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This really is a "rif" on the same principle - set the capacifier R and C values to the same as Scotty's and you have Scotty's mod (some of them would be set to null value)To go with this diagram I also have a spreadsheet that models the electrical behaviour - it can also be further tweaked by measuring the actual behaviour of a cartridge, cancelling the theoretical electrical behaviour from the measured to provide a "raw mechanical" (+ non linearities) baseline, that can then be used to model what will happen with various parameters.These circuits do as advertised - you can (with the right values on the components) effectively get the same results you would have were your capacitance far lower - so it is a means to attach Audio Technica cartridges that work best at low C loading, to standard phono stages with loadings of 220pf (+interconnect of 100pf or more...)This is very flexible - if you use a p-mount adapter in the circuit setup, you can quickly and easily switch cancelling cartridge bodies to experiment further with tweaking the voicing.There is a long thread on this topic here:http://www.vinylengine.com/turntable_forum/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=33929bye for nowDavidP.S. please ignore component values on this diagram... I just threw it together to show the outline... values would obviously vary wildly based on what you are using it for and with which cartridges.... the two cartridges involved need not match. - For best results, as in all things audio, the two channels should be matched as closely as possible.... this is the trickiest part given variation in cartridge inductance between channels on many exemplars!
Are you looking for different cart models? Okay, how about AT 0C9ML/II? I haven't bought a pre for it, but have the Collins PCB and a lot of the components.