired me to look at your systems link. Still have the Oracle V, SME IV, w/Soundsmith SG400?Is that the primary table? The Teres with the Versus, Graham Phantom 2, and Koetsu - wood platter? How is the Versus working out?Interesting choices. I haven't heard an Oracle V. The Delphi was always a great looking table, maybe the best in the hot looks dept. The early ones didn't quite live up to their price in the performance dept, guess they didn't have to. I've read that the new ones change that aspect and are great performers. Any further comments on your phono systems would be of interest, I'm sure.neo
I consider both primary. I didn't go for the wood platter since I thought lead shot acrylic was already smooth and organic enough as it is mated with Koetsu and Io. Verus is trouble free and has no problem spinning the platter accurately even when 2 Kg of gunmetal mat was added. The speed lock on within a few seconds. Phantom 2 is the best arm for adjustment that I have ever had and the Magneglide really provides lateral stability on a true uni-pivot design. This lateral stability is the focus of the Delphi MK VI. A couple of years ago, I heard the difference at RMAF. When the Micro Vibration Stabilizer System was engaged, the imaging and details went up a notch. The spring suspension always had lateral wiggle room even though it was designed to provide vertical suspension. MK VI adds these gizmos (silicone damping trough on the plinth with plunger attached to platter suspended in it) near each foot (where the spring is housed). This provides lateral support much like the Graham Magneglide although in this case it addresses more lateral displacement than azimuth. It also damps the vertical springing to minimize recoil. Anyway the darned thing works. I was told I can retrofit the Mk V with this Micro Vibration Stabilizer System but it has to be factory installed and matched to my springs and bearing. The cost was 2K then. Hope it hasn't gone up too much. I am going to get it done one of these days.Soundsmith Strainguage actually is a bargain when you consider that the price includes cartridge, phonostage and/or linestage (multiple input) depending on the model. It's one of the best bargains I pulled off when I got this almost new system used. The fact that it does not depend on coils or magnets on the pick up but, rather, the electrical signal is constituted in the preamp from the resistance differential from the unfettered pickup eliminates a lot of potential pitfalls in vinyl play. It plays in the same league at the statement level of any of the best analog gear and (in my case) it's 1/6th of the cost of Io/Koetsu. It does everything well in a balanced way. I did have to find the right cabling to tame it's hotness when I first plugged it in my system. Some records were just too bright when I used silver IC in the chain. I had Alex from Wywire make a phono cable in his gold line and changed out the rest of IC in the chain with the same. Now it's superb. I use in on instrumental heavy music. I still prefer the Teres setup on Operas and vocal heavy music. The Koetsu bloom and tonal richness of Io make gorgeous singing. So what if it's distortion -- it's euphonic to my ears! This brings me to a philosophical conclusion I have come to in this hobby. There is no jack of all trade best system no matter how much you spend. There will always be something that does some aspect better than others. The trick is finding out what you want and putting your system together so you like your system. I don't mean some bizarre distorted sound. The are some objective parameters of good music playback but there is a lot of artistic leeway within the parameters. I am very partial to what I call cohesive and rich tonality. I am not sure if it's the same as even harmonics/odd harmonics thing but it's probably a part of it. I also prefer live indoor acoustic concerts more than outdoor -- acoustic or amplified. Indoor amplified concert is a hit or miss. Most of the time they are too loud. I like the sound of natural room gain (distortion) of acoustic sound. Strathmore and Blues Alleyare two of my favorite venue for concerts.I want that sound in my room. Sorry for meandering afar from the original question. I prefer balanced over single end for my LOMC playback if I could choose the topology.