Grado Sonata II [message #89308] |
Thu, 06 December 2018 20:54 |
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gofar99
Messages: 1949 Registered: May 2010 Location: Southern Arizona
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Illuminati (5th Degree) |
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Hi Everyone, as a devoted analog listener and owner of several turntables, tonearms and cartridges I thought I would pass along some thoughts on the Grado Sonata II (not the I version). YMMV as always and your ears are not mine, and your system is certainly not like mine.....disclaimers finished. I have the cartridge mounted in an Origin Live arm on an Empire 598 (series 1). I use all tube electronics and bi-amp feed Martin Logan ESLs for the above 40HZ and 15 inch Great Plains Audio (new manufacture Altec Lansing ) 15 inch drivers in 7 cubic foot vented enclosures for the bottom end. The Grado now has about 150 hours on it and is well "broken in". If you like female vocalists and jazz or acoustic instuments this is a killer cartridge. Wide sound stage, accurate centering and just plain lovely sound. Slightly better than most for residual groove noise. It is no slouch on other stuff as I like that too. It has a really solid and clear bottom end and hits all the highs quite nicely. It is not as "energetic" as my Dynavector Karat23MR-RS, but then not a lot of cartridges are. As a medium price cartridge I believe it to be a good buy (runs about $600). The less expensive series II Grados (skip the lower cost wood bodies) are also pretty good (I have tried several) and the "gold" one is my choice. Not in the same league, but then it is about $260 and has user replaceable stylus. The Sonata must be sent out to re-tip.
Good Listening
Bruce
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Re: Grado Sonata II [message #89317 is a reply to message #89314] |
Sat, 08 December 2018 09:36 |
Rusty
Messages: 1187 Registered: May 2018 Location: Kansas City Missouri
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Illuminati (3rd Degree) |
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When I bought my OC9, the price was the determining factor to jump into the arcane world of LOMC cartridges. Knowing I'd take a whack at using SUT's. I went diy with Cinemag. Studied online builds and went to work. I used a cheap aluminum enclosure though, typical of most builds depicted online. The diy community is really a crap shoot for reliable information. I lucked out with any noise problems.
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