Grado Prestige Gold 3


Hi all, I have a thirty five year old Linn Axis with Basic Plus tone arm in a second system that I love and I find hard to beat unless I spend $2500-3000. I am currently running an Ortofon Om30 but would like to try something new under $250-300. A friend recommended the Grado Prestige Gold 3. Anybody have any thoughts regarding this cartridge with the Basic Plus tone arm? Any other recommendations? Anyone think it’s worth spending a little more (not too much more) on something else or moving to an MC cartridge?

regg

Showing 3 responses by dogberry

I'm a fan of MI cartridges, and while these aren't in your price range, the comparison might hold true for more affordable examples in the two companies' line-up of products. I recently bought and compared a Nagaoka MP-500 and a Grado Lineage Statement 3. I've got 80 hours on the Grado, and it still doesn't excite me one bit. It does its job, but it doesn't make music - it's lifeless. The MP-500, on the other hand, absolutely rocks. Delightful, fun, maybe just a little overly bouncy. But a real bargain compared to the Grado.

Normally I use a London Decca Reference, but it has gone for a rebuild before John Wright (the maker) retires in November. So these two above, plus a London Jubilee and a BM Ruby 3 have been keeping me occupied. If I outlive the Deccas, which isn't likely, the MP-500 and the Ruby 3 will keep me very happy. I now understand why Grado cartridges have lost a lot of the popularity they once enjoyed.

It certainly is, but not really relevant in this thread. You're going to be in the strange position of telling others who have never heard them why they were so special, along with me. No one will ever believe us!

The effective mass of your arm is said to be 10g, which is probably a bit low to satisfy those who believe in calculations. Then again, my SME Series V is said to be too light for the Deccas, and it plainly works fine!