0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic. Read 8106 times.
Just intrigued by these oddities in vinyl-philia. I understand, from a little reading, the theoretical advantages in groove tracking (and hence, distortion), but has anyone had experience with them?
....... has anyone had experience with them?
Thanks Scott for the link. If I decide to bite, I'll send it to you first for a review, how is that? The same goes for any tonearm I buy, if you haven't tried it before, in return I ask only your feedback. Sound fair?Analog is one of those things we must rely upon other's reviews since it is difficult to try numerous arms & carts. I am in the midst of working on a second arm setup for my Teres, planning to add a lo-output MC dynavector (starting to become a dynavector aficionado) to the setup. Haven't decided on an arm, might be a little in the future.
Hi GuysHere is a link to the Cartridge Man's new "Conductor Tonearm", at $3,300AUD it is out of my league. http://www.decibelhifi.com.au/prod419.htmBluesky
This may be a side note to the topic, but I was wondering if groove distortion is solely produced by the playback mechanism or if the vinyl itself can be permanently damaged by playing the record on 'improperly' setup systems. For instance, is the transient crunchiness I hear on some old vinyl simply because the poor thing was dragged through cheap equipment or is it just because my rig can't hack it? Breakup on the treble is the one thing that makes me hate vinyl playback, way more than surface noise; so I definitely share the curiosity in linear arms.
I'd think a finer stylus and better tracking tonearm like a linear tracker would only make it all the more noticeable.
You're paying more to hear more...and you hear more of someone's ham-handedness in the process. The crunchiness you hear is probably because you have too good of a playback system at your disposal.
How much different/inferior is the 505 to the 507mkII? The 505 is up on audiogon a whole lot cheaper.