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Advice on Cartridge

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Category: Other music related lounges
Forum Name: Tech Talk
Forum Description: Discuss musical instruments, equipment, hi-fi, speakers, vinyl, gadgets,etc.
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Topic: Advice on Cartridge
Posted By: Roxbrough
Subject: Advice on Cartridge
Date Posted: January 13 2015 at 13:38
I have a rega RP1 and it has the give away Ortofon cartridge in it.
I'm ready to upgrade, so my question is, do I go for the Carbon or the Bias 2?
Or would you recommend something else entirely?

Thank you in anticipation of your help.


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Live Long and Prosper



Replies:
Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: January 13 2015 at 14:46
Hi Roxbrough
Depends on what sound you prefer and budget, I have no experience with either and don't read much about them on audio forums, that's not to say they are bad or anything.
 
In the price range of US$100 I would highly recommend a Nagaoka MP-110. A warm sounding cartridge, very analog sounding and also is the best tracking cartridge I have ever owned in that price range.
 


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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 14 2015 at 04:32
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

Hi Roxbrough
Depends on what sound you prefer and budget, I have no experience with either and don't read much about them on audio forums, that's not to say they are bad or anything.
 
In the price range of US$100 I would highly recommend a Nagaoka MP-110. A warm sounding cartridge, very analog sounding and also is the best tracking cartridge I have ever owned in that price range.
 

That's useful, thank you. Would the sound be too polite with an MF A3 feeding MA RS8's?


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: January 14 2015 at 10:42
Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

Hi Roxbrough
Depends on what sound you prefer and budget, I have no experience with either and don't read much about them on audio forums, that's not to say they are bad or anything.
 
In the price range of US$100 I would highly recommend a Nagaoka MP-110. A warm sounding cartridge, very analog sounding and also is the best tracking cartridge I have ever owned in that price range.
 

That's useful, thank you. Would the sound be too polite with an MF A3 feeding MA RS8's?

Not sure what you mean by polite......the MP110 is a warm cartridge, not bright at all and has a very good low end sound. The A3 and RS8s look like a good match, what I am not familiar with is the phono stage of the A3...how does that work with your Ortofon cart now? My only experience with an Ortofon was with a 2M Red, which I did not like.


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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 15 2015 at 06:10
The current sound is slightly thin.
Would a cartridge of this price make sense given the modest price of the turntable?


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Argonaught
Date Posted: January 15 2015 at 07:01
Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

The current sound is slightly thin.
Would a cartridge of this price make sense given the modest price of the turntable?

In the past I had cartridges that would sound too bright (if not tinny) with one receiver and perfectly balanced with the other one. You'd think that all MM cartridges would be universally compatible impedance-wise with all MM phono stages, but this is apparently not the case. What do you feed your signal into? 

It could be a smart thing to do if you try to read up on your existing cartridge; do people in general describe it as "thin"? 

Another quick & cheap fix maybe cranking the bass up a little :)






Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: January 15 2015 at 09:35
Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

The current sound is slightly thin.
Would a cartridge of this price make sense given the modest price of the turntable?
 
The RP1 should handle a cartridge of higher quality easily, the effective mass of the tonearm should be a good match with the Nagaoka. The MP110 will solve your thin sound, it is what I would call a beefy sound, thicker than Ortofon carts.
 
Anything higher than a MP200 @ US$325 is probably too much for the RP1, you will not hear the benefits of a higher cartridge. Then at that point you might begin to think about TT upgrade, but that is more money.....Again, I am not into telling you to spend more because I have no clue what your budgets are or your desire for higher end sound, that is your decisions.
 
Some people swear to the AT95 carts that run sub $100, but AT carts can be on the bright side....


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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 15 2015 at 12:55
Originally posted by Argonaught Argonaught wrote:

Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

The current sound is slightly thin.
Would a cartridge of this price make sense given the modest price of the turntable?

In the past I had cartridges that would sound too bright (if not tinny) with one receiver and perfectly balanced with the other one. You'd think that all MM cartridges would be universally compatible impedance-wise with all MM phono stages, but this is apparently not the case. What do you feed your signal into? 

It could be a smart thing to do if you try to read up on your existing cartridge; do people in general describe it as "thin"? 

Another quick & cheap fix maybe cranking the bass up a little :)





I feed the turntable into the amplifier rega RP1 to MF A3.
I do not use tone controls, there are none on the amplifier.
I don't know anyone else who uses the ortofon.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 15 2015 at 13:00
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

The current sound is slightly thin.
Would a cartridge of this price make sense given the modest price of the turntable?
 
The RP1 should handle a cartridge of higher quality easily, the effective mass of the tonearm should be a good match with the Nagaoka. The MP110 will solve your thin sound, it is what I would call a beefy sound, thicker than Ortofon carts.
 
Anything higher than a MP200 @ US$325 is probably too much for the RP1, you will not hear the benefits of a higher cartridge. Then at that point you might begin to think about TT upgrade, but that is more money.....Again, I am not into telling you to spend more because I have no clue what your budgets are or your desire for higher end sound, that is your decisions.
 
Some people swear to the AT95 carts that run sub $100, but AT carts can be on the bright side....

I have never heard a turntable that sounds better than a rega.
A cousin had a Sondeck and the rega was demonstratably superior, he was very upset when we played the two side by side.
I have done the same test with a Pink Triangle and an Elite Rock and the rega beat the lot and the owners of the other turntables were forced to agree.
The rega has the best dynamics, against dearer turntables it possesses the ability to rock.
Thank you for the advice the Nagoaka sounds like the best option to me. if I do it, I'll be sure to post back on here.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: January 15 2015 at 13:29
^ Nobody can tell you what sounds best, you have to hear it for yourself and perform A/B tests and go audition the gear you are interested in.
Too many variables in the whole audio chain, nothing is ever apples to apples......Cables can make all the difference too, there is no standard or reference to judge against.
 
Look forward to your impressions.


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Posted By: Walton Street
Date Posted: January 15 2015 at 13:33
if I had the ears you guys have i'd have to eat dirt and leaves 3 meals a day
 
 


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"I know one thing: that I know nothing"

- SpongeBob Socrates


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: January 15 2015 at 15:04
^ Dude, I make a mean mudpie.......

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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 16 2015 at 03:09
Originally posted by Walton Street Walton Street wrote:

if I had the ears you guys have i'd have to eat dirt and leaves 3 meals a day
 
 
If you had my ears that would mean you had a total of four and would look rather strange.
I wouldn't advise eating dirt, it would ruin the enamel on your teeth.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 22 2015 at 09:09
I have been reading reviews of the Denon DL110 and it seems to have as many fans as the Nagoaka.
I would be interested in your opinion.
p.s. It takes me a while to decide to shell out near on £100!


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: January 22 2015 at 09:37
The DL-110 is a moving coil cartridge, a high output version. Most moving coils are low output like 0.4-0.8mV, so you need a step up preamp or a phono preamp to boost the gain and handle the loading. This one though can be run into a MM input at 47Kohms. The Denon's output is listed at 1.6mV and normal MM carts are in the 4-5mV range, so you might find you are turning up the volume more with the Denon.
 
Also the stylus is non user replaceable, so you have to send it to a re-tipper, not cheap. MM carts you can buy replacement stylus.
 
But yes, it is highly regarded as a wonderful cartridge for the money, now recently that has changed as you could buy it for about US$100, it has almost doubled in price the past 6 months.


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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 23 2015 at 10:12
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

The DL-110 is a moving coil cartridge, a high output version. Most moving coils are low output like 0.4-0.8mV, so you need a step up preamp or a phono preamp to boost the gain and handle the loading. This one though can be run into a MM input at 47Kohms. The Denon's output is listed at 1.6mV and normal MM carts are in the 4-5mV range, so you might find you are turning up the volume more with the Denon.
 
Also the stylus is non user replaceable, so you have to send it to a re-tipper, not cheap. MM carts you can buy replacement stylus.
 
But yes, it is highly regarded as a wonderful cartridge for the money, now recently that has changed as you could buy it for about US$100, it has almost doubled in price the past 6 months.

Once again tip-top advice. thank you sir, you are a credit to the forum.
I do think a more sensible avatar would make you look even more professional, but that is just a private opinion. 


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: January 23 2015 at 11:04
Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

The DL-110 is a moving coil cartridge, a high output version. Most moving coils are low output like 0.4-0.8mV, so you need a step up preamp or a phono preamp to boost the gain and handle the loading. This one though can be run into a MM input at 47Kohms. The Denon's output is listed at 1.6mV and normal MM carts are in the 4-5mV range, so you might find you are turning up the volume more with the Denon.
 
Also the stylus is non user replaceable, so you have to send it to a re-tipper, not cheap. MM carts you can buy replacement stylus.
 
But yes, it is highly regarded as a wonderful cartridge for the money, now recently that has changed as you could buy it for about US$100, it has almost doubled in price the past 6 months.

Once again tip-top advice. thank you sir, you are a credit to the forum.
I do think a more sensible avatar would make you look even more professional, but that is just a private opinion. 
Haha....prog is not sensible
 
Cheers my friend!


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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 26 2015 at 11:16
[/QUOTE]
Haha....prog is not sensible
 
Cheers my friend!
[/QUOTE]

What is your opinion of the AT100E cartridge, how does it compare to the Nagoaka, please?


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 26 2015 at 11:19
It represents a saving of 25%

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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: January 26 2015 at 16:07
Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

It represents a saving of 25%

Don't know, never had one of those. The house sound of AT is on the brighter side, Nagaoka has a beefier sound, thicker....

I use an AT moving coil right now and works good because my gear has that British designed sound in my amp and speakers, so it is on the warm side. The AT just livens things up a bit, but I can manipulate the sound since it is a MC and I have many loading options in my phono stage.

You originally stated your sound was thin...The Nagaoka will help that more than the AT will, either should give you a bump in quality sound.


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Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: January 26 2015 at 16:09
Not that I am a big fan of youtube for audio gear, but there are some video sound bites that people made using Nagaoka MP-110 carts, look them up, might help your decision process.

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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 27 2015 at 03:13
Thank you once again, your remark about the brightness of the AT has eliminated it for me.
I am now close to a decision between the Nagaoka and the Ortofon 2M red.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 27 2015 at 05:56
Nagaoka MP110

An affordable cartridge at just £62, the Nagaoka MP-110 tracks at a nominal 1.8g.

We found its square casing easy to fit and align, and from the outset our sample gave a bright, immediate sound that would work well in pepping up a dull system.

The MP-110 reveals a sweet midrange, although we'd like some more bass weight to support its light and breezy character. Treble needs more refinementThe treble is also a touch edgy and not quite as refined as some closely priced rivals.


Ortofon M2 red

With its distinctive coloured shell, Ortofon's 2M Red fits so snugly onto the Rega tonearm he midrange is full and expressive, handling vocals with sensitivity and warmth. The bass and treble interact well here, and while we'd like more authority from the bass, it's a minor quibble that we can live with.

Like closely priced rivals, the 2M Red tracks at 1.8g, and we found it simple to fit and align, with its combination of a large, solidly built casing and captive nuts easy to manage, as it stands, it's a more-than-enjoyable listen.



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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Argonaught
Date Posted: January 27 2015 at 06:34
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

The house sound of AT is on the brighter side 
. This is certainly true for many AT carts, ranging from the ultrabudget AT92E to the popular (with me, at leastBig smile) AT120E to the fancier AT150E. The latter, actually, is as fright as buck. It doesn't cut off the lows; just favors the highs. 

There are two in their lineup that are more tone-neutral, the sub-$100.00 jobs AT95E and AT110E. 




Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: January 27 2015 at 11:56
Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

Nagaoka MP110

An affordable cartridge at just £62, the Nagaoka MP-110 tracks at a nominal 1.8g.

We found its square casing easy to fit and align, and from the outset our sample gave a bright, immediate sound that would work well in pepping up a dull system.

The MP-110 reveals a sweet midrange, although we'd like some more bass weight to support its light and breezy character. Treble needs more refinementThe treble is also a touch edgy and not quite as refined as some closely priced rivals.


Ortofon M2 red

With its distinctive coloured shell, Ortofon's 2M Red fits so snugly onto the Rega tonearm he midrange is full and expressive, handling vocals with sensitivity and warmth. The bass and treble interact well here, and while we'd like more authority from the bass, it's a minor quibble that we can live with.

Like closely priced rivals, the 2M Red tracks at 1.8g, and we found it simple to fit and align, with its combination of a large, solidly built casing and captive nuts easy to manage, as it stands, it's a more-than-enjoyable listen.


The MP-110 has plenty of low end, not sure where this review came from. On the mids and highs sure it is not as refined as say the MP-200 which is a $300 cartridge, so makes sense. I have both the MP-110 and MP-200 and there is a big difference.
The square body is excellent for alignment process, this is true, makes it a breeze lining up in a grid box.

I was given a Ortofon 2M Red and it lasted only 1 week on my tonearm, I did not like it, too bright for my taste.

Again, just depends what you are looking for in sound, I suspect you would be happy with either one.


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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 28 2015 at 05:37
I have made a change by getting the rega phono stage and now using the amp's line level input.
It's an upgrade!
Fuller sound, better depth to the sound stage.
I am still after a cartridge, but the difference in the system has now forced me to re-evuluate my list.
I will keep you informed and thanks for your very valuable input along the way.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: January 28 2015 at 10:15
^ Then yes you will be better served with a higher up cartridge, if not, the improvement you just made will be lost.
Which phono stage did you get?


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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 29 2015 at 04:35
I got the lowest in the range.



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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 30 2015 at 04:22
I have now fitted an Ortofon 2M Red into the arm.
The result is fantastic!
More detail, better width to the soundstage.
Superbly controlled frequency extremes.
I listened to Gazpacho - Tick Tock [180gram three sider]
and Pendragon - Passion [180gram three sider orange version]
Both left me breathless.
I suspect the 2M is a perfect match for the RB250 and the amp.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: January 30 2015 at 15:47
Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

I have now fitted an Ortofon 2M Red into the arm.
The result is fantastic!
More detail, better width to the soundstage.
Superbly controlled frequency extremes.
I listened to Gazpacho - Tick Tock [180gram three sider]
and Pendragon - Passion [180gram three sider orange version]
Both left me breathless.
I suspect the 2M is a perfect match for the RB250 and the amp.
 
Nice!!.......Yea, save your pennies as you will get the upgrade bug again on that phono stage for even more WOW moments
 
I calculate the resonance frequency of your arm and cartridge at about 7.8, ideal range is said to be 9-12Hz but I am not 100% sure of the total weight of the 2M Red with screws and all. Final test is your ears though, as long as you have it well aligned to minimize IGD you should have the 2M Red maximized.
 
Enjoy and keep spinning that stuff!! Clap


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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: January 31 2015 at 04:25
Nice!!.......Yea, save your pennies as you will get the upgrade bug again on that phono stage for even more WOW moments
 
I calculate the resonance frequency of your arm and cartridge at about 7.8, ideal range is said to be 9-12Hz but I am not 100% sure of the total weight of the 2M Red with screws and all. Final test is your ears though, as long as you have it well aligned to minimize IGD you should have the 2M Red maximized.
 
Enjoy and keep spinning that stuff!! Clap


My next upgrade will be the 2M blue stylus as the body on both is the same.
I then plan to play blue for new
red for second hand.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 03 2015 at 08:46
Just debuted the 2M blue stylus, playing Ian Anderson's - Homo Erraticus.
Very very good indeed.
I have now put a PR6 on order as I think the cartridge deserves a better arm.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: February 03 2015 at 09:17
Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

The current sound is slightly thin.
Would a cartridge of this price make sense given the modest price of the turntable?
 
 
Good question ... but I can tell you that my $275 dollar Stanton 681EEE something or other that I bought in 1979 lasted 25 years on my Pioneer PL12 something or other (was high end turntable in 1980!), and while I have bought a very nice USB turntable by Stanton, I have not, YET, purchased a catridge that should match the quality of the albums.
 
Stanton, does not seem to make these anymore (why, right?), and the cartridges they show, for some reason do not stand out at all, and appear to be that good. Maybe it is that the design itself is still the same!
 
I always thought that the difference between music and crap was a good turntable, cartridge and speakers! In those days! Tangerine Dream jumped and went around your head silly ... the Rolling Stones were just loud by comparison!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: February 03 2015 at 09:17
Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

Just debuted the 2M blue stylus, playing Ian Anderson's - Homo Erraticus.
Very very good indeed.
I have now put a PR6 on order as I think the cartridge deserves a better arm.
 
You mean a Rega RP6? Well, you will need a much higher up cartridge than a 2M Red or 2M Blue, if you are gonna stick with Ortofon then you should look at the 2M Black. The 2M Black has a shibata stylus and digs deep in the groove to reveal more music but that phono stage will be your brick wall. You should do more research......
 
I can tell you have the bug Big smile, don't panic buy, research, research, research.....
 
Have fun! 


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Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: February 03 2015 at 09:26
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

The current sound is slightly thin.
Would a cartridge of this price make sense given the modest price of the turntable?
 
 
Good question ... but I can tell you that my $275 dollar Stanton 681EEE something or other that I bought in 1979 lasted 25 years on my Pioneer PL12 something or other (was high end turntable in 1980!), and while I have bought a very nice USB turntable by Stanton, I have not, YET, purchased a catridge that should match the quality of the albums.
 
Stanton, does not seem to make these anymore (why, right?), and the cartridges they show, for some reason do not stand out at all, and appear to be that good. Maybe it is that the design itself is still the same!
 
I always thought that the difference between music and crap was a good turntable, cartridge and speakers! In those days! Tangerine Dream jumped and went around your head silly ... the Rolling Stones were just loud by comparison!
 
You are spot on Pedro.....Clap


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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 03 2015 at 13:01
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

 
I always thought that the difference between music and crap was a good turntable, cartridge and speakers! In those days! Tangerine Dream jumped and went around your head silly ... the Rolling Stones were just loud by comparison!

I would question your order there and put it this way;
turntable, cartridge, amp and finally speakers.
If you lose it earlier in the chain no speaker is going to claw it back, it's a physical impossibility.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 03 2015 at 13:05
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

Just debuted the 2M blue stylus, playing Ian Anderson's - Homo Erraticus.
Very very good indeed.
I have now put a PR6 on order as I think the cartridge deserves a better arm.
 
You mean a Rega RP6? Well, you will need a much higher up cartridge than a 2M Red or 2M Blue, if you are gonna stick with Ortofon then you should look at the 2M Black. 
I can tell you have the bug Big smile, don't panic buy, research, research, research..... 
Have fun! 

Yes the rega PR6. I believe in turntable/cartridge/amp/speaker order, so it makes sense to me to get the platform first. I've jumped the boat a bit with the 2M blue, but feel it will blossom in the RP6. I will then look at a different phono amp, but as my MF A3 has a phono input too, don't know which way that will go yet.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: February 03 2015 at 15:57
Again, it's Rega RP6, not PR6 Big smile. I am not a Rega fan, but I still think the RP6 would need a higher up cartridge to take advantage of the higher end turntable, that RB303 tonearm would give you better reproduction with a 2M Black and of course a higher end phono stage.
 
Not pushing you to spend more money, but rather research the myriads of choices you have. Getting an RP6 almost requires you to spend more coin on a cartridge.......I mean you would not buy an Audi R8 and put small 13" tires on it....Thumbs Down


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Posted By: Argonaught
Date Posted: February 03 2015 at 16:27
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

Again, it's Rega RP6, not PR6 Big smile
Nothing escapes your attention, huh Geek
 
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

 I mean you would not buy an Audi R8 and put small 13" tires on it....Thumbs Down 
 Maybe not on R8, but ...

http://images.thetruthaboutcars.com/2010/01/CC-79-044-800.jpg

I always thought that the difference between music and crap was a good turntable, cartridge and speakers!

 Yeah, fo'sho, but .. consider these: I removed floor rugs, tilted the speakers about 5 degrees, moved a house plant a couple of feet away and my chair - 6' to the left.  Now, where I sit - either at the desk, or in the dedicated chair, I am getting more lows and highs and the whole sound stage has cleared up quite a bit.


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Thank you, Fripp, for our daily Prog (Red 39:54)


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: February 03 2015 at 17:29
^ Nope.....

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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 06 2015 at 11:27
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

^ Nope.....

The RP6 came today, I've installed the 2M red into it and can tell you the red sounds better on the RP6, that the 2M blue does on the RP1.

 




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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: February 06 2015 at 11:37
^ Clap Nice Roxbrough!! Get rid of that krappy felt mat and get a better one, cheap tweak and you will thank yourself later.
I use the Music Hall cork mat.......What alignment method did you use?


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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: February 06 2015 at 13:13
Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

 
I always thought that the difference between music and crap was a good turntable, cartridge and speakers! In those days! Tangerine Dream jumped and went around your head silly ... the Rolling Stones were just loud by comparison!

I would question your order there and put it this way;
turntable, cartridge, amp and finally speakers.
If you lose it earlier in the chain no speaker is going to claw it back, it's a physical impossibility.
 
Fair enough ... but you HAD TO HAVE a very big and strong receiver to be able to drive 2 ESS HEIL AMT's ... which I still have and they have been cone'd twice here in Portland by Jamac! And the old man there, says ... keep those speakers ... they don't make magnets that big or that valuable any more!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 07 2015 at 03:56
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

^ Clap Nice Roxbrough!! Get rid of that krappy felt mat and get a better one, cheap tweak and you will thank yourself later.
I use the Music Hall cork mat.......What alignment method did you use?

I used the rega alignment protractor and checked the downward force with Ortofon scales.
The balance sounds spot on so I guess it's okay
Jeff Wayne - War of the Worlds the 1978 pressing on the turntable today.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 07 2015 at 03:57
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:

Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

 
I always thought that the difference between music and crap was a good turntable, cartridge and speakers! In those days! Tangerine Dream jumped and went around your head silly ... the Rolling Stones were just loud by comparison!

I would question your order there and put it this way;
turntable, cartridge, amp and finally speakers.
If you lose it earlier in the chain no speaker is going to claw it back, it's a physical impossibility.
 
Fair enough ... but you HAD TO HAVE a very big and strong receiver to be able to drive 2 ESS HEIL AMT's ... which I still have and they have been cone'd twice here in Portland by Jamac! And the old man there, says ... keep those speakers ... they don't make magnets that big or that valuable any more!

The cone replacement may well have been due to soft clipping.
I suggest Krel amplification.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: February 07 2015 at 16:53
Originally posted by Roxbrough Roxbrough wrote:


The cone replacement may well have been due to soft clipping.
I suggest Krel amplification.
 
I wish I knew what this meant ... it's a speaker with an air motion transformer, a huge bass speaker (that has been coned twice0 and a big, hard wood case for it.
 
I'll look up "krel amplification" but the only Krel I ever met was in a movie ... 60 years ago or so!   Smile
 
ED: Btw, that was coned TWICE in 35 years! The speakers were bought in 1978, I think along with a UHER cassette player (it was good too until it couldn't be fixed!)


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: Argonaught
Date Posted: February 07 2015 at 18:25
^ Krell

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Thank you, Fripp, for our daily Prog (Red 39:54)


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 11 2015 at 11:59
I have now had time to thoroughly test my two cartridges.
Ortofon 2M red
Ortofon 2M blue
Both have been in an rega RB303, mounted on a rega RP6
Feeding a rega turntable amp.

I like the red better!!!!!

It's more even, more polite.
The blue shouts in the mid where the red has all frequencies in balance.

Thoughts anyone?


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 19 2015 at 09:46
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

^ Clap Nice Roxbrough!! Get rid of that krappy felt mat and get a better one, cheap tweak and you will thank yourself later.
I use the Music Hall cork mat.......What alignment method did you use?


The 

SRM/TECH Clear Acrylic Turntable Platter Mat came today Catcher.

You were right, another veil has lifted from in front of the music.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: February 19 2015 at 12:00
^ Very cool.....What thickness is that clear mat?

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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 19 2015 at 13:04
2 mm

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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: February 19 2015 at 17:20
I would like a clear mat.....Will look into that for my table.

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Posted By: Argonaught
Date Posted: February 19 2015 at 17:54
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

^ Very cool.....What thickness is that clear mat?

I have a non-transparent acrylic mat and, for the love of Fripp, I can't hear any sonic difference between it and the regular, rubber-like ones. 

Perhaps, I need to upgrade my ears :)


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Thank you, Fripp, for our daily Prog (Red 39:54)


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: February 19 2015 at 18:58
I have used rubber mats, cork and the cheap felt ones.......None really add appreciable sonic value. I look for mats to help eliminate static, which cork does very well.
 
I prefer the cork mats that decouple the vinyl from the platter, those I do hear a very slight difference in the bass regions, just tightens it up some. But yea I have read the night and day improvements people claim...They help but not that much.
 
There are carbon fiber mats that sell for like $200..claim all sorts of stuff will happen.


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Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 20 2015 at 05:14
considering it has no grading on the surface it bonds to the record very well and I figure I don't need a clamp now.

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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 20 2015 at 05:18
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

I have used rubber mats, cork and the cheap felt ones.......None really add appreciable sonic value. I look for mats to help eliminate static, which cork does very well.

I have found the best way to eliminate static is with the anti-static inners, which fit snuggly inside the paper one that the record comes in.

Analogue Studio Inner Record Sleeves



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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 20 2015 at 05:19
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

I have used rubber mats, cork and the cheap felt ones.......None really add appreciable sonic value. I look for mats to help eliminate static, which cork does very well.
 
I prefer the cork mats that decouple the vinyl from the platter, those I do hear a very slight difference in the bass regions, just tightens it up some. But yea I have read the night and day improvements people claim...They help but not that much.
 
There are carbon fiber mats that sell for like $200..claim all sorts of stuff will happen.


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 20 2015 at 05:19
Originally posted by Catcher10 Catcher10 wrote:

I have used rubber mats, cork and the cheap felt ones.......None really add appreciable sonic value. I look for mats to help eliminate static, which cork does very well.

I have found the best way to eliminate static is with the anti-static inners, which fit snuggly inside the paper one that the record comes in.

Analogue Studio Inner Record Sleeves



-------------
Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 20 2015 at 08:05


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Roxbrough
Date Posted: February 20 2015 at 08:05


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Live Long and Prosper


Posted By: Catcher10
Date Posted: February 20 2015 at 10:56
Very cool!

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