What innovative, unconventional cartridge designs can you recommend?


Most cartridges have a stylus and cantilever where the transducer (magnet, iron or coil) sits on the far end of the cantilever.  What other designs are there?

I am mindful of two designs which put the business end right on top of the stylus.  The first is the moving coil (MC) Audio Technica AT-ART1000 which places two tiny coils, each 0.9-mm diameter, with eight turns of wire directly above the stylus.  Australian price is about AUD-7000 and there apparently is a newer model, slightly less exxe. the ART1000X.  This has square coils for a bit more output, and threaded mounting holes.

A downside is that stylus replacement involves a factory maintenance program and the Australian website page describing this service does not exist.

Another design is optical, exemplified by DS Audio's range.  While these still need a stylus to trace the groove, the signal is produced by reading the intensity of light produced by a Light Emitting Diode (LED) hitting two sensors.  Between the LED and the sensors are two 'shades' mounted above the stylus which change the amount of light as the stylus vibrates.  These cartridges need a special "photo-stage" to replace the conventional phono-stage which is an additional expense.

Australian prices including photo-stages range from AUD-2,150 for the DS-E1 to the DS Master 3 at approximately AUD-40,800, which is a bit outside my price range!  Where is the sweet spot?

What other way-out designs are there?

richardbrand

I got to hear a DS Audio W3 on Magico S5 MkII with VPI Classic TT and Convergent Audio amp/preamp.  I've the same system with a modified OPPO CD player, which was also excellent, so the system is a big factor, but I thought the DS Audio W3 sounded superb. 

So it should - even a cheap Grado MI would sound much better than the Oppo 105, which is unlistenable for music in my experience.

 

So it should - even a cheap Grado MI would sound much better than the Oppo 105, which is unlistenable for music in my experience.

Not sure which Oppo it is or what's been done to it, but it's been modified, and has indeed sounded really good on that system. 

in fact, the internal impedance or resistance of a low output moving coil cartridge dominates the circuit impedance, because it is in parallel with the signal as is the input resistor on the phono stage. Two resistors in parallel will always yield a net resistance that is lower than the lowest value of the two resistances. So for a cartridge with a 10 ohm internal impedance, even if you terminate the phono stage with a 47,000 ohm resistor, the circuit impedance will be just a bit less than 10 ohms.