Grado Sonata & Platinum - Reference Series Cartridges
Grado Sonata & Platinum - Reference Series Cartridges
USER REVIEWS
[Sep 12, 2008]
Dimitri Turbiner
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
Ease, resolution, crystal clean highs, tight controlled base, size of the soundstage (huge!)
Weakness:
Ridiculously narrow margins on the VTA angle, causing unusually high setup times. (Reference Platinum)
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[Jan 01, 2008]
Ian Fettling
AudioPhile
Strength:
Very, very musically involving.
Weakness:
Difficult to align in the Linn Ekos arm. I am now on my second Grado Sonata and find the cartridge very musical and involving to listen to. I use a Linn Sondek LP 12 with a Linn Ekos arm and actually sold a Linn Arkiv to stick with the the Sonata. I have also used a Denon 110 high output moving coil, a Benz Micro wood reference and an Audio Technica OC7 but nothing seems to compare with the natural, smooth presentation that the Grado offers. Similar Products Used: Benz Micro wood reference, Denon 110 moving coil, Linn Arkiv, Audio Technica OC7. |
[Aug 20, 2007]
Polhemus
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
Quiet. Little surface noise! Very detailed high end.Neutral midrange (I like a little emphasis). All my complaints may inprove if with a low mass arm tracking at 1.5 or 1.75 grams.
Weakness:
#1, Very sensitive to VTA and other paramaters. Need to tweak this baby! Not the best sounstage width.This may correct with less tracking force! Not the best bass but enough. Need a low mass tonearm. Grado Reference Platinum, can buy new for $300. Very,very,very sensitive to VTA and then overhang. Tweaking anti-skating recommended. A high mass S arm will require 2 grams of tracking (my situation). Detailed highs. Decent but not great bass. Neutral midrange. Fair sounstage. Mediocre tracking. With shallow VTA very bright and edgy and lame with a lot of surface noise. Get the VTA right and this is a very quiet cartrige. Very detailed at the high end.Get the overhang right and more detailed.This cartridge requires precise alighnment! From horrible to excellent depending on alighnment. If you can't install with the proper VTA, don't waste your money. I don't see how anyone can claim this to be a warm cartridge! It's neutral to bright depending on the room. Not recommended for a bright room. Fine with a warm one. Can do better for less money. Maybe the sounstage would open up tracking at 1.5 grams. My Denon 160 and my BenzMicro M20E more "musical" with a better sounstage and cheaper. However, they weren't as quiet with surface noise nor as detailed at the high end. Similar Products Used: Denon 160. BenzMicro M20E (preferred). |
[Feb 14, 2003]
Tino
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
sooooooo smoooooooth and warm
Weakness:
not noticed for that price Hey Guys! I bought this catridge GRADO PLATINIUM WOOD in February 2003 in Germany and paid 350 Euro/350$. I put it on a REGA RB 300 tonearm and on a ACOUSTIC SIGNATURE SAMBA (1600$) turntable. I have it now only a few days but I can say that the sound is excellent so far. Warm and soooo smoooooth. I do not listen to techno or heavy metal music but to avantgarde and independent music and to many italian music, as I'm a italian freak. I'm no expert but I have not noticed until now the weaknesses on the inner circle that Marc has in his review below. I do not think that it depends on the GRADO but on the wrong settings of the tonearm. I have to admit that if I would have the money, I have bought a VAN DEN HUL catridge, which is 700$ the cheapest one, but I do not have the money. So for that price I can really recommend it to you! Similar Products Used: Ortofon |
[Jan 05, 2000]
Marc Bratton
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
Muscicality with a capital M! Neutral in the sense of good tonal balance. Unlike Paul's review below, I find it to be a very good tracker-not quite as good as a Shure V15VMR, but close.
Weakness:
None-other than the fact it doesn't quite sound like a high end (read: "expensive")moving coil cartridge. As you can see from the list of similar products I've used, I'm familiar with a lot of what's out there in this price range.If you're familiar with the Grado "house sound" (warm, rich, a little sweet) this one still has it. Add to that a great sense of dynamics, more air, and somehow, a much greater sense of ease, and you'll have a sonic picture of how this cartridge sounds. It's limitations are those of seemingly all moving magnets-you're just not going to get those little microdynamic bursts that whisper "live music"..you'll probably need one of those foo-foo expensive moving coils for that. You know the kind-the ones that cost $500.00 to retip, and will bust a cantilever if you look at em wrong. That's fine if that's your gig...I'll put my money elsewhere-like more records. Still, you do get some of that expensive moving coil cachet with this cartridge. It comes in a nice mahagony box, lined with green velvet. You keep this cartridge permanently, and send it in for retipping-just like a moving coil. Retipping cost $200.00-a bit high, but not really out of line. It costs as much to retip a Sumiko BPS, or to get a replacement stylus for the Shure V15VMR. Since I brought it up, how does it compare to those two cartridges, both highly recommended? Very well, thankyou...more musical than either-the Shure is a little clinical by comparison, and the Sumiko...it's hard for me to remember, as it's been awhile. Let's just say the Grado has that certain musicality-like Conrad Johnson's gear-that makes it a keeper. Do make sure your preamp has a high overload margin, as this thing has a high enough output(4.5mv)to overload some. With my Bryston BP1 phono preamp(review forthcoming), that's no prob. After reading Paul's comments below on this cartridge's trackability (or lack thereof!), I have to say this sounds more like a tonearm/cartridge mismatch. This thing tracks like a champ with my Well Tempered Record Player's tonearm. Using Shure's long discontinued trackability test record(which is biased towards...you guessed it-the Shure!), this thing did about as well as the Shure. Real world, I hear no problems with tracking, but I am running it at 1.8grams. Unless you're a no-holds-barred analog idiot (more power to 'em), this is probably as good a cartridge as you'll ever need. I'm giving a 4 overall (there's always a lot better out there), but a 5 for value. Similar Products Used: Grado Signature Jr, Shure V15 VMR, VandenHul MM,Sumiko BPS. |
[Jun 04, 1999]
floyd
an Audio Enthusiast
Just picked up my Sota Star with a brand new Grado Platinum professionally mounted. When I hooked up the table and played the first record my ears were immediately treated to pure sonic bliss. I am sure their are better cartridges out there...for under $300 i don't know how one can spend big money on a cartridge. after an extended listening session i found that there was little to no cartridge fatigue and absolutely no ear fatigue on my part. this cartridge mates well with bright speakers... the highs are spatial with dynamic seperation and a beautiful soundstage. the bass is plentiful and solid...the mids could be a little more clear and i mean a small little...the treble is perfect. vocals come out tender and pure...i feel confident that i am set for a while....it's the firts grado i have ever listened to and i love it. |
[Apr 21, 1999]
Paul Guy
an Audiophile
For the money this is a very good cartridge. It tracks high velocities reasonably well, although many albums will give it trouble on highly |