A more substantial and ambitious Miyajima design...
Introducing the Miyajima Destiny
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The Destiny was developed through extensive experimentation into the relationship between tracking force and body weight. Miyajima describe its finished sound as tightly balanced, with powerful bass, a firmly expressed midrange, realistic treble free from unnecessary resonance, and their best sound separation to date.
Using a tapered bamboo cantilever and line contact solid diamond stylus, the Destiny brings scale, stability and presence, with an especially grounded and convincing sense of musical performance.
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Specs
| Body | African Blackwood |
| Frequency Range | 20 Hz - 32 kHz |
| Output Level | About 0.23 mV |
| Impedance | About 16 ohms |
| Tracking Force | 2.5 g |
| Stylus Shape | Line contact diamond stylus |
| Compliance (10Hz) | Around 9×10-6 cm/dyne |
| Weight | About 13.3 g |
| Dimensions | W 21.0 mm × D 24.3 mm (excluding terminals) |
| Cantilever | Tapered bamboo |
What Makes Miyajima Cartridges Special?
There is nothing unique about using wood for cartridge bodies, but Miyajima cartridges have a unique, patented design that really is different to any other moving coil cartridge available. Miyajima understood that traditional moving coil cartridges suffer from resonances and distortion, firstly due to the tie-wire that typically holds the cantilever and coil assembly against the magnet pole piece with a compliant insert between to allow some movement. The tie wire has to be very precisely tightened so that the coil assembly is correctly aligned, but its disadvantage is that it resonates, introducing distortion. The second source of distortion is the typical iron coil former of a moving coil cartridge, which actually distorts the lines of magnetic flux between the pole pieces, as it moves through those lines. Miyajima have a patented cross ring coil structure that has a non-magnetic core, neatly side-stepping this problem. The next innovation was to eliminate the tie-wire altogether. Instead, Miyajima use a pointed slide bar that locates the coil assembly very precisely from behind at its pivot point, which is also the centre point of the magnet, while gently pushing the coil assembly against a compliant insert. This means that the coil assembly can pivot unimpeded by a tensioning wire. Here is a helpful animation showing how Miyajima cartridges work:
What's The End Result?
Miyajima cartridges really do have dramatically lower distortion, compared to other MC cartridges, and these can sound like CD in comparison. The sound is smooth, but don't think that they are 'rolled off' or lacking in 'bite' - the smoothness is a reflection of the low distortion. Miyajima cartridges are effortlessly musical too. Paul Rigby reviewed the original Takumi here, and gave it a 'Groovy' award.
Our philosophy is to skillfully build superior audio components that will reproduce recorded sound so faithfully, that the artists personality and the emotions in their music are perfectly expressed to the listener. Exceptionally fine audio components will result when music can be reproduced with accuracy and without distortion. When matching theory and musicality, good products are created. We at Miyajima laboratory believe that although we are small, our dedication to the fine details allow us to build the very finest sounding components – ones that will bring you joy every time you to listen to music.
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