Today, thanks to the ongoing vinyl renaissance, quite a few hi-fi companies are manufacturing new turntables; Pro-Ject, Cambridge Audio, U-Turn Audio, and Technics are just a few. This reality is not lost on companies that manufacture phono cartridges.
Japan, Denmark, and New York produce the vast majority of phono cartridges mounted to the millions of headshells in operation worldwide. Companies like Ortofon, Audio-Technica, Grado Labs, and Denon operate at full capacity just to keep up with demand.
Phono cartridges are not all the same. The construction of a moving magnet cartridge differs from that of a moving coil, as does the material used in the cantilever, and the quality of the diamond used in the stylus. High-end cartridges are hand-assembled and often sold in much smaller quantities which figures into the final price.
The cost to re-tip a really high-end phono cartridge can be prohibitive considering the number of hours that you may get if you listen to a lot of records on a regular basis.
A $500 cartridge, however, is likely to last a long time if you properly clean it and the re-tip cost is likely to be less than $70. But is there a real perceptible difference between a $99 moving magnet cartridge from Ortofon and a $750 high-output moving coil from Dynavector? We think so.
What To Know Before Buying
Here are a few important guidelines to maximize your purchase.
- Rule #1: Do not spend more on the cartridge than the table.
- Rule #2: A better turntable with the right arm will maximize sound quality with even an inexpensive moving magnet cartridge like a Grado Labs Blue V2 โ versus a $750 Dynavector on an entry-level turntable.
- Rule #3: Proper set-up of your cartridge is more important than what you spend.
- Rule #4: Clean your records and your stylus. Nothing ruins a stylus faster than dirty records.
- Rule #5: A high-output moving magnet or moving coil cartridge (anything above 2.5mV) requires between 35-45dB of gain from your phono pre-amplifier as opposed to 55-65dB of gain from your phono pre-amplifier for a low-output moving coil cartridge.
- Rule #6: Moving magnet cartridges tend to sound warmer or more lush than their moving coil counterparts, but the tradeoff is a reduction in overall resolution and detail retrieval.