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MC Carts: Poor Specs! |
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Graham Slee
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Retired Joined: 11 Jan 2008 Location: South Yorkshire Status: Offline Points: 16314 |
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Topic: MC Carts: Poor Specs!Posted: 03 May 2009 at 6:02am |
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One very important factor in ensuring the correct sound balance from a moving coil cartridge according to one website is being able to control the extreme rising response which, according to a graph on the same website, can be up to plus 10dB at 16kHz!
Bang goes the supposed benefits of moving coil cartridges then? I know this simply doesn't happen with moving magnet! But does this happen at all? Or is this website a lone voice? Excluding forums where it is known that members can imagine all sorts of things and convince themselves and others of all sorts of myths and magical things (this doesn't happen here because our members still have most of the sense they were born with, plus I have the delete button...), the website in question IS a lone voice. So where's the link I hear you ask? Sorry, it's a competitor is my answer. I spent most of Friday trying to substantiate this claim of "wickedly" rising response, which is due to the inductance of the cartridge, but unless my search terms were way off base, I couldn't substantiate it. So what is the inductance of a moving coil cartridge? Most manufacturers don't seem to have a clue - or don't give a hang! The only manufacturer's website to specify inductance is Goldring! So with only their inductance to go on I decided to do a spice model of the parasitics: if you model pure inductance into a load you will get a frequency response "kick" which would suggest the website in question has a point. But then the cartridge manufacturer also specifies the DC resistance of the coil - this is a constant. Model that in series with the inductor and suddenly the "kick" is gone! So will the "kick" be an acoustic phenomenon? And if it is - is the website in question therefore saying moving coil cartridge manufacturers have it wrong? I would have thought they'd be equipped with the odd test record and some test gear to be able to plot their cartridge's response - wouldn't you? In fact I'm sure I received such a plot with my Audio Technica OC9! So is this guy kidding? Trying to frighten the buying public by saying "see here, I'm the only guy who knows his stuff and if you buy anything else you're in for a bad time"? Could that be possible? ![]() Or does the fact that I can't find any MC cart specs that list inductance mean that the cartridge manufacturers have something to hide (except Goldring)? If the last case is true, then it would be a case of just one cartridge manufacturer's products being any good! So my using Audio Technica and Ortofon moving coils in the listening tests of our phono stages is wrong?.... I should be using Goldring? Well, if that is the case, then our phono stages will sound just fine with every single MC cart apart from Goldring..... ?!? ![]() And that gentlemen, is why so many of you can get so totally confused! My advice is to avoid the singleton! The singleton with what seems to be an attitude problem who wishes to suggest you can only get the RIGHT result with him, and him alone! Which is exactly what every hi-fi manufacturer is about which equates to one thing... MONEY LUST, period! |
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tg [RIP]
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Joined: 19 Jan 2008 Location: Sydney Status: Offline Points: 1866 |
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Posted: 03 May 2009 at 9:29am |
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Interesting theory. My bog standard professional broadcast cartridge (DL103) came with a frequency plot that drops gently from 2KHz to around 9KHz - by about 1dB then rises gently to about 0.5dB at around 17KHz dropping again to -1 dB @ 20KHz. Is this some kind of fraud on their part ? - it does look like a section torn from a continuous roll of recorder paper, rather what one would expect to be used in such testing equipment and does have an official "chop" mark along with various testing parameters for reference. Perhaps the official mark of the tester makes it some form of legal document ? - rather like a sworn statement ? - would they dare to falsify such a thing ? - particularly one not intended for a consumer market ? That is no doubt why this one displays such "atypical" behaviour - it is a broadcast cartridge not a "hifi" cartridge. I hope our friends at Nippon Columbia understand the use of irony - don't want any flak from there BTW I have seen inductance figures for some AT cartridges on a resellers website so they must be published somewhere - perhaps in Japanese. Edited by tg - 03 May 2009 at 9:34am |
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Analog Kid
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Joined: 07 Mar 2008 Location: Germany Status: Offline Points: 209 |
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Posted: 03 May 2009 at 8:45pm |
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Some manufacturers even display a lack of consistency in their specifications. For example for their 17D3, Dynavector specificies a To make it even more confusing, the previous model the XV-1s has the following listed: "Impedance: R=6 ohms, L=18 micro Henry" And what does that mean? Edited by Analog Kid - 03 May 2009 at 8:55pm |
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Graham Slee
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Retired Joined: 11 Jan 2008 Location: South Yorkshire Status: Offline Points: 16314 |
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Posted: 04 May 2009 at 4:51am |
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Nice question AK!
Here we need to differentiate between the recommended load impedance and the little understood property of source or driving impedance. Also we need to learn the difference between impedance and resistance. We'll do the last first... Resistance is that thing we were taught about in elementary science at school - remember Ohms Law? That is DC resistance. Right, now for the difference between load impedance and driving or source impedance - this will have you in command of the situation from now on... Because the signal is generated in a coil of the cartridge by a magnetic influence (stylus movement causing the coil to move with it in a magnetic field) it works just like the alternator of your car - except in miniature and the voltage isn't constant but IS in sympathy with the music... But maybe the cartridge manufacturer noticed a slight tendency for the highs to get a bit loud? This being a mechanical or acoustic thing, he decides he can use the load to improve the tonal balance - and this is possibly why Dynavector have specified a load impedance of 30 Ohms? Yes! Actually that is the case. The previous model of the Dynavector XV-1t was obviously much different - possibly a weaker magnetic system requiring more ampere turns to produce its 0.35mV output: more ampere turns = greater DC resistance as well as more Henrys of inductance so the driving impedance is as quoted 24 Ohms. So then they specify greater than (>) 75 Ohms for the load. Should we therefore assume moving coil is still in its experimental state? At least moving coil cartridges from some manufacturers? It would seem so. Now how can the phono preamp designer be all things to all men? He simply cannot - all he can do is try to cover as many bases as possible! So where is the justification for all those quick to put down one design or another? That place is called hypocrissy! The hypocrissy comes about from not understanding - more like a refusal or stubborness in understanding? Like I said a million times (with very little exageration) it is no good getting into vinyl without understanding it, or at least trying... ...vinyl is not for the plug and play (foot note on magnetic systems: a weaker magnetic system is not necessarily a bad thing - it can actually reduce the Q or peaking in the cartridge system. The downside being that the majority of manufacturers don't do the same, so the weaker magnetic system finds itself out of place - it doesn't fit easily with the majority...) |
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