Winkelwagen is nog leeg.
Winkelwagen is nog leeg.Productbeschrijving
VM95-serie dubbele magneetcartridge met 2,7 x 0,26 mil Shibata-stylusAluminium cantileverDuurzame polymeerbehuizing Met schroefdraadinzetstukken in de behuizing van de cartridge kan de cartridge metslechts twee schroeven op de headshell worden gemonteerd - geen moeren nodig Compatibel met elke vervangende pen van de AT-VMN95
Bernard
23 juli 2025
De media kon niet worden geladen.
Wilfred Jaguar
11 juli 2025
Thanks for dispatching this item so fast. I’m really happy with the result 👍
Ed Wesley Tolardo
2 juni 2025
Melhor do que eu esperava. Toca com perfeição. Nada de exageros em graves, médios ou agudos. Excelente compra. É caro, mas vale cada centavo investido.
Customer
28 mei 2025
Me ha sorprendido las sutilezas de los sonidos que es capaz de reproducir esta cápsula con la aguja Shibata, sin duda la estrella (y más cara) de los otros diseños. Me resulta un placer volver a escuchar mis LP's (o vinilos como se les llama ahora) con esta cápsula, seguramente se debe a que su geometría le permite introducirse más profundamente en el surco y/o trazar mejor sus variaciones. En la época de los discos cuadrafónicos (Quadradisc) tuve (y conservo) una cápsula también con aguja Shibata porque era la mejor capaz de reproducir las frecuencias superiores a 25.000 Hz necesarias para escuchar cuatro canales discretos registrados en estos vinilos.
MIGUEL ANGEL AYALA
29 maart 2025
igual a la descripción
RichP
10 maart 2025
So, I’m a “budget” audiophile. I have some nice gear and the ability to run both a nice surround system or a nice stereo. I’ve been collecting records for only about 7 or 8 years and what I’ve done is buy a couple of whole collections from estate sales to flesh out an inexpensive assortment. Needless to say that you don’t get too many minty records doing this. Plus, the learning curve of matching gear, turntable, phono pre, stylus, etc. So, buying a few turntables and cartridges, I was left still wanting more. I was running an AT120Eb which is a very nice cart and sounds great much of the time, but still suffers from a modest amount of sibilance and IGD (inner groove distortion). Not horrible but I’m pretty picky.I was reading about this line of carts (no longer new but new to me since I didn’t pay attention for a few years) and I saw very good reviews of the shibata version. I decided it was time to give it a shot and try to improve my sound. Remember all those old records I have, literally hundreds of them, some of them a bit scratched, some of them used on a really bad record player with a stylus that apparently damaged them during use (sound fried with distortion that follows whatever is most prominent in the mix). The shibata stylus is much narrower and gets deeper in to the groove and gets past much of the burn from lesser (and wider) needles. This new vm95sh is the cure to my vinyl ills. The sound is perfect and undistorted on new records and my worst sounding records are much better than they have been. It’s remarkable how it erases so much damage by getting deeper and going past the surface wear. It doesn’t eliminate all pops and scratches, but it does, in my case, de-emphasize much of it. No sibilance and no perceptible IGD apart from the natural drop in resolution which is unavoidable on a record, so it’s killer awesome.Lastly I would say that one concern I had was the VTA issue with shibata stylus. So, they’re supposed to be very sensitive to vertical (rake) angle. My main table is a ProJect Debut Carbon with Speedbox. There is no VTA adjustment, but you can use different thickness platter mats and they do sell a shim that mounts under the tone arm base, so there are options. But, so far (I’m 2 days in) I think my stock platter and mat (1mm thick felt) and no other adjustments have the cartridge sitting about perfectly parallel to the record right out of the box. It’s almost like it was made to go on a table like mine with no fuss. I may, over the next week or two, play around with VTA by shimming and swapping mats, but right out of the box, with only my alignment protractor and tracking force scale and about a 3” strip of electrical tape to add a tiny bit of mass to the tone arm, I’m dialed in at 2.08 grams tracking force (1.8 to 2.2 recommended) and I’m loving it. A clean record with little wear is now fully rivaling my HiRes 24/96 flac and easily besting my CD’s in terms of presence and engagement. I have the clarity and resolution of my best digital (I have a nice DAC too) coupled with the natural live presence and amazing soundstage that even the best digital sources struggle to re-create. It’s just more fun to listen to vinyl now, without getting let down by the end of the record sound quality drop off. For $200? Seriously? I doubt there’s a nicer sounding, better cart on the market, especially considering how the shibata stylus saves borderline records. I have a hundred records that sounded bad last week, but sound pretty good now, and my good records sound amazing. Best investment I’ve made in the vinyl hobby.
Nevin
26 november 2024
Changed the cartridge that came with my Marley record player and the step up in sound quality is instantly noticeable. Worth the cost to get the most out of your vinyls.
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