Am waiting the delivery of an Accuphase AC 1 from England. I knew very little of the history of the AC 1, but decided to take a bit of a gamble. Didn't know these were produced in 1979, I was thinking they were from the late 1980's. Imagine my surprise and a bit of uneasiness when I found out this cart was produced when I was 13 years old.
This Accuphase has been rebuilt by Expert Stylus company, and fitted with a Paratrace diamond. Original cantilever and coils are used, the rubber shroud at the body/cantilever junction being replaced. From others description of Expert Stylus work, they don't retip a cartridge that is dodgy, but they don't do cantilever and suspension replacements either. So either a cartridge is in good condition and a candidate for retipping, or it goes back to the customer. From my understanding, the original cantilever was a combination of aluminum, with a boron rod in the center....but cannot get any verification on that. Would be curious to see if anyone knows.
Expert Stylus company seems to be quite the company. I understand they were the semi official re tipper of Koetsu when the company was in flux. The elder Sugano had passed away, and the son had not begun to make cartridges. Here is a link to an interesting article I found on vinyl engine regarding cutting diamonds for audio cartridges. Follow the link and just click on the download button, its a pdf format.
http://www.vinylengine.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=15646Another thing that I would like to find out is the differences between the AC 1 and AC 2. They have almost identical specifications, with the AC 2 being .02mv less output. Can't find a description of its cantilever material either. Only the AC 3 has that info.
Part of what motivated me to make this purchase is the reputation and work of Hisayoshi Nakatsuka, who is the designer of the AC cartridges from what I understand.
I guess part of what I am interested in finding out is how good a restored vintage top of the line cartridge can sound? Is it still worth its esteemed pedigree? Or has time and technology moved so far beyond that these cartridges are well past their glory years? If not, then this appears to be a good way for a financially prudent hobbyist to have a chance to experience high quality analog playback.
For what its worth. The analog rig this is going into consists of a Townshend Audio Rock Mk III, with a Rega 251 + Incognito rewire and Riggle Engineering VTAF and counterweight. Phono stage is a Hagerman Coronet w VCAP upgrades and a Piccolo step up.
Thoughts/Opinions/Experiences are welcome. I would like to hear others thoughts about these vintage high end cartridges.
Regards
Mister Pig