Need cartridge advice for Supratek preamp


I recently came back to analog after many years of having a digital-only front end. My knowledge of analog systems is therefore sorely lacking at this time, although my enthusiasm for listening to my old record collection again is very high.

Last month I purchased a Supratek Syrah preamp with phono stage (similar to the Supratek Chenin which replaced it) and an Oracle Delphi V turntable with Rega 300 arm. What cartridge do you recommend that I buy? I'd like to keep the cost of the cartidge under $350.00 or so, but I'm flexible in that regard.

According to the Supratek owner's manual:

***The phono section is designed to handle low output moving coil cartidges. Moving magnets will generally not be suitable without modification, although lower output MM's may be okay depending on your system.

The cartridge input range is 0.1mV to approx. 2.5 mV.
Next to the phono input is a 4-way slide switch for cartidge loading values - from the top down are 47 kOhm, 1 kOhm, 100 Ohms, 10 Ohms.***

Because I purchased the Supratek partly in response to the favorable threads here at Audiogon, I thought that perhaps someone here could assist me on the cartridge choice.

Many thanks in advance for your input -- I greatly appreciate any advice or suggestions.
west99

Showing 1 response by lewm

I have no problem with the advice you've already been given (though I personally do not care for any of the Benz cartridges I've heard), but it would be a terrible shame to limit yourself to spending $250 on the cartridge, when you've bought yourself such a great phono front-end. There are some real bargains in MM cartridges (see the relevant thread) that do cost less than $250, but, as you state, the Supratek will evidently have too much gain for any of these and may be overloaded as well by their high output voltages. As far as loading goes, the rule of thumb is that all MMs will like 47K ohms. Some HOMCs will also be OK with that load. LOMCs will generally sound best with lower input impedances, because they tend to have a very low output impedance. In the end, it's a matter of taste.