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John:So you finally got to hear it w/ your own ears. Its not a subtle improvement. I think its just simple physics but at any event you heard it.BTW, the MC-3 certainly sounded stronger than .35 mV, I couldn't find a spec on it and switching back and forth between it and my new Glider L2 (.43 mV factory test sheet) I never changed gain settings. That was using my EE MM phono section @ 57 dB gain and 47 ohm loading. Both carts partnered well with it.The thing I liked about it most, is the image density. I had a similar experience to Rim, even at the extremes of bass and treble, it was there. Add in some "constrained layer damping" as in the isoplatmat and the resolution just improves.
One thing solved by the MC-3.....a certain, very noticeable high distortion level, or ugly blurring of notes when playing (in particular) driving piano music from Horowitz, Guaraldi, George Winston, Keith Jarrett or others. It may be there on other music, but most noticeable to me with driving piano music. It has existed on every cartridge thus far....magnet, iron, coil - all high output before this one (this is my first in-home audition of a low output device). So, I strongly suspect that we have coil saturation on the higher output devices...that doesn't exist on lower output cartridges. Seems reducing wire lengths from hundreds of feet to a few, along with larger gauge wiring used, is strongly beneficial for vinyl sonics. Lower DC resistance is a good thing in reducing coil saturation
I had assumed my direct drive JVC was incapable of producing bass like that...or the arm wasn't up to snuff, etc. Well, I hadn't really considered the preamp in the equation. It seems rather more critical than I had been giving it credit too, previously. The bass power of the Benz/JVC QL-F6/Mitsubishi is outstanding. Like 'Eric the Red' found out recently with puchase of Graham Slee's overachieving phono stage...they matter more than we would have thought before hearing them.Unless you're playing kettle drums or organ notes, the bass power of this vinyl-based front end is on par with that of CD now. That's something I've been looking in vain for for 20 years to match. This Mitsui is a winner, a keeper, and it sounds astounding here now.I don't know if it's dual mono (with separate power windings and boards for each channel), 1% film caps that allow for 0.2db deviation from the RIAA equalization curve or something else with this preamp....but it's a very serious preamp (tuner is okay, but it's not that important to me). Old caps and all need to be replaced, of course...but I'm enjoying things now immensely. What part of the equation the MC-3 plays in this is unknown right now...but it may well be significant, as well
Damn, I was telling everybody in staff YOU designed it! Anyway, neither of them is me, though I'm a charter member--the only original remaining charter member after the pres. (founded 1995) Well, dual mono is one of the requirements, but of course there's more to it. Seems you hit it good with the Mitsubishi. Is it bettter sounding than the APT?
If I pull out a clean, dynamic recording (Black Uhuru's 'Anthem', the pricey audiophile pressings I have, etc.), it all sounds good - better than ever. But, with a lot of my records, I hear the ham-handed previous owners spherical needle plowing thru my record, I hear the weird equalization and compression applied, etc.