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Analog Playback
Topic: ..and your expectations were…?

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Posted by Paul S on 02-14-2013
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Since I discovered repeatable VTA/SRA, my Ortofon MC-3000 II cartridge (with matching T-3000 SUT) has been about as ignore-able as a hard-tracing cartridge in a hi-res system can be.  Too bad it took me so long to figure out the repeatable VTA/SRA!  It seems like I just got the thing dialed in, and now the left channel is 3 dB down.  Has it really been 8 years since I bought it?!?  What's an OCD basket case (like moi) supposed to do in a case like this?  I had it in mind to check out cartridges while I was Big Amp shopping; of course, that didn't work at all.  So here I am in the position of finally having to find and integrate another cartridge/SUT.

Only, in this case, it's Dumb Luck to the rescue!  It turns out, for only 30% more than I paid for my original, new MC-3000 II, I can have Ortofon DK totally re-build my old (long-discontinued) cartridge, replacing everything except the body, running as-new tests on it, plus re-instating the original warranty.  It's a rather convoluted process, starting from the 'States; I have go through Ortofon USA.  Perhaps they keep normally-returned VAT charges, I don't know; but it appears that the cost to me will be no more than what Europeans pay.

I think I also know where to find a NOS MC-3000 II, for a couple hundred more.  But it would have old rubber, etc., while a refurbished one would have all-new guts, fresh from the factory that still makes many of its own parts, including the rubber bits.

The Ortofon USA rep warns that turnaround will take 6 - 8 weeks (starting from/returning to West Coast, USA).

What the Hell; I'm doing it.  I think I will fit another slip of lead on my WT Ref arm "headshell", before I (re)mount the refurbished cartridge, maybe nudge the tracking up a little...

Maybe the wait will motivate me to buy some CDs...


Paul S

Posted by Paul S on 02-16-2013
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I just turned up the original paperwork while looking for the original packaging, in which I planned to return the cartridge to DK.  The original packing slip was dated 27 July, 2002;  rather more than the 8 years I "remembered".  Which makes me wonder (again): what is the useful life of a phono cartridge, expressed as a "range"?  Do I also "remember" something recent from Ortofon saying the life of a styus is - I dunno - something like 1,000 hours of play time!  Of course, there are "other factors" involved in cartridge degradation, as well.

Probably, most of us simply continue to employ a cartridge until we "upgrade", or until it becomes unbearable.

Paul S

Posted by Paul S on 06-01-2013
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It wound up taking 9 weeks to get my re-built cartridge back from/through the Ortofon DK/USA  consortium, and then I let the re-built cartridge just sit there in is box for another 2 weeks.  When I finally went to re-mount it, I managed to snap a very fine wire at a cartridge clip, which subsequently entailed getting out the 808 (de-soldering gun), and the iron, and the holding jig, etc, ad nauseum.  But I took a deep breath and fixed the wire/clip; then I carefully re-mounted the cartridge and re-set all its alignment parameters, including VTF, all the while assuming that the height of the "new" cartridge would wind up pretty close to what it was before.  Of course, it will take a while for the cartridge to break in, before I can be sure about the exact effective height of the re-built cartridge, itself.  But now that I have my relative VTA/SRA system all worked out, once I fine tune the arm height by ear on a record of known thickness, all settings fall into place, based on the unchanging relationship between record thickness and arm height, acccording to the charts and "dials" I made up years ago (see the thread, "At Last, Repeatable VTA!".

As for the sound of the re-built cartridge, it is a good deal quieter in the groove than the old one was by the time I pulled it.  In fact, it is remarkably quiet.  It also has better "interstitual" silence, and better/clearer articulation, from top to bottom.  And none of this surprises me, since I probably had over 1,000 hours on the old cartridge before I figured out the Repeatable VTA system!  If nothing else, I will at least "get my money's worth" now that I know how to use the damned cartridge correctly from the get-go.

There has been too much going on in my house lately for me to get involved with my music, and the electricity has been uniformly lousy for over a year now.  Still, there are signs that I did the right thing, and I very much look forward to having access to my LPs again!  It's not that I hate digital; but it is the case that I choose digital only for convenience or to access programs that are unique to CDs in my library.
 
At this point I would "recommend" the Ortofon factory cartridge re-build to those trying to save money (vs. a new Ortofon cartridge) or to those who wish to restore a "classic" Ortofon cartridge that is no longer offered for sale new.

So far, so good...



Paul S

Posted by Romy the Cat on 06-02-2013
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Might I ask you what was the price of building this cartridge compare to but the new one NOS?

Posted by Paul S on 06-02-2013
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Persistent due diligence will eventually turn up the obscure part of the Ortofon DK website that lists prices and procedures for rebuilding services for some Ortofon cartridges (including the Jubilee, I think), and the DK site makes it look for all the world like anyone could set the whole thing in motion with computer and a credit card.  However, I held my horses and contacted Ortofon DK first, to make sure all the information was up to date, and "just in case", and I'm glad I did because they insisted I go through Ortofon USA, in upstate New York.  Oddly, I could not find the rebuilding information listed on the Ortofon USA site; but when I contacted them about it they definitely knew what I was talking about, and their total cost to me was actually somewhat less than the listed Ortofon DK asking price (in Euros), which I ass-u-me included VAT, or Denmark's version of this.  Anyway, my total cost was 1,089 USD, compared to an asking price of 1,200 USD for the NOS unit from "other sources".  By comparison, I originally spent quite a while shopping for the MC3000II, and I had a hard time finding this cartridge/SUT pair at any price.  Eventually, I paid 800 USD for my original cartridge (and 600 USD for the T3000), back in 2002, when the asking price for the pair from the usual sources was well into the mid-threes. 

No surprise, although rebuilding prices are lower than original cartridge prices, they ascend as one moves up the line.


Best regards,
Paul S

Posted by Paul S on 06-09-2013
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Today the girls took off early on a shopping bender, so I quickly fired up the rig and settled back with Cosi Fan Tutte.  I enjoyed the music and the performances, but I could not help getting up every so often to tune the cartridge, trying to close in on basic settings, to get to the point where only per-record, relative VTA remains again.  I think I am very close now, but we'll see/hear as the new motor continues to break in.  Right now, it sounds like the "new cartridge" wants less damping than where I left off with the old motor/stylus, and also less anti-skating tension, and for now the arm is slightly lower than before on any given LP, as well.  Anyway, the sound was good enough that I put on Bruckner 7 (Solti/VPO) as soon as CFT was done.  This was not bad, but also not everything I hoped for, the electricity being not quite good enough for me.  As things are for me now, everything has to be about perfect to really communicate Bruckner.  I suppose it's a good thing that sound is better than before at less-than-optimal settings.



Paul S

Posted by Romy the Cat on 06-10-2013
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 Paul S wrote:
Anyway, the sound was good enough that I put on Bruckner 7 (Solti/VPO) as soon as CFT was done.  This was not bad, but also not everything I hoped for….
I wonder what do you hope to hear in the Bruckner 7? I mean do you have any specific sonic/audio/musical objectives that you feel need to be delivering by your playback? Bruckner 7 is VERY hard to find properly recorded on LP.

Posted by Paul S on 06-10-2013
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Romy, I am hardly familiar with Bruckner.  The local SO never plays it and, honestly, they are not really equipped to do it; and this was mostly the case when I lived in LA, also. And because my hi-fi systems could never do it, I do not even have a good sampling of Bruckner recordings. Also, like you say, this music is not easy to record well, either.  So, my choosing Bruckner 7 yesterday was partly a test, and partly just casting a line w-a-y out there, and I was really only hoping to hear it as well rendered as the best I've heard from my system so far, which includes a sense of listening in on the session(s).  Had it been more than that I would have been ecstatic.  In other words, at this point I am not even sure - in terms of Bruckner - what's on the LP I played!

I have mostly decided that the hi-fi cannot deliver more than the original performance(s), in terms of music and musical expression, but I am usually OK with this if the sound delivers enough of the gestalt of the music, and I hope my imagination will supply the rest of a rich musical experience.  Since my own thoughts and feelings about Bruckner are not well formed, you can factor this in with my remarks about the sound I got.  You might say it wound up being more about sound than Bruckner, when I hoped it would be vice-versa.

The LP set in question here is London (stereo, ffrr), CSA 2216, and it does have "that curve".

Now I hope you will recommend a Bruckner 7 (LP set)!

Best regards,
Paul S

Posted by Paul S on 05-13-2014
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A couple of great electricity days/listening sessions have established that the broken-in refurbished cartridge is better now than it was when I first formulated a relative VTA solution, using the old/original cartridge. Naturally, I always use the RVTA system now, to set VTA quickly and precisely for any and all LPs. Anyway, I finally immersed in my first "real" Bruckner. Looking back to the previous post, there was a LOT more on that LP than I suspected at the time of that post! Glorious! FYI, my present iteration of this cartridge rides enough higher than the old one to warrant pre-consideration on my RVTA "gauge".

I mainly made this post because today Ortofon sent me some advertising that included a link to their DK refurbishing service website, and it includes a list of "eligible" cartridges, so here it is:

http://www.ortofon-shop.com/index.php?page=shop.browse&category_id=50&vmcchk=1&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=230

Remember, apropos, that I was compelled by Ortofon DK to go through Ortofon USA, and any country outside DK might have similar "restrictions".


Paul S

Posted by Romy the Cat on 05-13-2014
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I do not know any “interesting” LP of Bruckner 7. In my view Solti was not a good conductor of Bruckner. He did Bruckner artificially impressive and imposingly puffy, in my view they are big now ways to play Bruckner. For sure Bruckner would be “effectively” orchestrated by Solti and I might see some attraction in it but ultimately when I want not “orchestral music” but Bruckner sound I do not go for Solti. I still do not deny that this recording with Vienna was OK. The last time I was listening Solti with Vienna doing B7 was 2 years back. We were staying in St. John’s Westin Resort and one nigh we find ourselves at wonderfully open pool and we had Amy’s Phone (with 64G of music) and Bose SoundDeck. We were laying somewhere between poll and ocean fully relaxed and I was puffing some very tasty cigar sending the smoke to the stars. I said “Kitty, now I want B7”. So, we near max out the SoundDeck and blasted Solti’s adagio throughout the whole resort. Boy, I am sure it was a lot of people out there who felt that we were assholes…. I need to tell you: the Caribbean night sky, a good cigar, Bruckner and a hand of a friend whose hand pulsates counting the Bruckner beat makes all experience very special….

Posted by Paul S on 05-13-2014
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I take your word that better is available, but it has been very gratifying and very "instructive" to hear a coherent and musically satisfying "Bruckner" of any kind via my hi-fi. (London stereo ffrr, CSA 2216). It was not bad but also not all good until electricity and everything else was "right" with the hi-fi. Before that, the sound was just not good enough to "bring it across". Once I could really hear what was going on with the 4th movement, it all came together. Now I "know what's going on", so I can "hear it better".

Best regards,
Paul S

Posted by Paul S on 12-25-2015
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For a while now I have been regularly listening to "Big Works", something I did not even try a few years ago. Yesterday it was my most recent "pet" piece, another iteration of Ein deutsches Requiem. Something I have not really dwelt on to date is how nice it is to be able to listen to Big Works despite sub-optimal electricity, a situation I have only enjoyed since I have re-integrated this re-built cartridge into my system. Regarding sub-optimal sound while using this cartridge, it's always hard to separate out any problems with the sound, but keeping this on the subject of this thread, I think this cartridge would be easier to "develop" with a heavier (than my Well Tempered Reference) tone arm, but IMO it would be an exercise in futility to use this cartridge in any arm that does not allow easily adjustable and repeatable settings, including - especially - VTA. With my WTR arm it has also been necessary for me to re-set damping and anti-skate for this re-built cartridge, so - even though I do not have to do this for each record - readers should take this into account before purchasing the Ortofon MC 3000 II. Also, readers should remember that I went "whole hog" for this cartridge, buying its factory-matched SUT at the same time, and I have never even heard this cartridge with any other SUT. If only because it's output and output impedance are both so low, you can be sure the SUT is a big factor here. No doubt other combos could be developed, however, I can only "recommend" this one.


Paul S

Posted by Paul S on 05-05-2021

Can’t remember when I first noticed the right channel was quiet when I used phono as my source, but it was some time before I rigorously traced the fault back to the cartridge, itself, and it was another age before I asked Ortofon about another re-build. Only this time, Ortofon told me they no longer support their “legacy” cartridges, such as my MC3000 II. This made my head spin, to think I would have to find a replacement for the heart of my system, likely including a new SUT, as well. Very depressing.  I started “shopping” for a new cartridge, and at the same I looked for someone who could and would restore my 18 year old (!) cartridge (again). I spoke with the folks at Soundsmith first, and they said they’d look at it, so I packed it up and shipped it to them, in New York. After a couple of weeks, and after a couple of inquiries from me, Soundsmith said it was trash, and they would dispose of it for me. I demurred and sent them money to ship it back to me. Then I called Steve Leong, VAS Audio (he will get his own thread, soon).  I talked a blue streak, and he listened and he also said he’d look at the cartridge, so I turned around and shipped it back to Steve, again in New York. It took less than a week for Steve to tell me there were two cuts in one coil’s wire, and the suspension was “melted”, and he would try to fix it, and less than a week after that, Steve sent me a sound video of my cartridge playing classical music, and it sounded great!>>

>

Folks, I have no idea how it came to pass, but Steve also told me the wire in my cartridge is not copper but it is solid gold. According to Ortofon, it was originally spec’d to be super pure OFC OCC copper, and their specs for the 2013 rebuild called for all new, original spec internal parts in the original shell/body. ????? Oh, well. As far as performance, the newly-rebuilt cartridge tracks better than ever at the factory spec’d VTF (2.2 grams), and at the original cartridge’s VTA/height settings, based on my original, repeatable VTA calibration system settings. According to my “audio memory”, it sounds substantially like it did before the repairs, and output levels are the same. Digesting all this brought to mind the header for this post, “It’s Alive!”, because my cartridge appears to be a Franken-cartridge! Go freaking figure!>>


Paul S


Posted by Paul S on 12-14-2021
Yesterday I was more-or-less randomly reading Stereophile, skimming, in case something interesting to me appears, and Mr. Fremer in his Ortofon Verismo cartridge report told that top Ortofon cartridges use "6 nines" copper wire that has been gold plated for their coils. Well, this is the first time in over 50 years I ever heard of the gold plating! But who am I? And it certainly makes sense of my own recent conundrom, when Steve Leong told me the refurbished/replaced coils from Ortofon DK were gold, while Ortofon always spec'd copper. Like I said, any differences in the sound of the repaired cartridge from Steve were few, and they were minimal; also they were pretty much swamped by the phono stage cap change.


Paul S

Posted by Paul S on 06-29-2024

As I mentioned up the thread, I bought the Ortofon MC3000II cartridge and T3000 SUT new in 2002. Eleven years later, in 2013, I had the cartridge totally rebuilt by Ortofon, at their factory in Denmark. The cartridge came back from that re-build looking and sounding like new, and Ortofon reinstated the original warranty after The Fix. Very Nice, and I certainly would have done it again if Ortofon still offered the service. But they no longer support or even talk much about their old “1000” line of cartridges and “companion” SUTs, once their Pride and Joy, since replaced with new cartridge offerings ranging in price to over $10,000.00, with a smattering of down-spec’d, one-size-fits-all SUTs. For all I know, these cartridges and SUTs might be the best-sounding they’ve ever sold. But I actually voiced and built my system around the MC3000II/T3000 pairing, and I have been loath to just chuck it in favor of something new and unknown-to-me, regardless of what anyone else says about it. As told in this thread, my MC3000II suffered injury in 2021, and I sent it to Steve Leung/VAS, where the damper was replaced and two cut coil wires were fixed, and the MC3000II came back sounding great. All-too-fast forward to 2024, and I’ve found myself thinking that the sound from my analog is softening due to stylus wear over the past 11 years. I mean, that’s a while, right? As much as I hate shopping for hi-fi stuff, I started looking for alternative cartridges, and also SUTs, since there are very few new cartridges that would work with my T3000, and none I found that could work that I thought I might like. One idea I chased involved a Bob’s Devices SUT, and during a quick (and rather surprising…) exchange with Bob Satin he suggested I try having the MC3000II “re-tipped” by Andy Kim (Needle Clinic), here in California. Hmmm… If it worked, I should be able to stay with my current T3000 SUT… To make a short story even shorter, Andy offered a money-back guarantee, and I sent him my MC3000II. I opted for a Namiki Microridge stylus mounted on a Boron cantilever tip that would be splined onto most of the current MC3000II Boron cantilever (to the appropriate length, of course…). Could this “work”? Are you feeling Lucky? The core of my “reasoning” here is that the Namiki Microridge is another “extreme”/”hard tracing” profile that is in that sense similar to the Replicant. And – as it happens – I have developed a proprietary Repeatable VTA system that will ensure optimal tracking once VTA for any LP is set by eye and ear and the thickness of that LP is noted and tied to the best-sounding arm height. After that, the arm height/VTA can be reliably re-set for any LP, based on the LP’s thickness. Yes, I’ve been through all this before, but here it is again, apropos of optimizing a re-tipped MC3000II. Turnaround time was FAST!  I sent my cartridge to Andy on Thursday, June 20th. Andy received it on Saturday morning, and by Saturday afternoon he’d fitted the new stylus. Done! He mailed the re-tipped cartridge back on Monday, June 24, and I got it midday on Wednesday, the 26th. Truly Amazing! I don’t have a stereo microscope, but the cartridge looked/looks just fine through a 40X jeweler’s loupe, really no sign it’s been worked on, except I’m thinking the new stylus is smaller than the Replicant. To start, I installed it just as before, including overhang, offset, arm height, azimuth, VTF, anti-skate, and damping. I used a test LP for a round of “empirical” testing and adjusting, to make sure I was in the Ballpark, then on to Music LPs I know well. As far as the sound of the re-tipped MC3000II, surprise(!), it is very much like the original cartridge, only better highs and lows, and more clarity across the board, without the problems that can come with “more”. As I have listened to Music I have been able to home in on azimuth and anti-skate, as the MR stylus is quite sensitive to its set-up parameters, as I suspected it would be. Not that it sounds bad if it’s not spot-on, rather it rewards careful set-up with truly wonderful Sound, and if one wants to hear its best then accurate set up is required. Something it has not changed about my system is that recordings still sound like what they are… recordings. There is not some sort of own sound that swamps recordings to “Make Everything Magical”. It does make the most of recordings, however, and a nice bonus is that “space” in recordings is quieter than before, which contributes to the clarity I mentioned and also to better spatial cues. Another bonus is how mechanically quiet this stylus is in the grooves, quieter than the very quiet Replicant.
 
Gotta say, it worked out very well indeed for me to have Andy re-tip my MC3000II. If he’s still re-tipping in another 11 years, I’ll do it again!
 
Paul S

Posted by Paul S on 07-28-2024

I have told in this thread that it took me many years to get the best from the MC3000II/T3000 combo, and I have shared my findings that random tracking parameters result in random Sound, and only optimal adjustment results in optimal Sound. While most settings hold from disc to disc, I have found that VTA is critical enough with the Replicant stylus that it is best to re-set it for each LP, according to the thickness of that LP. And this last “rule” also applies the new Namiki MicroRidge stylus, which actually sounds a lot like the Replicant, but it seems to track better in my rig. Yesterday I lightened VTF to barely over 2 grams, and I raised my tonearm ever so slightly above where I had gotten the best results with the Replicant, before the needle swap. Upshot? It turns out there’s a good deal more in the way of ambiance on/in my LP grooves than I was aware of! And, apparently, there was yet more room for general “settling” of the Sound, as well, with no loss of anything I’ve valued to date. Since my VTA system always keeps arm heights relative to LP thickness, I only needed to dial in one LP of known thickness in order for the relative height system to work on every subsequent LP. All Good!>>


Paul S


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