Did Koetsu Quality Decline with New Ownership


I met the new owner of Koetsu Cartridges at Axpona.  Nice fella.  Spent quality time with us.  He said he has many of the original building in Japan still making the cartridges.

Then an Audiophile just sent me a text saying he talked to a HiFi dealer who was saying product quality of Koetsu Cartridges has declined.

Anyone have any insight in this? I don’t know about it, but the new owner really seemed to be on top of everything and I didn’t get the heebeejeebees talking to him.

Interested if anyone knows anything about this?

pgaulke60

$8K for a Rosewood Sig (non-platinum) :(
I got a brand new Coralstone Platinum for $4800 circa 2018.

Of course , you've got to support those Californian taxes. It's a public service.

I recall

Air Tight 

originally 2K

4K post review in The Absolute Sound ( those distributors do a lot of work - its hard work keeping track of orders when you don't carry stock ).

6k, 18 months later

then within 4 years - $10k - same cartridge.

All up 2k - 10k within 5 years - net result of TAS review and US distribution "costs/profit".

 

 

what about my original question on Quality?

Nobody will know until they hit the market, and we get feedback from owners.

Dealers opinions are unreliable - they usually have a vested interest one way or the other.

 

Quality control, as we normally think of it, was never a particular virtue of Koetsu cartridges, and in fact maybe it is not a strong point of any of the boutique cartridges, owing to their being hand made.  In 2009, I bought two samples of Koetsu Urushi, from an audio salon in Tokyo.  When I got back to my home in the states, both of them had slightly misaligned cantilevers.  I had certificates of warranty from Koetsu, so I sent them both back to the salon which sent them on to Koetsu for correction. (This could be done only because my son lives in Tokyo and speaks perfect Japanese; I do not, and no one at that salon spoke English.). Within a few weeks I received back my cartridges with perfectly straight cantilevers, for no charge and no questions asked. To me that meant Koetsu was not unfamiliar with the idea of imperfection in their manufacturing and quality control process.

I wrote, "When I got back to my home in the states, both of them had slightly misaligned cantilevers."  Bad sentence. What I meant was that I did not inspect the cartridges at the point of purchase in Tokyo.  I only did so when I finally arrived back home.