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Grado chief engineer John Chiapas recently told me the Green is 90% of the way there for music...what he didn't tell me is that much of the rest of the way is changing out the stylus assembly for a more hyperelliptical shape.fyi - you now need to spend $1200 in the Grado line to get an ellipsoid stylus (nee, Shibata)A very interesting and substantive $59 discovery this was, indeed
Psychicanimal400 mH impedance is still high-ish...which means it is an inherently noisy (internally) cartridge...it just comes with the territory. It also means DC resistance is probably well over 1000 ohms, which will mean detail retrieval will be somewhat obscured with a deficit in transparency to low output cartridges and even hi output Grado's.
Point is entry to mid level cartridges with excellent stylus can go a long ways...
The (high output) 881 and 981's have 900 and 800 ohms internal DC resistance/impedance...it's not until you get to the very low output 981LZS in the Stanton line does DC resistance fall significantly in their line. Which one you got there?www.cartridgedb.com
Interestingly, the 500 series (mentioned occasionally as a terrific budget buy alternative to other makes) has less DC resistance/impedance than the similar output 881/981's in that line. But, no stereohedron (nee, otherwise known as Shibata or Line) stylus....just cheapie ellipticals and sphericals. 500 ohms internal resistance is very, very good outside of moving coils. I actually know someone that re-tipped with a ruby stylus from SoundSmith and glows over the cartridge. Sounds a bit daft to take a $39 cartidge and put a $250 tip on it....but that very low-ish internal resistance figure would indicate pretty transparent and fast musical reproduction (for moving magnets/moving irons)