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Weren't Micro Acoustics carts also "strain gauge" designs? Seems I remember they were unusual in some design aspect.
[Kevin Haskins - Ignorance is bliss (agreed); in the case of the Grado Green it is also pretty smart financially. I posted this elsewhere on AC after talking to Grado yesterday and you may not have seen it:
Wow, this is a trip down memory lane. I too used the Panasonic Roland combo. There were two setups. One was a bare board with a simple shelving filter and the other a nicely made rack mount box with a 70’s SOTA fet based circuit. At the time it retired my Denon 103D and I used it till I ran out of replacement stylus...John
As an old timer at this, back in the late 70's or early 80's I purchased a Grado and didn't care for it's sound at all. Very bland, with no high end as I recall. Much preferred the sound of Audio Technica XLE40 or Audio Technica AT122LP on my Kenwood KD-550 Turntable (concrete? resin base?).Recently purchased a have a Clearaudio Champion TT with Rega 300 (OEM) arm, and Micro Benz Ace M cart (low output) paired with Monolithic PS-1 Phono Pre. Any opinions on how the Grado Green or Sliver would sound in comparison?Would entertain trying other carts, but don't have much to spend. Audiogon a place to try or should I consider only "new" carts? Any general info?
Quote from: dB Cooper on 20 Feb 2007, 10:53 pmWeren't Micro Acoustics carts also "strain gauge" designs? Seems I remember they were unusual in some design aspect.Those were electret condensers, a strain gauge is an entirely different concept.
how is a strain-gauge different???