Yes: I had examined the stylus with a good loupe, and could not find any sign of wear.MicaMonster wrote:The floating reproducers are VERY sensitive to the geometry of the sapphire stylus. Look at it under a microscope or loop. If there is ANY flat whatsoever, the sound quality will be terrible because the sapphire will be riding the shoulders of the groove instead of the bottom of the groove. Ron Sitko has excellent 2-minute sapphire replacements for these.
Lucius1958 wrote:Well, I've rebuilt the reproducer (an early #2) on my AT, and it's still pretty coarse in sound.
Whether it's because the reproducer was designed for brown wax cylinders, or that the modern suppliers use a thinner gauge of mica, I do not know…
Bill
Interestingly, what appeared to be the original diaphragm (when I purchased the machine, it had a frozen carriage, and did not appear to have been tampered with for a long time) was a single piece of mica - not stepped.
Is it possible to re-create the stepped diaphragm by splitting a thicker sheet of mica to the correct gauge and laminating it? What would the original specifications have been?
Bill