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Grado cartridges have a well earned reputation for poor tracking. They're also not shielded and therefore tend to pick up RFI and EMI. Those are real drawbacks in a phono cartridge. Why not start out w/o those drawbacks? I'm aware that many folks love them, I just don't understand the attraction.What about the Clearaudio lineup? Where's the sweet spot for performance VS price?
Right on, Derockster. At only 45mh of inductance, cartridge resonance won't occur until well into the supersonic region (61K or some such with 150 ohms of impedance in your wiring leading to your phono preamp - 150 ohms is pretty typical for armtube, phono leads and an additional IC to your line preamp/receiver or integrated if you're using an intermediary dedicated phono stage). The AT440MLa has 490mh (the AT150MLX is less I think at 350mh) of inductance...even if you have it loaded right, it's resonance point is 18K or so. You may not hear it, but this resonance will screw up what your pre-amp and amplifier is trying to achieve if not damped right and it is within the realm of theoretical hearing range 20hz-20Khz.http://www.hagtech.com/loading.htmlAs well, lower inductance means the coil noise is lower - less details obscured. The treble on the Grado's is natural and the best I've heard, bar none. Instruments sound more like instruments than any other cartridge I own - no matter the cost.5 mv is nice high'ish voltage - plenty of punch without undue noise from higher gain stages need apply. 45mh is embarassingly low inductance level for a MM/MI (no others even come close to it).Larry, before you knock it - try it - as you have a fluid damped arm now...it's worth the shot at it for cheapo money.You can thank me for being an unrelenting Grado whore after the 50 hour break-in period I promise not to use the 'I told you so' bit John
So Clearaudio's are really AT's in disguise. Thanks for the info. I hope he doesn't mind me posting this, Woodsyi, who is a very generous man has offered to loan me his Ruby 3, so that I can hear how a really first rank LOMC compares. It has been said on this forum that LOMC's below $1000 are compromised. What if I fall in love with its sound? At any rate, I wanted to thank Rim publicly for this kind and generous act.
Hey Gary how did the Grado sound on your 1200??Derockster
Grado's do sound good on DD tables - 'tis true. Their bass can sound a bit billowy, but always powerful, on 'slower' belt drive tables.Gonna' try one I just bought from Wayner on my DUAL 1229 Idler (my first rim driver) to see if they work on those well.John
Thanks Gary for the info.For fear sounding repetetive GRADO's sound real real real.Just so you'll know my Grado Green replaced a Shure mv 15 type v(a rather expensive cartridge).I never looked back to it.Regards derockster
Quote from: Derockster on 2 Feb 2008, 10:34 pmThanks Gary for the info.For fear sounding repetetive GRADO's sound real real real.Just so you'll know my Grado Green replaced a Shure mv 15 type v(a rather expensive cartridge).I never looked back to it.Regards derocksterNever cared for my Shure V15 either Gary/lazydays - the Grado Green/shibata sounds great on both DD decks I have (both are well isolated from feedback)...it's the VPI belt driver where the bass sounds overwrought and billowy. John
Ringing? Usually if you are getting a ringing it may be cartridge loading.I don't get any ringing effect with any of the MC's I have here. Interesting.I would not buy a Grado for all the problems that have been mentioned everywhere.How about the Ortofon M Series, AT 440, Denon 160?Den
Nice post.I tried AT440MLa recently, 'cause I needed a good tracker. Unlistenable (I have both MFA Lumi full function and Hagerman Trumpet). Tracked ANYTHING and EVERYTHING, but nasty up top. Grados sound good on my rig, but don't track. So what does one do?
I have the statement, I like it a lot.... Nice and warm!