Hey Gary,
For a 630mh inductance cartridge
I might pay $300 tops for it as it's naturally
hobbled by high-inductance (no matter what you do mechanically, the electrical laws can't be bent). Actually, I think the lower 2M series cartridges are 700mh.....
further hobbling them.
http://www.hagtech.com/loading.htmlThe problem is further compounded by external phono stages (which most have now today) because they add
additional capacitance beyond the turntable leads. The resonant point is well below 20khz at 630mh inductance and 125pf capacitance.
Note that Ortofon does not specify the
capacitance level used with the cartridge in deriving their specs....making their specs rather like marketing drivel than fact. Specs matter only if used in relevant real world conditions, not laboratory optimized.
What sonics and treble is there might be sweet indeed, but if you're paying large money (I consider $600 for the top-of-the-line 2M to be) for a MM, it ought to have more to it (or less of it as it were). It's pretty clear that Ortofon has elevated the price of all of their cartridges in the past couple years to fend off pricing discounts and increase their margins (because they can).
For $300 and less, you can choose from among several Audio Technica's, Grado's and Goldrings with less or equivalent inductance and moving and tip mass....so,
I would never choose the Ortofon 2M series.
But, that's just me...enjoy whatever makes you happy. But, no one should be called 'stupid' for expressing their opinions at Vinyl Circle (I know you agree on that one

)
btw, a real cartridge collector/nut/friend in Puerto Rico adores his Ortofon 2M. So, I'm happy for anyone that is - but unless I get one for almost free, I won't be paying money for it (and I have no beef with Ortofon...long may they live

)
John