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I don't think the Sumiko one shown here:http://www.needledoctor.com/Sumiko-HS12-Headshell?sc=9is as well made, although I'll happily be proven wrong if anyone has directly compared the two. And anyway, I don't like the fact that the Sumiko doesn't have a finger lift. I rarely use the armlift to cue records, and much prefer to hand cue, so for me the Sumiko is a no-no.
Marco - nice set-up!!
I never found headshell's made much of a difference in things.
I'm dubious on whether 2" of exquisite quality wire is gonna' make much of a difference either.
Nonetheless, I've never seen anything quite so well made as the Audio Technica headshell I bought at AudioCubes a while back. It, too, is space age material and comes with what is arguably the best copper wire that can be found in PC-OCC (one crystal boundary per 125'). The 'problem' with the 13gram one I bought is that it is quite a bit too stubby/short for most cartridges to fit well in there. I'd recommend the 15 or 18 gram headshells as they are likely longer (AudioCubes doesn't give much guidance on this online) as long as your tonearm can still support/balance them.
FWIW, I am not certain if the KAB Cardas tonearm re-wire also includes Cardas headshell wiring (I seem to recall it does, but I'm not absolutely certain
As for your AT headshell, I looked at that, too. It is very well made, but as the azimuth adjustment is in the form of preset drilled holes on the underneath of the headshell, I didn't feel this provided the level of fine adjustment that I require. With the likes of the Zupreme and Sumiko, you can slide the cartridge up and down the headshell in absolutely minute amounts, which can make all the difference when fine tuning a cartridge and getting it to 'sing'. Getting a cartridge set-up absolutely bang on is a lengthy and delicate process!
You can't see it on the AT, but the headshell does move north/south and east/west for that last bit of adjustment needed (it locks into place with set screws not shown on bottom of cartridge). It's the best arrangement I've ever seen in a headshell....
however once I damp the $10 Taiwan jobbies with modelling clay, I hear nary a difference between 'em
We audio and vinyl phools tend to look for extraordinary relief from easy issues to fix.....helped all the way to whet our appetities for more by marketers of such equipment. AT, Sumiko and LP Gear don't make much selling anyone $10 headshells and dishing out advice to buy a $3 stick of modelling clay and damp 500 headshells with it. I'm a marketer myself - so I'm not delusional, just realistic on these matters
Anyhow, sorry if this sounds preachy - I love your set-up man - and just glad to have another vinyl-phool to chew the fat with
Some months back tvad4/Grant PM'ed about the Technics mods from Kevin in general but one concerned azimuth adjustment of the headshell. I didn't know at the time that headshells for that arm were available that could accomplish that. I do not agree that this is a necessary adjustment and have never had any issues with mistracking due to a cartridge not being properly aligned in a stock headshell.
Marco, you must have a very nice sounding setup there but I have to agree with John, that few inches of wire doesn't amount to anything.
Sorry but I think you should take the money you would spend on fancy adjustable headshell and buy more LP's w/ it.
marco, i don't care how good you think the denon is - ditch it immediately, unless you wanna get it re-tipped w/the vdh stylus, or something similar. (it seems the audiocubes rebuild still keeps the spherical stylus shape, but i am not sure.) you're literally grinding your records, at 2.5g tracking with a spherical stylus. fine-line type styli are the way to go - better tracking, more retrieval of info off the winyl, lower noise floor, way less force in psi on the actual winyl surface, as the actual surface area of a fine-line stylus that contacts the winyl is so much larger than a spherical (or even an elliptical) stylus.
Marco:Doing the conversion 42,000 yen works out to just over $354 and thats not including shipping or is it?
Anyway, its quite a premium over the standard DL-103 is one of the darlings over on the Asylum. It can be had from an eBay guy who is very reliable for $148 delivered which is certainly cheap enough. It does require a good deal of gain and (I'm agreeing w/ doug) I would be awfully concerned about what it may do to your precious vinyl. The Denon 301II is much more interesting to me but I've not yet heard it. It is a high compliance LOMC that tracks @ 1.5 grams or so and has great word of mouth.