You have a great turntable and cartridge, what's next?

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 166

  • @trekjudas
    @trekjudas Před 4 lety +18

    The only thing better than getting new gear is after you've got it you pull out an album you haven't listened to in years and it just blows your socks off!

    • @ColocasiaCorm
      @ColocasiaCorm Před 2 lety

      This is the sad truth. Its new gear placebo high

  • @johnnytoobad7785
    @johnnytoobad7785 Před 3 lety +3

    I'm still using my SME 3009-II that I purchased for $300.00 in 1973. The BEST audio investment I ever made. I plan to re-furb it. I'll NEVER replace it.

  • @MangoZen
    @MangoZen Před 4 lety +11

    Yes! Yes! Turntables, cartridges, arms!... much needed to balance out the 3,287 speaker reviews. Thanks Steve!

  • @BirdArvid
    @BirdArvid Před 4 lety +13

    I "settled" on a 309. Did I dream of a Series V? yes. Did I ever seriously consider getting one? No. That's where my madness stopped. I spent LOADS of money on the turntable, and then the 309 and a cartridge on top of that... I just could never justify the extra outlay (let alone afford it..). And I would go so far as to say: when I've heard extremely esoteric/expensive turntables and arms (including the V) I've never felt the extra outlay was worth it; I'd rather buy a an extra 500 LP's.. or a new, fantastic cartridge. I think that the total system has to be of a very high quality and subtle enough to reveal very small differences (although I feel the differences in the bass are clearly detectable..) to justify the extra outlay. Hats off to you for doing it, but for me, the 309 is a keeper; certainly good enough!!

    • @charleskatz2606
      @charleskatz2606 Před 4 lety +3

      Good point.Of course Steve-O rolls with Nelksons kit so as I have said before (a la Mel Brooks) "It's good to be da King"

    • @carlosbauza1139
      @carlosbauza1139 Před 4 lety

      YES! The 309 is emphatically good enough!

    • @mkfmkf55
      @mkfmkf55 Před 4 lety +1

      Steve wasted 5 grand on a Series 5 tonearm. Sad to see what the audiophile disease does to some...

  • @solarman30
    @solarman30 Před 4 lety +5

    My Immedia RPM/SME V combo. has been spinning LPs for over two decades. No plans to upgrade!
    As a bonus, the SME V is one of the easiest arms ever to setup and align.

  • @HoomanR17
    @HoomanR17 Před 4 lety +8

    Thanks for sprinkling in vinyl related reviews and announcements.

  • @Aswaguespack
    @Aswaguespack Před 4 lety +7

    Hancock’s Maiden Voyage is such a stellar performance. A moment in time from a gifted assembly of musicians. It’s like an intelligent conversation among five scholars. Hancock himself considers it “his favorite among all the compositions he has written.” (Wikipedia). According to the Penguin Guide to Jazz “a colossal achievement from a man still just 24 years old."
    You can’t deny the impact of the album and the composition.

  • @1999zrx1100
    @1999zrx1100 Před 4 lety +2

    I used to have the Rega RB300 on a Thorens TD160, had that set up for over 30 years. Loved it. Recently installed a SME Series 3 on an old Oracle Alexandria,
    Wow was I impressed.
    They say the Series 3 is the Red Head of the SME line but I couldn’t disagree more.
    They can be had for peanuts and
    will make any turntable come alive.
    Little fussy to set up but most audiophiles enjoy that anyway.
    Love the SME arms. 😎

  • @stevenp9555
    @stevenp9555 Před 4 lety +2

    I truly agree from 309 to V SME Arm. The difference is worth the upgrade.

  • @stevezodiac6025
    @stevezodiac6025 Před 4 lety +1

    My VPI IV came with a PT6 arm. In 2002 I had a chance to get an SME IV from HK for $1100. Got the Graham IC-70 cable right away for huge improvement. Later on I tore out the internal Van den Hul wire and put in Audio Note silver litz tonearm wire along with RCA connectors to use AN-VX tonearm cable and have now had the Mk IV table for 22 years. With its TNT platter, motor, and SDS it is a solid end game table for me. I agree the tonearm and wire upgrade is at least as big as going from MM to MC cartridge.

  • @512bb
    @512bb Před 4 lety +3

    I agree completely, I remember when I went from the 309 to the V on my Sota Cosmos in the 90s & the upgrade was pretty significant. And the better the cartridge the more significant the improvement. Congratulations Steve, you deserve it. Use it in good health!

  • @airgead5391
    @airgead5391 Před 4 lety +3

    I HAVE an SME V and then what? YES! you remove the connector block at the cartridge end and have KONDO pure silver arm wiring and a good amount of patience before the wiring is burned in and BINGO! you are there! (and don't forget to have a turn reinforced tape around end of the arm to provide some damping that has been lost from removing the connector block.

  • @davidmalcolm4023
    @davidmalcolm4023 Před 4 lety +1

    Well done Steve for getting the SME V. I had one 'welded' to my 3-motor, 2 belt Voyd TT back in the 80s and it's been fantastic with a number of cartridge setups. I recently had a KISEKI PURPLE HEART fitted and am astonished, daily, at the sound coming out of my panel speakers. Loving your music recommendations.

  • @arte2arquiteto
    @arte2arquiteto Před 4 lety +4

    I was fortunate to see Herbie Hancock play live at The Blue Note Jazz Club on West 3rd Street, New Year's Eve 1991...

  • @Si1983h
    @Si1983h Před 4 lety +3

    My ultimate deck would be an SME 20/3 with the Series V arm and an Ortofon Cadenza Blue or Black, it’s the best deck I’ve heard, next best is a full Klimax spec LP12, but the SME gets the crown for me.

  • @WiliiamNoTell
    @WiliiamNoTell Před 4 lety +2

    Dr. Guttenberg your suggestion yesterday helped! From now on you will be referred to as...the good doctor! Any chance in the future, if you haven't done it already, post a video on how to clean your vinyl and your stylist thank you. Everyone have a good listening day !!!

    • @biketech60
      @biketech60 Před 4 lety +3

      If you can afford a record cleaning machine , that's the way to go . If you are serious and willing to pay , you won't regret a Loricraft purchase . For the stylus , the ONZOW from Japan is excellent . The difference between a new record and a new record that's been properly cleaned is bigger , IMO, than any cartridge upgrade . USAF vet

  • @sc51153826
    @sc51153826 Před 4 lety +3

    Great choice! If my memory serves me right, you're right on the nail with the pairing! The Linn eventually did limit your choice on arms, I should have got the ARO instead of the Ekos with the Linn. The SME V in one word, grounded. Together with the table builds a solid foundation for the music to come alive. IMHO, not as "toe-tappingly musical?" than the Linn/Aro combination, but much more solid overall. Did you mention the difference in the bass? Your work here is done, but you'll have thousands of LPs to enjoy with the SME V like they were brand new recordings! Congrats!!!

  • @James-hb6ee
    @James-hb6ee Před 4 lety +2

    Nice story. I think you should interview Michael Trei . From what I have heard he has had an interesting audio life, from working with Herb as an Audio Note importer to TAS reviewer (I think) and I don't what all else. Would love to hear his story! If you've already done this and I missed it, apologies.

  • @chadbarker2316
    @chadbarker2316 Před 4 lety +7

    I've got some cables for sale that were dipped in hash oil and dried in a special oven at a temperature I cant say. I agree with the cartridge but I'm not spending 5000 on an arm just to hear a slight difference if any. But to each his own.

    • @nostro1001
      @nostro1001 Před 4 lety

      @ Chad...clearly you don't need to!!!
      I will comment though, regardless of any sound improvements, there is a lot of engineering that goes into a high end arm, esp given they aren't mass produced.
      Almost the polar opposite to something like a dac, where they are possible to build en masse with off the shelf parts.
      Maybe you should reclaim your hash oil from your cable. You could put it to better use. 😂

  • @NoEgg4u
    @NoEgg4u Před 4 lety +3

    Steve, before folks upgrade their turntable or associated parts of their turntable, they need to first make sure that what they have is professionally dialed in.
    If they never set the anti-skating, overhang, vertical tracking alignment, azimuth, weight correctly, with precision, and now upgrade a part, and again not set those items correctly, with precision, then the upgrade is sort of pointless (like getting those great new speakers, and not having ever positioned your old ones correctly. Maybe the upgrade will still sound better. But without the proper settings, they will be missing out -- big time.
    Not all turntable enthusiasts really understand how critically important it is to professionally dial in everything. It makes a huge difference. And even those that do know the importance, then it comes down to having the knowledge, tools, and skill to do it yourself, or knowing someone that you trust that has the knowledge, tools, and skill.
    My guess is that most people do not know how to do the above -- myself included. I was fortunate to buy my turntable at a store that had an expert. He is the only person that I know that can do a great job (well, I know about you and Fremer, etc, but I do not really know you guys, meaning, I can't get you on the phone and schedule an appointment). So what do most people do? How do they go about finding someone that can do the job with expertise?

    • @johnsweda2999
      @johnsweda2999 Před 4 lety +1

      You have to be the expert yourself mate learn get the right tools not too difficult, trial and error and you will find it

    • @NoEgg4u
      @NoEgg4u Před 4 lety

      @@johnsweda2999 Not too difficult? It takes painstaking patients and time, repeatedly making adjustment after adjustment, often resulting in going back steps and starting again.
      I am all for learning. But my setup sounds great now. I do not want to tinker with it. If I screw it up, it is a long drive back to the audio store, a week or so for them to get around to dialing everything in again, and hundreds of dollars for their labor.
      And how do I dial in the azimuth?
      For that, you need a special record (probably not too expensive?) and an oscilloscope (or something similar). Raise your hand if you own or have access to an oscilloscope. The azimuth setting cannot be done by ear or by looking at the stylus -- well it could be done wrong by ear and by looking at the stylus. And the azimuth setting is critical to get sparkling stereo separation.
      On top of all of that, I have no plans of upgrading again (unless I hit the lottery).
      Perhaps a lot of people have dialed in their own analog front-end gear? But I bet that even if it sounds good, they did not dial it in with precision, so it could sound better than good -- it could sound great, but it only sounds good. They do not know that they are not unearthing every last once of sonic juice from the grooves. And that is where the magic lives.
      If it were easy, most turntable owners would have the tools and the skills to get every setting on the money.

  • @GeirRssaak
    @GeirRssaak Před 8 měsíci

    Dear Steve! You are totally right!

  • @QoraxAudio
    @QoraxAudio Před 4 lety +2

    6:20 I also use Herbie Hancock for testing. I have a pressing of Man-Child by Speakers corner that is very good as a reference AAA record!
    7:16 I think it's what they call "slapping the bass"
    When I go mod my turntable (SL-1200G), I'm putting a Dynavector DV507 MKII on it, just because it has so many settings to adjust and I like to experiment.

  • @ericelliott227
    @ericelliott227 Před 4 lety +1

    I'm definitely a vinyl guy. While I don't have a large collection of records (about 620+ or maybe closer to 650+), I am heavily into the restoration and preservation of vinyl records. To me they are historical documents to be cared for and yes, listened to and enjoyed.
    The one thing I need not concern myself with is tone arms. Why? Well, simply because I use vintage tables where one can not swap arms. My tables are direct drive as well. For those who doubt the accuracy of such tables, you would be very shocked how accurate they are (at least a number of particular models anyway. No, the old Technics 1200s were notoriously inaccurate. The ones Technics makes now though are a completely different story though).
    Sure, I am limited to what carts I can use....or am I? There are tons of different carts for any mass arms, so it is not all that restrictive.
    Of course, for real nice sound from your table, it can also make a big difference in what phono preamp you use. Again, the good thing there is that there are real nice ones for not a lot of money as well.

  • @stephengarratt5076
    @stephengarratt5076 Před 2 lety

    In 1999, upgraded from a Thorens 160s, SME Series 3 arm and Goldring 1042 cartridge to Michell Orbe, SME Series V arm and VanDenHul MC1 Special cartridge.
    A upgrade to a VanDenHul Frog Gold and most importantly, a phono preamp upgrade from the Audiolab 8000PPA to a Rega Aura MC phono preamp has proved to be a stunning improvement. It has literally given me a new collection of vinyl!

  • @carlosbauza1139
    @carlosbauza1139 Před 4 lety

    My SME 309 has given me 20 years of delectable performance with over 20 cartridges. This 309 was recently upgraded at the factory with the optional silicon damper (which comes standard on the Series V). The 309 is SO GOOD (using the damper, or not) that one feels NO NEED for improvement. But it IS good to know the Series V (with fixed headshell, spring tracking force, and special inner wiring) can make such improvements detected by Steve's ears!

  • @TheVinylGuru
    @TheVinylGuru Před 4 lety +1

    I have always loved your videos. The best from the audiophilliac

  • @Theatersounz
    @Theatersounz Před 4 lety

    It's so cool to see you show your passion for great records Steve, I get the same goosebumps of certain ones I have in my collection too, so when your describing your experiences with your system I'm digging it totally! 👍👍👍👍👍😁

  • @3lueant347
    @3lueant347 Před 4 lety +1

    You are my audio kryptonite.
    I dragged many of my records around from apt to apt for years, gave away hundreds, still have a few that are dear to me like all the Beefheart albums, Television, Dylan...
    I have resisted the turntable purchase because it seems like more of a rabbit hole than would be good for me. Oh but when I hear you and Herb wax poetic about vinyl I weaken. You are my audio kryptonite.

  • @Rondoggy67
    @Rondoggy67 Před rokem

    The SME Series V is one of the greatest audio products of all time. The company is based a few miles from where I live (as is B&W). Apart from the quality of their products, SME has always had a great reputation locally as a very good place to work. Likewise B&W.

  • @andershammer9307
    @andershammer9307 Před 4 lety

    I once took home an LP 12 that was worth about $8000.00 and compared it to my modified Dual that has a Supex MC cartridge and I slightly preferred my Dual. I still have and use the same Dual and cartridge. Still sounds great.

  • @garylawrence3873
    @garylawrence3873 Před 4 lety

    What would my life be without this show?

  • @GeirRssaak
    @GeirRssaak Před 8 měsíci

    Sms have allways made great tonearms!

  • @carlosbauza1139
    @carlosbauza1139 Před 4 lety +2

    SME (Scale Model Engineering) is undergoing some degree of re-invention. Best wishes for them!

  • @stephenhylander9395
    @stephenhylander9395 Před 4 lety +3

    Steve, As always, fantastic insights. Very much enjoying your channel. Enjoy your weekend.

  • @mr.george7687
    @mr.george7687 Před 4 lety +4

    OH Great! Now you got me thinking of upgrading my tonearm! Where will it end?

  • @kevinw.weiser9820
    @kevinw.weiser9820 Před 4 lety +1

    Guess I'll be listening to CD's from here on out. I have a Project turntable with an Oyster cartridge but it doesn't even come close to my Wadia transport and DAC. It appears that in order to correct that imbalance I'd have to redirect my coke, hooker, concert funds and I'm surely reluctant to do that! So, until I win the lottery and can revinylize, it's all digital for me. Rock on!

  • @mcaddc
    @mcaddc Před 4 lety +1

    Was the geometry of your existing arm & cartridge properly optimized? Was the improvements you heard in the new arm, attributed to the newly tuned setup & adjustment of the needle & arm that improved the sound? Food for thought.

  • @carlos2bass
    @carlos2bass Před 4 lety +3

    Great video Steve, you have had some great tonearms there, wish you could comment or make a video of what is your experience now with a top Gimbal bearing tonearm as the SMEV vs your former unipivots like the Naim Aro and Graham Phantom, that would be great!

  • @scottspinner1
    @scottspinner1 Před 4 lety +7

    Assuming the arm is up to the task. You want to look at the phono stage.

  • @andrew-xr1de
    @andrew-xr1de Před 4 lety

    Very Good info on the arms, I didn't know that a better than better arm still made a difference and Dynamic static was also good to know!

  • @rickg8015
    @rickg8015 Před 4 lety +2

    Audiomods series six is another to consider..

  • @RasheedKhan-he6xx
    @RasheedKhan-he6xx Před 4 lety

    Every time he moves his hands the dynamic contrast of the image changes. :)

  • @ProgRockKeys
    @ProgRockKeys Před 4 lety +2

    Ok, finally a turntable/ vinyl related post... And I shall now retreat quietly back to my seat, being put in my place with that $6,000 tone arm, as a glance over at my $399 Technics SL1200Mk2 with its new Audio Technica VM540 $249 cartridge. I am super grateful to have what I have, but I can only imagine what magic must come from that professionally set up system. I go through phases where I only play vinyl, nothing else will do, then it passes and I happily live in the digital realm again with the rest of the world. Not sure what’s going on there, but most likely, it’s something between the ears. Thanks for the turntable related podcast!

  • @thomaslutro5560
    @thomaslutro5560 Před 8 měsíci

    OK. There's no way I'll forego the advantages of the 12" 312S, but I woll be looking for a V-12, when funds allow.

  • @leesuretime1
    @leesuretime1 Před 4 lety +3

    VPI makes some sweet arms too!

    • @timw.9466
      @timw.9466 Před 4 lety +1

      Just bought the VPI White Prime Super Scout turntable last year along with the appropriate cabling from Transparent reference phono, the Kiseki purple heart cartridge and Herron vtsp mk 2 phono.!
      I agree they make a quiet table with appropriate dynamics, that VPI 10.5 tonearm being very substantial in overall performance.
      I'll also admit there customer service is second to none, great folks at VPI!
      .

  • @mikrophonie5633
    @mikrophonie5633 Před 4 lety +5

    I upgraded to a CD player. No more pops and crackle.

    • @mikrophonie5633
      @mikrophonie5633 Před 4 lety

      @Joe Home If you don't hear pops and crackle when you play vinyl, I think you're the one who needs an ear test.

    • @mikrophonie5633
      @mikrophonie5633 Před 4 lety

      @Joe Home Your parole officer is calling you.

    • @mikrophonie5633
      @mikrophonie5633 Před 4 lety

      @Joe Home Brain dead, aren't you?

  • @madmeister407
    @madmeister407 Před rokem

    Very interesting Steve however, if dynamic balanced arms are better why is the principle not used more by other tonearm manufacturers. I've used an SME IV with fixed headshell for a very long time now and love it and it's just as good as a V. The biggest improvement on an SME or any tonearm, is going balanced with a suitable Phono stage. I know this is controversial but it's the way to go with vinyl.

  • @towers3334
    @towers3334 Před 4 lety

    My nephew at 4 years of age destroyed my Grado Cartridge. HE WENT IN MY ROOM AND TURNED THE NAD PRE AMP ON TURNED THE HAFLER 220 ON HE TURNED ON THE THORENS , HE JUST DIDN'T NO HOW MUCH PRESSERE TO PUT ON THE ARM. HE DID PRETTY GOOD. HE DID NOT HAVE THE VOLUME UP SO MY SPEAKERS WERE SPARED. THE HAFLER WOULD HAVE KILLED THEM.

  • @jrmanders99
    @jrmanders99 Před 4 lety

    Steve you now have the same setup as me except I have a VDH Condor XGM but try some damping too. Add silicon oil to the trough and make sure the paddle is only just touching the surface.

  • @carlitomelon4610
    @carlitomelon4610 Před 4 lety

    At this late stage of physical media, I'll stick with my Heybrook TT2 mk2 / Rega RB300 (van den Hul silver wired) from the mid 1980s.
    Still in good voice, when I get the urge to spin the old vinyl;-)
    Im sure the V is a great piece of engineering, but 6 Grand is alot of new music!

  • @andershammer9307
    @andershammer9307 Před 4 lety +1

    Ohh and I do own an LP12 also.

  • @stevenp9555
    @stevenp9555 Před 4 lety

    I have the SME15A , great feedback, am confident with the next upgrade

  • @Wacoal34d
    @Wacoal34d Před 4 lety

    This is great. Getting into the weeds of audiophilia.

  • @johnlebeau5471
    @johnlebeau5471 Před 4 lety

    I went through this process many years ago, looking for an arm that would bring out the best in my Koetsu Rosewood Pro IV. I tried many arms, including a Koetsu, made by Jelco. I finally discovered that synergy with a Linn Ittok. The Koetsu loved it. I upgraded to an Ekos and noticed the same type of improvements Steve talked about when upgrading his S.M.E. I may be the only person in the world that uses a Linn arm on a non-Linn table.

    • @nostro1001
      @nostro1001 Před 4 lety

      @ John....similar story here. I was likely the only person using a well tempered arm on my Sota Saphire back in the early 90s. That really never worked well. 😞
      Beyond that I've had a few turntables, but I think it was close to 10 years ago now, I got an acoustic signature final tool mkii and fitted a 10" jelco arm.
      That tt got upgraded to another acoustic signature w/Kuzma arm. Can't see anymore upgrades on the horizon. 😃

    • @johnlebeau5471
      @johnlebeau5471 Před 4 lety +1

      @@nostro1001 I had a SOTA with an E.T II arm back in the early '90s. One day I caught myself looking for records to play based on how they sounded rather than what I wanted to hear. The result was the sale of the SOTA and the start of the great turntable search. I listened to a lot of tables, some very high end, almost all boring. Then I stopped at a store in Kalamazoo Michigan where I heard the Pink Triangle Anniversary. I still have it with no desire for anything else.

    • @nostro1001
      @nostro1001 Před 4 lety

      @@johnlebeau5471 nice story John. 😎
      I certainly remember the pink triangle anniversary - very nice!!!
      There's no doubt when you get to a certain point, there's little else the attain sound wise. Perhaps that's when you start looking at cartridges. 😆
      I do like and appreciate the engineering that goes into TT's. Aside from anything else visually one can sort of see the attention to detail and methodical thought processes.

    • @charlesgrubbs2101
      @charlesgrubbs2101 Před 4 lety

      I remember going to a store in San Jose CA back in the mid 80's. They were using an Ittok on a Sota table with a Koetsu Black cartridge. It was one of the best systems I have ever heard.

  • @leesuretime1
    @leesuretime1 Před 4 lety

    Nice report! Great seeing you in NYC.

  • @andrewaldridge4260
    @andrewaldridge4260 Před 4 lety

    I have a V too. Ortofon Kontrapunkt C cartridge Roksan Xerxes tt

  • @aceofspades6667
    @aceofspades6667 Před 4 lety +1

    Just got my new cart and I'm in vinyl heaven! Have a Thorens TD-125 mkII with SME 3009 series II improved arm. I've been using an entry level AT cart which was fine but just got my new baby in the mail this last week. Grace F9e with the upgraded OCL Nude stylus-Ruby Cantilever RUBY-OCL stylus.... I'll enjoy these for a bit but I need to upgrade my active bookshelf speakers.

  • @thisismagacountry1318
    @thisismagacountry1318 Před 4 lety

    I'd say the Tube amplifier you've mentioned from China. Plus, the KEF R3 and Mag .7's unless there are better speakers for RUSH, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Gary Moore, and RHCP? Or the Outlaw RR2160 instead of the Chinese Tube Amplifier.

  • @JohnDoe-np3zk
    @JohnDoe-np3zk Před 4 lety +1

    I bought a Rega Planar 3 with the Elys 2 cartridge. My phono stage is the Rega Mini with USB as the original plan was to bring the vinyl to my computer. Anyway, 1200 bucks total and the arm is the plus along with the ease of set up. So for me perhaps an upgraded phono stage maybe mofi one at 299?

  • @laurencel.2493
    @laurencel.2493 Před 4 lety +7

    Steve, let me get a pair of headphones from you. Then you’ll only have three dozen.

    • @northbound4296
      @northbound4296 Před 4 lety

      If I ever got to buy a pair of headphones from Steve he would have to sign them :-D

  • @bloodyhell451
    @bloodyhell451 Před 3 lety

    I swapped out a silver wired Rega 250 with Michell weight for a Wilson Benesch Act 0.5 . Oh boy. Oh boy oh boy. I was not expecting the things I heard. The arm is a big deal.

  • @gregNFL
    @gregNFL Před 3 lety

    Herbie Hancock 1962 Takin’ Off. Watermelon Man. ☺️

  • @philrushton6868
    @philrushton6868 Před 4 lety

    Your best video to date!

  • @jamesnelson8549
    @jamesnelson8549 Před 2 lety

    Steve can you tell about UNIPIVOT vs standard bearing type arms! No one talks about it!

  • @zogzog1063
    @zogzog1063 Před 4 lety

    I put an Origin Live Conqueror on a Technics Turntable. It was dreadful. Luckily I sold it for what I bought it for. Jelco tonearms are better.

  • @CheekyFest
    @CheekyFest Před 4 lety

    Listening to Maiden Voyage on Spotify - never heard it before. I like it

  • @scottspinner1
    @scottspinner1 Před 4 lety

    Talking about arms. Origin live do fantastic arms. Don’t forget get a good phono cable.

  • @razisn
    @razisn Před 4 lety

    In case not everyone knows it by now, SME have stopped OEMing their tone arms. I am not sure if they still sell them individually or they just make them to go with their own turntables.

  • @skip1835
    @skip1835 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks Steve - wondering if the arm tube wire was changed when the arms were changed? Was there a possible upgrade with the wiring as well?

  • @matzeflamingos
    @matzeflamingos Před 4 lety

    I have an rega 202 on my kuzma stabi s and I think about to change the Rega with a Kuzma stogi

  • @charleskatz2606
    @charleskatz2606 Před 4 lety

    Cool mention of 801 Live (been listening to it on and off for 30+ years incredible Bill Bruford Bass and Simon Phillips drums- "Diamond Head" and "Listen Now" are great to plus his solo "Primitive Guitars He's till around too plays regularly in UK)
    OK here's the question:What do you think the cause of improvement is?Better bearings?Wiring?Detachable vs solid tube and headshell?Or is it the dynamic vs static balance?The latter comes into play with Jelco because you can go up the line and spend more for the dynamic over the static arm with same knife edge bearing.Would love to know what made the V worth the upgrade

  • @eightrodway
    @eightrodway Před 4 lety

    Congratulations on your world-class, "destination" 'table and arm!

  • @Mckorzi
    @Mckorzi Před rokem

    Here is a problem I have with my SME V tonearm. Maybe you have some help available for me.
    For a while now I get interrupted sound coming from both channels while I,m listening to music. I can’t find the problem yet and it seems to alternate between L&R channel.
    So first I changed all my tubes for brand new ones on my phono pre. No improvement!
    Then I changed cartridge to rule out any problem from the cartridge side. No success!
    Now, I did change the cartridge lead cables connecting the cartridge to the tonearm cable. Still no success.
    It’s getting annoying finding the problem. Funny though, if I leave the system off for a couple of days the sound is coming back. Although only for a few songs and then one channels starts to get silent again🥵
    Any ideas how to solve this problem? Do I need to send the SME-V in for a tonearm cable change or to get the connection inside the tonearm checked?
    Many thanks for your inputs and helping me getting back to Vinyl listening 🙏

  • @Beyondabsence
    @Beyondabsence Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you again and again Steve. I bought the TECHNICS SL1200 MK7 and wonder why would I at any point change the tone arm, thinking they've designed the TT precisely with their own tonearm in mind?

    • @paultuerena
      @paultuerena Před 4 lety

      guscaldas3 The arm is the weakest point of the 1200, put a Rega on it and it will sing (though a UK magazine - Hifi World - did put a SME on one (with a few other upgrades)

    • @Beyondabsence
      @Beyondabsence Před 4 lety

      @@paultuerena Thank you for your feedback.

  • @leekumiega6576
    @leekumiega6576 Před 4 lety

    A change inThe stylus rake angle would be more apt to cause the differences you noticed than the arm itself .

    • @gotham61
      @gotham61 Před 4 lety

      Both arms were carefully adjusted to the same SRA.

  • @ClearOutSamskaras
    @ClearOutSamskaras Před 21 dnem

    How do you assess whether you can change out your tone arm?

  • @LS-ti6jo
    @LS-ti6jo Před 3 lety

    Steve, after a year of lockdown, I pulled my old Music Hall 2.0 turntable, bough an iFi Zen phono preamp (good sound, weird design - grounding post is too big for most turntables, plus it has an annoying wall wart power supply). After a month, the Music Hall's moor died, so I was able to justify a major step up to buy a Dr Freikart Volare. It also was disappointing -- no RCA and power supply jacks on the back where they should be. The audio connects asre hard wired to the arm, the power supply jack is on worst place possible (the bottom - I asked my dealer, who confirmed its where Dr F puts all his power supply ports). But worst was that even with brand new records, the table constantly skips (I'd forgotten the skip/repeat/skips). Do you think a good record cleaner would help?

  • @runetech
    @runetech Před 4 lety

    First. How often have you reseated all contacts on the old arm during the use of that? I'm not doubting there is tangible differences between those arms, but I am always very particular when trying anything new to make sure to reseat everything on the old stuff before a change to eliminate all risk that the difference I hear is mostly by difference in termination. Since you are a clear pro I assume you did this, but it is worth mentioning this step for all new testing and comparing for everyone else.
    Second. Never changing my Airtangent 1b for anything. I will always have variable second players, but the Airtangent stays on my main player forever. :)

  • @joybrucebruce3377
    @joybrucebruce3377 Před 4 lety +1

    SME quit selling tonearms directly. Let's have s funeral for the finest tonesrm manufacturer in the world for decades going the way of the dodo bird. SME either does your military contract or your turntable and tonearm as one kit. No separate tonearms anymore. Too bad. Lots of perennial favorites from them that once sold in the 1000s.

  • @sheerkhanful
    @sheerkhanful Před 4 lety

    No matter what the promise of HiRes Audio is, at least in my collection, 99% of my tracks/albums are 16/44.1 CD rips. Nothing changes that. Can we attack this problem from another perspective? Steve, would you consider doing a video on the Chord M Scaler, a product specifically designed to work with 16/44.1 files?

  • @redstarwraith
    @redstarwraith Před 4 lety +1

    I got into Herbie Hancock a few years ago. That's a great lp for sure. Also, that 801 Live album is amazing! They do the best version of Tomorrow Never Knows I have ever heard.
    I have yet to get into Herbie Mann though...a lot of his album covers sort of put me off. Lol! I know, I know..."Can't judge a book by its cover." My friends swear by him though.

  • @jamesbrotherton5487
    @jamesbrotherton5487 Před 4 lety

    I'm waiting to see what shakes out after the Apollo fire.

  • @RickRoberts_simplyrick
    @RickRoberts_simplyrick Před 4 lety +2

    801 Live is a great album... Imagine hearing it on a linear tracking air bearing tonearm...

  • @Fluterra
    @Fluterra Před rokem

    Remove the SME V bridge for better sound

  • @gtric1466
    @gtric1466 Před 4 lety

    Were some of these albums listened to for the first time on the Cornwalls? and if so could have that made a sizable impact?

  • @TheTimisek
    @TheTimisek Před 4 lety

    Hi, you look like smart guy, I think about buying a turntable and phono at a price matches my setup.
    I have Electrocompaniet ECI 6DS powered by DH labs RED Wave cable and Dynaudio Contour s1.4 speakers powered by XLOelectric Reference3 speaker cable.
    I would like phono stage with XLR because I own XLOelectric Signature3 balanced cables.
    Thanks for your time and sorry for the spam.

  • @nebulusnebulus6503
    @nebulusnebulus6503 Před 4 lety

    I have a turntable brand Acoustic Solid model Solid Wood. The turntable has a Rega RB-303 arm (OEM version). My wish is to replace it with a Rega RB-3000 because it has the same three-bolt anchor and it would save me to change the anchor base which is very expensive for what it really is. Would arm installation be very easy or difficult? Would you notice a significant increase in sound quality?

  • @johnsweda2999
    @johnsweda2999 Před 4 lety

    The best arms are better than SME is Origin live I have told you this and make a really good really good Rega replacement for $600 silver

  • @ujean56
    @ujean56 Před 4 lety

    What would be a good replacement for a Linn Basik on a Heybrook TT2?

  • @SimonPepper
    @SimonPepper Před 4 lety

    What tone-arm wiring are you using?
    Both internally in the tone arm (MFC) and then externally to the arm
    Have owned a SME V on my full plinth Orbe for 20 years

  • @Algabatz
    @Algabatz Před 4 lety

    I have a Thorens TD124 MKII with an SME 3009 Series II (with an Ortofon 2M Black), do you think the SME V would be a significant upgrade and really worth that money?

  • @christophernoto
    @christophernoto Před 4 lety

    More Brian Eno, live, can be found here, on CZcams, by searching "Kevin Ayers / John Cale / Brian Eno / Nico - June 1, 1974"

  • @mitchellburns92
    @mitchellburns92 Před 28 dny

    Steve do you still own the SME 15? I’ve got a chance to buy a dealer demo but tossing up between that or a Michell Orbe.

    • @SteveGuttenbergAudiophiliac
      @SteveGuttenbergAudiophiliac  Před 28 dny +1

      No, I do not own the SME anymore.. I would not recommend it. As you might've noticed I am living happily with a Technics SL1200G. I don't like the way it looks, but it sounds wonderful.

    • @mitchellburns92
      @mitchellburns92 Před 28 dny

      @@SteveGuttenbergAudiophiliac thank you Steve, I had a feeling that you were going to say exactly that. I’ll keep looking 👀

  • @NickP333
    @NickP333 Před 4 lety

    I’ve got a KAB modded/upgraded SL1200 MK5, which I replaced the tonearm on with a new Technics arm with internal dampening and Cardas wires before they stopped making the arms available. I often wonder if a Jelco arm would sound better, or if it would just end up being somewhat of a sideways move. I also like the easy VTA adjustment on the Technics, but I still wonder about if the Jelco would truly be an upgrade or if a stock arm is better, as it was specifically designed for my particular deck. I’ve read so many conflicting views, that I’m kind of at a loss at this point, but also happy with the new upgraded stock arm.
    In the end, I think I’m more apt to get more out of a better phono stage.

  • @handsoffanomaly7
    @handsoffanomaly7 Před 3 lety

    How does the SME V compare to the SME iV?

  • @brianjuffs4662
    @brianjuffs4662 Před 4 lety

    Whats people's opinions on the audio technica at1005/ at1009 tonearms?

  • @RUfromthe40s
    @RUfromthe40s Před 9 měsíci

    there´s never a perfect cartridge for all music styles i have 3 turntables all from the 70´s with a good cartridge but it needs 3 for diferent styles of music. One only i would take the grado that costs around 5.000€´s or maybe only because they are made of a rare type of wood, but sound fantastic as 70´s better cartridges,at also as new MC type cartridges who are perfect sounding,art1000 ,i think it´s the model, i have a art9 already good sounding and cheaper, still using V15 from sure ,the best there was ,well in my own opinion, and some cartridges that came with the turntables sound a lot more good than todays 1.000 of € cartridges i´m refering to pioneer and technics, SME arms are not the best AT used to have very good arms in the 70´s as i have one in my thorens professional line from late 60´s, the original one was enough good to me but with lot´s of usage it get bad and couldn´t find one in good condition so i install one from AT and didn´t had an excentric squadry to be installed maybe the more weightless i own

  • @Peter_S_
    @Peter_S_ Před 4 lety +2

    "So you're a vinyl guy....."
    Instant like 👍

  • @mkfmkf55
    @mkfmkf55 Před 4 lety +3

    Shameless self-indulgence here. I'm all for audiophile pursuits, but the local food bank, homeless or animal shelter would have been better served with that $5,500+. The original SME setup was MORE than sufficient for analog delights.

  • @victorcheung2868
    @victorcheung2868 Před 4 lety

    How about the SME V vs SME v-12?