Analog Corner #242: Cornering the Vinyl Scoffers; Fuuga & Air Tight Phono Cartridges
The "Meet the Editors" panel at T.H.E. Show Newport Beach 2015. (LR): Robert Harley, Chris Connaker, John Darko, Michael Fremer, David W. Robinson.
Add to the deniers of the Holocaust and Climate Change those who say that the vinyl resurgence isn't happening.
Seriously, the pushback was bound to happen, and the bigger this so-called "hipster fad" gets, the more the scoffers sweat. In 2014, according to my sourcesrepresentatives of the world's largest pressing plantsmore than 73,985,000 LPs were pressed. That's correct: almost 74 million LPs. Taking into consideration such things as multi-LP boxed sets like The Beatles in Mono (which might be counted as a single record in terms of sales), defective discs rejected by consumers or retailers, and unsold records, of which there surely are many in the pipeline, we could cut the number in halfand still have around 35 million. That's more than a 40% increase worldwide over 2013.Analog Corner #243: TechDAS Air Force Two turntable, Graham Phantom Elite tonearm
How big is the performance gap between TechDAS's new Air Force Two ($52,000) and original Air Force One ($105,000) turntables? How do you halve the price without also sacrificing the build quality and features of the flagship model that defines the brand? Even $52,000 is more than most people pay for an automobile, not to mention a turntable. Still, TechDAS's assertion on their website that the price of their new model price is "reasonably improved" over the old strikes me as an understatement.
Analog Corner #244: TARA Labs cables, Synergistic Research accessories, Stillpoints ESS rack
Does everything produce an improvement?"
My skeptical visitor, to whom I'd just pointed out some of the acoustic treatments and other accessories in my listening room, wasn't trying to push my buttons. He just wanted my opinion.
"No," I said. "Some things make the sound worseway worsebut after all these years, I'm convinced that just about everything that can be done to a room or a system produces an audible difference, for better or worse."
Analog Corner #245: SME Model 15 turntable, SME 309 SPD tonearm
In the April 2000 issue of Stereophile, I reviewed SME's Model 10, which was an attempt by that storied company to produce an "affordable" turntable. I described the Model 10's $5500 turntable-only priceabout $7600 in today's dollarsas "stiff." (At the time, the Model 10 cost $5995 with SME's M10 arm, or $8250 with their IV.Vi arm.) But 16 years later, the same Model 10 costs only $5000 ($7000 with the more recent Model 10 arm, which is superior to the M10).
Analog Corner #248: Mørch DP-8, Reed 3P tonearms, TechDAS Air Force One turntable
"HOW MEASUREMENT FAILS DOCTORS AND TEACHERS" was the headline of a story in a recent issue of the New York Times's "Sunday Review" section (formerly called "News of the Week in Review," now rendered obsolete by the 24/7 news cycle created by and for the terminally self-absorbed). The writer, Robert M. Wachter, a professor and interim chairman of UC San Francisco's department of medicine and author of the book The Digital Doctor: Hope, Hype, and Harm at the Dawn of Medicine's Computer Age, said that healthcare and education "have become increasingly subjected to metrics and measurements," and that the focus on them has "gone too far."
To me, that headline screamed "Audio!" And the book that needs to be written is The Digital Recording Revolution: Hope, Hype, and Harm at the Dawn of Audio's Computer Age.
Analog Corner #249: LKV Research Veros One phono preamp, Triangle Art Apollo MC cartridge
Designer Bill Hutchins, of LKV Research, builds the 2-SB moving-magnet/moving-coil phono preamplifier in North Conway, in the White Mountains of New Hampshire; he uses as many US-sourced parts as possible, and sells his products factory direct. I reviewed the 2-SB in March 2014, on AnalogPlanet.com: the 2-SB's sound was exceptionally fineespecially if you like refined, solid-state quiet and detail, and especially considering its then-price of $2500. Since that review's publication, the 2-SB has been upgraded with a version of the third gain stage from LKV's JFET-based Veros One phono preamp ($6500; see below), and its price has risen to a still-reasonable $3000.
In May 2014, Bill Hutchins introduced the Veros One phono preamplifier ($6500).
Analog Corner #250: Ikeda 9mono, van den Hul Crimson XGW cartridges, PBN GrooveMaster Vintage Direct turntable
The review gear piles up, and it's time for a late spring cleaningnot that any dust has gathered on the uniformly excellent products covered in this column. I'll start with two very different phono cartridges.
Analog Corner #251: ModWright PH 150 phono stage
ModWright Instruments' PH 150 moving-coil/moving-magnet phono stage measures 17" wide by 5" high by 12" deep and weighs 19lb. Knobs on its front panel let you easily make adjustments that with some phono preamps require accessing the rear panel or going inside. Starting at the left, the Select knob offers settings for MC, MM, and Mute. The Gain knob offers levels of 0dB, 6dB, and 12dB. With MC selected, those settings would correspond with 72, 66, and 60dB of gain, respectively; with MM, the numbers would be 57, 51, and 45dB, the last being more typical of most MM stages.
First, let's talk about problems with grounding and hum...
Analog Corner #252: Sony PS-HX500 USB turntable & GEM Dandy PolyTable
Recently, when a reader questioned my hearing acuity on account of my ageI'm 69I didn't argue: I don't hear as well as I did when I was 40, or 50, or even 60, and it would be foolish to claim otherwise. However, while my hearing isn't what it once was, neither is my listeningwhich has never been better. Audio perception is a combination of what the ear delivers and what the brain does with it.
My upper-octave response still sounds to be all there. Are there some lumps and bumps below? Probably. And some tinnitus noise encroaching on very-low-level material? No denying it. But as far as I'm concerned, at least for now, I'm still quite capable of doing this job.
Analog Corner #253: Mikey Gets Ortofon SPU'd
Last spring, at the High End show in Munich, I met with Leif Johannsen, R&D manager and chief designer of Ortofon, who walked me through the company's exhibition. Among the new products he showed me were two low-cost, low-output SPU (stereo pickup) moving-coil cartridges.
Leif Johannsen told me that Ortofon decided to produce two low-priced SPUs so that more people could afford them and enjoy their particular sound. Their new SPU #1 comes in two flavors: the SPU #1S with spherical stylus ($599), and the SPU #1E with elliptical stylus ($659)hence the model names.