Yes, I am fond of the AT440MLa and have been accused of being the company "pimp" which I am not. aa On the other hand, I own the AVA Grado Green and did a DIY Longhorn on the Gold. I like the AT on my Empire and VPI. It tracks better because the arms on these 2 machines are so damn massive and stiff, being not very compliant at all. However, I have either the Grado Green or Gold in my Harmon Kardon T25 and the cartridge tracks beautifully. The Grado's lower end is a foundation you could build a house on. That's my take. When the bass is done right and the cartridge is allowed to track correctly, the sound is very well balanced, beautiful in fact especially thru the T8.
The last time I visited Frank, I brought my Grado Gold Longhorn with me premounted to my HK headshell. It fit right into Frank's Harmon Kardon T30 with only a slight weight adjustment. Well, the grado kicked butt thru Franks T8/550ex and HT-3s. He had a new record that he had got at the show in Michigan and put that on. There was a lot of percussion and piano in this pressing (180 gram, I think), and the Grado walked right through it. It was impressive, to say the least.
I'm not going to paint an audio tapestry of what the cartridge sounded like, I'm an engineer. Can't spell either. But the cartridge equation is that it is an equation. The table, tone arm, motor and their respective adjustments, damping and compliance are all critical to good sound. Put the best cartridge in a poorly set-up machine and you get crap. Spend the time learning the geometry and physics of the table and make the appropriate settings and the Grado will bring tears to your eyes. Ear candy, for sure.
No, the Grado won't work on every machine. That is why I have the ATs. It is a great sound for these hard to fit tables, nice midrange and with any Dire Straight album, plenty of solid bass.
As far as spending big bucks on tables and carts.............
