You can purchase the Shure cartridge now, and put it on your new turntable later.
So I went with TLS Guy's advice and purchased the new cartridge. It came in Friday so I postponed Friday Night martinis and installed the cartridge. I figured I would want all coordination and dexterity to install this thing.
I must admit, when I first ordered the cartridge I had a little buyers remorse. Would this be another audio "upgrade" I rushed out to buy and install in my system, only to have minimal effects at best. Read on and find out.
As covered in many other reviews, the cart arrived in an aluminum box with the cart, mounting hardware, screwdriver (nice touch), protractor and brush (whew). I removed the old Ortofon 5e from the Rega P-1 tonearm and installed the M97xE. One issue, I found the screws that came with the M97xE to be really short. I really could not get them threaded with my fat fingers, so I went back to using the screws from the 05e. (I did notice later, AFTER my M97xE was mounted, aligned, and balanced, that the M97xE installation manual states that if you have trouble mounting, you can always put the screws on "upside-down". Good idea, but I was not about to undo 40 mins of work to use different screws.)
So, about an hour after I opened the box, I was listening to some vinyl with a martini in hand. Two things I noticed right away: first, the soundstage did not seem as wide as the Ortofon, second, and surprising considering some reviews of this cart, the bass response was *much* tighter. The Ortofon could "go low" with bass, but it was always a little sloppy, the response on the Shure is really tight. An electric guitar A or E, really sounds like a guitar now with that nice roll off from the vibration of the string.
Bass response alone has made this worth the price of admission. Now for some more critical listening. It seems the noise floor has really dropped. Not that it was "noisy" before. With my phone-pre, pre-amp, and amp, I have no hiss or hum, so there was no "noise" with the Ortofon, but it seems more dynamic now.
Sibilance is not as pronounced on vocals as with the 05e, but it seems a little less detailed. The lack of "detail" is not a bad thing. Previously, with the Ortofon, vocals often sounded strained, and sometime, shrill. I have not experienced this with the Shure.
Furthermore, there seems to be almost no audible "clicks" or "pops" from surface debris. Maybe it is because my records are getting cleaner, maybe it is because of the little stabilizer with brush on the front of the cart (yes, I have it down). I don't know, but I don't hear them as much anymore.
Lastly, and I am fully willing to admit this is psychological, playback seems quicker. I don't know how to explain it. If before, playback was a trickling stream, it is now a swift moving, still, river. Maybe it is the drop in the noise floor? I don't know. But is just seems faster. (of course the pitch is not higher, the record is not playing faster) I really cannot explain it. I am sure it is in my head.
So, in closing, this little investment has fixed about 3 things I did not like about the Ortofon and has made me hear another shortcoming with the 05e, the lack of control on bass. Subtle advancement to be sure, (my wife hears no difference and thinks I am insane) but the difference is audible to me. All I have seemed to have lost is a wider sound stage. A trade off I am very willing to make.
TLS Guy knows his stuff. Now, I wonder what he thinks of the
Rega P-2 I have been eying?