I would like to solicit the members who own Koetsu stone body cartridges once again to try to rationalize and understand the stone body cartridge line-up. (With certain different stone body cartridges at the same price point it almost seems as though Koetsu is having fun trying to drive neurotically-inclined audiophiles a bit daft!)
I think it was Mike Lavigne who wrote that the different sonic characteristics of the stone body cartridges are attributable to the MOH (hardness) of each of the stone materials. I have attempted to line up each of the Koetsu names (i.e., stones) of the stone body cartridges against the MOH list of stones, but, based on the subjective comments I have read about the sonic characteristic of the stone body cartridges, there does not seem to be a consistent, linear relationship between MOH number and sound (i.e., the harder stone bodies being progressively more detail-oriented and analytical as you go up the MOH scale, and the softer stone bodies progressively having a warmer total balance as you go down the MOH scale).
Is there a way to rationalize the Koetsu stone body line-up (or not because different people will hear different things from each model of cartridge)?
(Selfishly, if I could determine conclusively which of the Koetsu stone bodies is lowest on the hardness scale and prove that that cartridge, for that reason, produces the least detail- oriented/"analytical" sound, with the slightly warmest tonal balance of the whole group, then I could compare that stone body winner to the Rosewood Signature Platinum and my personal cartridge puzzle would be narrowed down to two contenders!)
Thank you!