Garrott Brothers
Retipping and Stylus
Replacement:
Sumiko Blue Point
Special |
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Paul Szabady |
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24 July
2002 |
Specifications
Aluminum
Cantilever, Microtracer
stylus
Price $480.
Address:
US Distributor and Mail
Order:
Jerry Raskin's Needle
Doctor
419 14th Avenue SE
Minneapolis, MN 55414
Phone: 800 229 0644
Website:
www.needledoctor.com/
E-mail:
info@needledoctor.com
Manufacturer:
Garrott Brothers
155-157 Camberwell Rd
Hawthorn East Victoria
Australia 3123
Phone: +613 9882 0372
Fax: +613 9813 3108
E-mail:
info@audiodynamics.com.au2
In addition
to their excellent line
of phono cartridges (I
fell in love with the
P89 moving coil and
Optim FGS moving
magnet), the new Garrott
Brothers carries on the
famed tradition of
excellent re-tipping and
stylus replacement of
the old firm. A variety
of stylus types are
available, ranging from
simple conical styli up
to the superb FGS (Fritz
Geiger Signature,) with
cantilever choices of
aluminum, boron and
sapphire. Old beloved
cartridges entombed in
the back of some drawer
can be resurrected and
reincarnated to a higher
plane of performance by
upgrading stylus
profiles and cantilever
materials.
In my
case, it was Sumiko's
Blue Point Special.
After installing
countless samples while
working in retail audio
and having owned one
personally for five
years, I had neatly
skirted the curse of
snagging the unprotected
cantilever. One moment's
inattention, the arm
lock not engaged, and
the BPS stylus was bent
and creased, hanging in
front of the cartridge
like the proboscis of
some deranged mosquito.
The loud and sudden
expulsion of obscenities
(and Hungarians follow
only the Irish in the
range and creativity of
expletives) settled
eventually into only
mild rage at my lapse of
care and no great
impetus to have the
cartridge fixed. The BPS
was never one of my
favorite cartridges.
Although the BPS was THE
recommended budget
cartridge for a while,
with encomia like " it's
almost as good as the
best" offered freely,
ALMOST was the operative
word. As in "Close, but
no Cigar." Though very
reasonably priced at
$295 originally, the low
price encouraged many
with cheap and poor arms
to buy it. Even the best
of affordable arms, the
Rega RB300, had problems
taming its tendency to
go bright and shriek.
Somewhat lightweight and
dynamically constricted
bass registers and
inability to descend
deep into subterranean
regions tended to
exaggerate its
brightness and kept it
from total satisfaction
in music making. The
cartridge was also
physically heavy,
necessitating moving the
counterweight far back
on most arms, and the
exposed aluminum
cantilever held a simple
elliptical stylus,
unprotected by any sort
of stylus guard. Snapped
styli were common.
I had almost forgotten
about it until I heard
about the Garrott
re-tipping and stylus
replacement service. I'd
always felt that the
Blue Point Special's
elliptical stylus was
holding the BPS back
from providing what I
consider the requisite
resolution. I've become
quite snotty now about
cartridges with basic
elliptical stylus tips.
So Garrott's ability to
install a new aluminum
cantilever and upgrade
the stock elliptical to
a more precise
line-contact
Micro-tracer type caught
my interest. Although
more exotic cantilever
materials and stylus
profiles are available,
I didn't love the Blue
Point Special enough to
warrant the additional
cost. Sumiko charges
$275 for a new stylus,
so the additional $200
for the Garrott re-do
was plausible.
Re-tipping requires
sending the cartridge to
Australia. Garrott can
also give estimates and
advice on older, more
exotic fare. Rumor has
it their Decca repair is
near miraculous. Since
the PBS was a
bottom-drawer denizen I
was not antsy to have it
back and so didn't pay
too much attention to
the time span involved.
But I soon got a call
from The Needle Doctor,
Garrott's US
distributor, that the
cartridge was back
The improvement
sonically was marked:
big gains in resolution
all across the
bandwidth. Transients -
the starts and stops of
the signal - were
resolved far more
accurately than the
stock elliptical,
leading to clearer and
more accurate instrument
timbre. Musical notes
started and stopped much
more clearly, resulting
in improvement in the
movement of the musical
line, along with its
requisite tempo, rhythm,
dynamic variation and
thus, musical
expression. The stock
elliptical stylus had
blurred these aspects of
sonics and music.
Midrange and high
frequency response
showed the biggest
improvement. Now finely
detailed resolution of
the starts and stops in
cymbal and percussion
work were apparent,
without edge, artificial
brightness or
steeliness. The ability
to reproduce the highest
harmonic frequencies of
an instrument created a
new transparency in
deciphering multiple
instrument overlays,
their position in space
and the acoustic and
ambience of the
recording site into
which their decay
eventually melted. The
stock BPS's fine stereo
separation was further
enhanced - images
extended beyond the edge
of the speakers and were
anchored in position and
were now sonically in
focus, compared to the
slightly blurred
rendition of the stock
cartridge. Bass was
faster and more
controlled than the
stock elliptical stylus,
but without any
additional gain in
bandwidth: low bass was
still somewhat
lightweight and lacking
the BIG BASS aspect of
the finest cartridges.
So now the BPS gets the
cigar? Yes it does, but
unfortunately it does
not get the Dunhill pipe
packed with aged
Virginia tobacco.
Garrott does not and
cannot really change the
fundamental
architectural structure
of the cartridge.
Replacing the stylus and
cantilever can only
improve the signal going
into the generator and
its construction: the
ultimate resolution is
determined (in this case
limited) by these
aspects of the
cartridge. The Blue
Point still sounds
somewhat lean in the
lower bass without the
ability to trace the
dynamics and energy that
drive bass power
convincingly. The
cartridge still can't
dance very well (at
least it has now taken
lessons), and it still
lacks that ineffable
feeling of intense
musical communication
produced by the very
best cartridges. It
remains thus very much
an audiophile rather
than a musicophile
cartridge. But what an
audiophile cartridge!
Those who loved the old
cartridge will be
ranting about its new
powers.
Soundstaging and high
frequency response and
detail are among the
best I've heard at any
price, with the midrange
equally compelling. I
enjoyed listening to the
Garrrott re-do at a
deeper and more
satisfactory level than
the original ever hinted
at. So a very high
recommendation. The next
candidate in my treasure
trove of aging
cartridges to get the
Garrott magic is the
Goldring Eroica LX. I'm
pumped.

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