Over the last 50 years, I must have installed well over 1000 phono cartridges, but I still remember the very first one: a Goldring G850 I put into the family Garrard Autoslim turntable when I was 11 years old. In 1973, the G850 was the least expensive moving magnet cartridge Goldring made. The change from the flip over-stylus ceramic cartridge that came with the Garrard wasn't an attempt to satisfy a youthful audiophile itch but, rather, a result of my first encounter with a system compatibility problem.
A few months earlier, I had convinced my non-audiophile dad to upgrade the family stereo. We went from our ancient Monacor SMX-50 tube receiver to a pretty weird but less ancient Sony all-in-one cassette system called the TC-133CS. I failed to understand that the new Sony's magnetic phono input was incompatible with our old ceramic cartridge. Once I figured that out, I tried to convince my dad that what we really needed was a Shure M75ED.
After all, that cartridge came from the same company that made the legendary V-15 Type III, widely regarded as the best cartridge in the world at the time. My dad, however, had different plans. Guided by his home-product purchasing bible, Consumer Reports, he decided we should go instead with the less-costly Goldring.
By this point I had already shown a keen interest in audio systems, having moved the old speakers from the Monacor system upstairs to my bedroom, then wiring them into the Sony through a speaker switching panel I built using four old light switchesan early multiroom audio installation! So it fell on me to get it installed and hooked up, and somehow I managed to do it without breaking off a headshell clip or mangling the fragile stylus and cantilever.
Bu hikaye Stereophile dergisinin April 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Stereophile dergisinin April 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
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