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I'm local......bought the turntable and cartridge from Command AV (both demo items.
Jeff didn't try to sell you a phono stage, e.g. Luxman, Manley, Whest? You are welcome to join us to listen to several phono stages. I will PM you with information.
I just got a Nottingham Innerspace Jr. with a Shelter Cartridge; any recommendations on a phono pre-amp?
I have Nott Spacedeck and used it with Project Phono box II. It sounded very good. I switched to Nighthawk for a while, but something kept bothering me. Now I have the Jasmine MK II. So far good, have to spend more time with it.
but op amps are terribly unnatural sounding and battery power tends toward wimpy dynamics.
Yes, one that is.....Dual Mono (best for stereo imaging and separation)Solid State (no tube gear can amplify eeny weeny cartridge signals as quietly)Full Featured Preamp (that is one with integrated phono in preamp....to cut down on rca junctions and solder points)In 70's heyday there were many to choose from that fit this description...as EVERY preamp had phono function prior to the Digital Audio Disc. Well, not much has changed since then except that most folks listen to digital audio now. I know of only one currently made today - I own it and it's the best preamp I've ever had in a long line - the Pioneer SX-A9 (J is the old version I had and the newest version is the mk II) It's also freaky great priced today as many are clearing the old version out: $499.00 http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=300510962956&hlp=false&rvr_id=195027790486&crlp=1_263602_304652&UA=WVF%3F&GUID=4f7fa20a12d0a02669415d11ffe2c100&itemid=300510962956&ff4=263602_304652Remote, tuner, too (use different amps thru the available preamp out jacks.....the preamp and MM phono section is the star here) btw, I dig tubes everywhere else in the chain....digital front ends seem to benefit from them and my preference runs to tube amps. But for phono where amplifying quietly is very important, a SS preamp is preferred. Digital loves to be smothered in tubes to paper over it's deficiencies that always arise in sampling music rather than recording and playing back as they sound, in analog domain. btw, in the US it's offered as a receiver; in the UK it's pricier and it's only offered as an integrated amp (without radio)
Re: Ray Samuels Nighthawk. No disrespect to Ray (who seems to have a rep as a gentleman), but op amps are terribly unnatural sounding and battery power tends toward wimpy dynamics.The two together probably make for a lousy combination for many folks...despite it's eerily silent amplification provided by better power and dual mono construction (great for stereo imaging and separation)So, I'd image some folks thrilled with it for what it does well for $800...and as many dismayed and let down by the sound, too.Dual mono, solid state, full featured preamp or receiver w/phono (no opamps)...the best way to go that does the least harm while providing the most potential benefits with the shortest and most direct transmission line for eeny weeny cartridge signals to pass thru John
What an fantastic find!For the current price on the old version, it sounds like a steal.So I shouldnt spend the 3K on a Bryston?
What happened chairguy? Here's what you posted in the original RSA Nighthawk thread:Brilliant idea from Ray Samuels...and a fair price point, too. Dual mono is so incredibly beneficial to phono performance....and solid state and battery power is as quiet as you can dial up 40db or so gain (again, seriously important for phono)I don't for a moment doubt this one IS a true giant killer. Enjoy it folks. If that dude can keep that price point, he's gonna' wipe out a lot of competitors with it.John (EDIT: holee cow, did I see that it handles low output MC's, too? More brilliance!!)