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Good insight from Steve Deckert - thanks for pointing me/us in that direction
I don't think you can expect to achieve the level of playback quality that Mr. Deckert describes w/o investing in what he describes as " a respectable MC cartridge and appropriate arm and table WITH THE RIGHT ELECTRONICS ." The right electronics , of course , being those that he manufactures. In any event, it would be unrealistic to expect that kind of performance from a $60 cart.
The current darling of the Asylum is the Denon DL-103 which can be found on Ebay for $148 delivered. It is a LOMC that has very low compliance, thus requiring a medium to high mass arm. It also tracks around 2.5 gms but at the price, there is simply nothing that competes w/ it. You will need lots of gain in the phono section as well.I run a AT-OC9 ML/ll on my KAB modded Technics 1200 MKII and it is a very nice cart for $279 plus shipping. I have the Eastern Electric Minimax phono section with it and I highly recommend both pieces. I did an absurd amount of internet research before making this leap. Check it out for yourselves.It has good compliance and I set VTF @ 1.7 gms. The longevity of my vinyl is a consideration and I just can't get my head around low compliance and high tracking forces but many are seemingly not troubled by this. The OC-9 tracks as well as any MM I have tried. Surface noise is rarely an issue with this setup. A good record cleaning machine is almost a necessity and clean records and a clean stylus are essential.
you need to internally damp the coils and add the Longhorn stabilizer to make it perform leagues above it's paltry price.
Does that mean I can't pimp the AT440MLa anymore? W
It does seem like AT made a bevy of changes that might've tamed the nasties on the newer version.
PA, If ya' haven't heard it, how can you know? Or, have you heard it?
Some early, perhaps premature observations about 18 hours run in on it....1. VTF - I've never had any cartridge so finicky as the Green is about VTF (Vertical Tracking Force). 1.6 grams is too much - it deadens to presentation (like overdamping, but a bit different). 1.4 grams is, literally, too light a presentation, overall; dynamics are too lightweight. 1.5 about right...but about 1.46 to 1.48 is perfect. WTF - I've never had a cartridge so picky in any recent memory. 2. VTA - I've got it tail down a bit as I've read that's the best place for it. Beats me - I haven't tried it any other angle (no adjustable VTA on the JVC - too bad)3. Noise - It is a bit noisier in the grooves than other cartridges. Do ellipticals 'plow thru' where line styli and vdH/Geiger shapes leave less a bit less friction on the sidewalls of vinyl? Could be 4. Inner Groove Distortion - Almost disqualifies this cartridge entirely. The first 60% of each side sounds quite good - deteriorating slowly into something akin to hell the last tune or final 10-20%. It's quite noticeable - I only hope that I can jiggle some arm geometry or maybe the suspension still needs a bit more breaking it to be fully effective. Hope so, at least. Otherwise, it's a bit of hell as the side winds down each time. 1.6 grams VTF wasn't the answer either - it didn't help the end-of-record distortion....it just overdamped everything.Any of you Grado guys, or former ones, lend some guidance here on these matters - or others?Henry/ohenry, you out there