My experience of listening to music transcribed by the Grado Epoch3 cartridge on the Reed 5T tonearm in the amazing listening room of audioquattr in the Netherlands continues to haunt me (in a good way). I believe that when an audiophile has playback experiences of this nature one should pay attention to them and try to replicate that level of emotional engagement in one's own audio system.
Over the course of a wonderful and wide-ranging three hour discussion with Mark Doehmann a week ago I was reminded of how transcendent I felt was that cartridge/tonearm combination, especially on vocals. Mark loves the Schröder tonearms, and he loves the Reed tonearms as well.
But I am having trouble locating in the United States a dealer who actually has any experience, let alone repeated experience, installing the Reed 5T. Despite its universal reputation for utterly reliable, set-and-forget operation (my kind of component), to uninitiated eyes it looks like an absurdly complex contraption. If I order a Reed 5T I want it installed by somebody who has done it before.
I remember Michael Fremer's funny but worrisome comment in his review of the 5T regarding its installation:
I have quite a lot of experience setting up tonearms, but setting this one up was an exercise in frustration, for reasons partly but not entirely my fault. Even under the best of circumstances, even the most experienced analog fans are likely to find the 5T's setup challenging. Designer Vidmantas Triukas, who is obviously a genius, apparently thinks all his buyers are geniuses as well.
Do you have a Reed 5T?
Who installed your Reed 5T on your turntable?

Over the course of a wonderful and wide-ranging three hour discussion with Mark Doehmann a week ago I was reminded of how transcendent I felt was that cartridge/tonearm combination, especially on vocals. Mark loves the Schröder tonearms, and he loves the Reed tonearms as well.
But I am having trouble locating in the United States a dealer who actually has any experience, let alone repeated experience, installing the Reed 5T. Despite its universal reputation for utterly reliable, set-and-forget operation (my kind of component), to uninitiated eyes it looks like an absurdly complex contraption. If I order a Reed 5T I want it installed by somebody who has done it before.
I remember Michael Fremer's funny but worrisome comment in his review of the 5T regarding its installation:
I have quite a lot of experience setting up tonearms, but setting this one up was an exercise in frustration, for reasons partly but not entirely my fault. Even under the best of circumstances, even the most experienced analog fans are likely to find the 5T's setup challenging. Designer Vidmantas Triukas, who is obviously a genius, apparently thinks all his buyers are geniuses as well.
Do you have a Reed 5T?
Who installed your Reed 5T on your turntable?

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