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Have you checked what the Frequency-Amplitude response of those cartridges is?I ask because many MC's have a rising top end - which lends itself to an extreme soundstage...The rise is often beyond the brightness frequencies (lower high end) so they don't necessarily sound too bright.On MM's this top end is often tamed by the higher inductance of the cartridge.... on MC's it can only be tamed by using a much more sophisticated cantilever construction (eg: special materials, very short cantilever) - to move the resonance that causes the rise out of harms way.... which requires the cantilever resonance to be up above 30Khz and preferably above 50khz.Very very few MC's actually achieve this.bye for nowDavid
Hi Neowhat I am saying is1) low inductance designs tend to expose cantilever resonance (as it is not balanced by LCR loading..)2) basic aluminium cantilevers have resonances causing a boost at anywhere from 11Hz to 16Hz (examples Ed Saunders V15V stylus - 11Hz, Shure & Jico standard elipticals circa 16Hz), high quality aluminiums will place the resonance at 18Hz to 21Hz (examples Pickering Z7500s, Ortofon OM20/30/40) - exotic cantilevers can place the resonance higher (Jico SAS - circa 28kHz, Dynavector Karat 50Khz to 70kHz depending on model)3) Audio perception is a beast! - amplitude boosts in the very directional higher frequencies can be perceived as broadened soundstage4) Brightness is not a reflection of a linear boost across the high end - but a reflection of a boost between around 5kHz and 10kHz - boosts above 10kHz don't tend to be perceived as "brightness"5) a cantilever with a resonance in the lower highs eg: 11kHz - is very likely to sound "Bright" even if the high end above 16kHz drops off dramatically - counter intuitive I know... - So a basic relatively heavy aluminium cantilever in an MC can be a bad thing (assuming you don't like "brightness")6) A cantilever with a resonance around 16kHz will boost frequencies from around 8kHz (within the brightness range) up to around 32KHz - resulting in both brightness and strong soundstage perception.... the cues for both are boosted.7) A cantilever with a resonance around 19kHz (eg Pickering 7500) will boost frequencies starting from around 9.5kHz.... so negligible impact on the brightness zone - but substantial impact in the soundstage cues - this is common for many high quality MC'sThe very best MM/MI designs are mid inductance - not as low as true low inductance designs - so it does not expose cantilever resonance quite as harshly, but does not depress the high end as much as high inductance designs do. Fit a traditional 6mm or 7mm high quality cantilever to one of these - adjust with the right loading, and you can achieve theoretically very very good results without resorting to technological or engineering extremes....eg: CA Maestro, V15VMR, Technics EPC100/205, many othersBut these are just my ruminations.... and maybe I ate just one hash brownie too many....bye for nowDavid
On a related topic... I was re-reading the Stereophile review of the Ortofon MC3000....In this review it mentions that after "Golden Ear" sessions run by Ortofon determined that the "Golde Ear" fraternity preferred a slight rise of around 2db at 20kHz, they started incorporating this into their cartridge designs.The earlier MC2000 (not the MC2000mkII) was purported to be perfectly flat (in F/R) - and a wonderfully neutral transducer.It seems to me that the MC2000, MC200, and MC100 all came out around the same time, (early 80's) before the Ortophase papers, and were aimed at the engineering goal of perfect neutrality - flat frequency response.After the Ortophase tests (which were based on the MC200 in various modified forms) - things seem to change - I have a strong suspicion that the "Golden Ears" tests which led to the chosen 2db top end rise, and the Ortophase tests (and associated articles) are one and the same.One thing that was never clarified in those tests was whether Ortofon found a means to seperate phase/frequency effects from amplitude/frequency - my hunch is that they didn't (it would require linear phase filters, and prior to the true digital era this was non-viable). And that therefore the tests conflated phase and amplitude - in the end they concluded that audiophiles preferred a slight top end rise - and started tilting their new models in that direction.It is interesting that they chose "golden ears" and not experienced recording engineers.... the chosen preferences might have been quite different? (ie: would those with regular access to Master tapes, perhaps choose the more neutral alternative?)I do keep an eye out on the usual auction site for a stylusless CA body to add to my collection... and to try out with various stylus options based on the ongoing rave reviews - but so far the bidding has always beaten my willingness to spend....bye for nowDavid
It's all about learning. I'm more interested in your evaluation process. I'd like to know about the cartridges you've evaluated and how you came to the conclusion that they were not worthy. I'm also interested in your current reference. I'm relatively new to the mm world and I have a lot to learn. I know you're interested in the carts inductance, but inductance alone doesn't explain a cart's performance. I'd prefer not to waste my time and money trying to figure out what you already know. I know it's unlikely, but if there was anything I could do to help, I'd surely be open to it.Sincerely,Don
Sounds good. I actually stumbled into the AT-13 series cartridge. I simply tired of chasing Raul's cartridge of the month, and was unwilling to pay the "Raul Premium". I somehow, mistakenly or not, came up with the notion that some of the older AT carts would perform better than their newer models. I found your thread and thought you might be on to the scent. I'd be willing to invest a bit to help complete your work. My current favorite is the LS500, and I know this cartridge has more to offer than my system will be capable of revealing. If it's possible that you haven't already evaluated this one, I'd be willing to lend this one for evaluation.Don_grb