The control unit and compressor have been entirely re-designed from scratch, named the TITAN . One may read about the details in the following thread :
For the last several months I have been working in partnership with Mr. Giuseppe Viola at VYGER in Italy. My role is to add a new technical dimension to the research, design and manufacturing capabilities of the company, particularly with respect to electronics and compressor design. Mr. Viola...
Here is the video I took at Munich. Complete OMA setup. It's impossible to separate K3's sound but I think sound character in general is similar to MF video. This one is a little bit congested perhaps.
Here is the video I took at Munich. Complete OMA setup. It's impossible to separate K3's sound but I think sound character in general is similar to MF video. A little bit congested perhaps.
Tight, tin-y, and thin sounding to me. tizz, tizz. It lacks weight, body, and tonal color and is closed in. Just my opinion. Yes, it sounds a bit like the MF video.
Yeah, I have that with the Kuzma arm. Multiple carts pre-aligned on the Kuzma head shells. But it’s surprisingly time consuming still. I’m never really going to swap out head shells for just one record and then swap back, for example. If I’m going to swap, it’ll be for the duration of a listening session.
Swapping arm/cartridges for one record does not work well for me either, unless i am doing compares where i have both arms running simultaneously on the record. It takes at least one side for a cartridge to play decent, they need warmup time. I normally group records that i want to play on one arm together, occasionally a record is to warped for play with the LT arm and i will do a emergency use of the radial arm instead.
Swapping arm/cartridges for one record does not work well for me either, unless i am doing compares where i have both arms running simultaneously on the record. It takes at least one side for a cartridge to play decent, they need warmup time. I normally group records that i want to play on one arm together, occasionally a record is to warped for play with the LT arm and i will do a emergency use of the radial arm instead.
The control unit and compressor have been entirely re-designed from scratch, named the TITAN . One may read about the details in the following thread :
For the last several months I have been working in partnership with Mr. Giuseppe Viola at VYGER in Italy. My role is to add a new technical dimension to the research, design and manufacturing capabilities of the company, particularly with respect to electronics and compressor design. Mr. Viola...
Whilst there is a touch of foreshortening present in that image , but yes one might say that it has presence.
This image should give a better idea of scale. Not my system btw.
Half an hour maybe ? And i am currently using the built in phono stage in my Primare 928 preamp, just switching input from mc to mm, so not a big change in electrical path. TT runs constantly, and is started one hour before use, so pumps and motor are steady and warm. All electronics are warmed up one hour before use, but sound best after a couple of hours
Are you serious? All cartridges in my experience take at least a full record side of play before they reach their normal sound. Actually it’s more like halfway through the second side. That’s what I hear each morning when I start playing records.
I can’t believe any experienced vinyl fan wouldn’t notice this.
Half an hour maybe ? And i am currently using the built in phono stage in my Primare 928 preamp, just switching input from mc to mm, so not a big change in electrical path. TT runs constantly, and is started one hour before use, so pumps and motor are steady and warm. All electronics are warmed up one hour before use, but sound best after a couple of hours
I definitely notice a cartridge warm up period. About one LP side. Easy to hear. The music just opens up after a while. This occurs with all of my cartridges.
Are you serious? All cartridges in my experience take at least a full record side of play before they reach their normal sound. Actually it’s more like halfway through the second side. That’s what I hear each morning when I start playing records.
I can’t believe any experienced vinyl fan wouldn’t notice this.
I am serious. So if I play the same record side back to back, then I should hear the heavens open up and angels coming down on the second playback by these accounts. I'll try it.
Whilst there is a touch of foreshortening present in that image , but yes one might say that it has presence.
This image should give a better idea of scale. Not my system btw.
Pino (The Vyger owner) had the Pilium for voicing his speakers initially (when I visited), he did not voice the speakers with the TT but did so with an Oppo, as the speakers might be bought by digital owners, not necessarily Vyger TT owners.
The speakers played with the Viva amps at Munich, which seem to be in the photo. I wasn't at Munich this year but iaxel and byrdparis were impressed by that room.
Pino now has got some powerful GM70s made to run the speakers, I think. I would love to listen to them with those amps.
I am serious. So if I play the same record side back to back, then I should hear the heavens open up and angels coming down on the second playback by these accounts. I'll try it.
Generally, I never find it particularly musical when the play starts, and it does warm up and get more musical (more engaging, better flow, tone, openness, not sounding constrained) towards the end of the side.
I am serious. So if I play the same record side back to back, then I should hear the heavens open up and angels coming down on the second playback by these accounts. I'll try it.
I do not think anyone was recounting the heavens opening up and angels coming down, but sure, depending on the system's resolving abilities, it can make quite a difference. It also depends on the cartridge. My Colibri does not take as long as the vintage Ortofon or Technics MM. It's quite easy to hear, but it seems not all notice it.
Generally, I never find it particularly musical when the play starts, and it does warm up and get more musical (more engaging, better flow, tone, openness, not sounding constrained) towards the end of the side.
For me it takes two Lp sides to warm up a cartridge.
After a 30 min idle warm up period it takes 1.5 hours playing to warm up the whole setup (amps, speakers, etc) and 3.5 hours listening at full performance.
I am serious. So if I play the same record side back to back, then I should hear the heavens open up and angels coming down on the second playback by these accounts. I'll try it.
Sorry, you only get the "Angel" part when you play Emmylou Harris with a VDH cartridge, and sometimes the sibilants makes her sound like she is lisping !