Tech
Clearaudio N2 MM Cartridge Debuts With Featherlight German Precision and Heavyweight Vinyl Sound
Clearaudio did not exactly hide at High End Vienna 2026. The German analog specialist rolled into the show with new turntables, artist editions, and a Rammstein-branded deck that became one of the more talked-about analog products on the floor. Because apparently nothing says precision vinyl playback like industrial metal, LEDs, and a room full of hi-fi people pretending they were always huge Rammstein fans.
But the product that might matter most to real-world turntable owners is a lot smaller and far less theatrical. The new Clearaudio N2 MM cartridge is a moving-magnet design priced at just $290 USD, and that puts it directly in the path of Audio-Technica, Grado, Ortofon, and Sumiko, four brands that already own a lot of space in the affordable cartridge conversation.
The N2 is designed for broad tonearm compatibility, which makes it a practical upgrade for a wide range of turntables. Clearaudio carries over the proven motor assembly from the N1, but adds a new carbon fiber-reinforced housing produced using 3D printing technology, with the goal of improving rigidity, resonance control, and long-term consistency.
The N2 may not have generated the same noise as Clearaudio’s Rammstein turntable in Vienna, but it could prove to be the more relevant product for listeners looking to improve an existing deck without spending high-end cartridge money.
Clearaudio N2 MM Cartridge Targets the Affordable Upgrade Market
The Clearaudio N2 MM cartridge is built around a simple but important idea: control unwanted vibration before it reaches the generator system.
The key change is the new PETG-CF body, a carbon fibre-reinforced engineering polymer that gives the cartridge housing greater rigidity than standard plastic without adding unnecessary mass. Cartridge bodies are not passive decoration. They influence how energy moves through the cartridge, headshell, and tonearm. By using a stiffer, lower-resonance material, Clearaudio is trying to give the stylus and motor assembly a quieter mechanical platform to work from.
That matters because the N2 shares the proven motor assembly of the N1, but moves away from the heavier aluminium body. At 8.5 grams, the N2 is significantly lighter, which broadens compatibility with a wider range of tonearms, including lightweight designs that may not have been an ideal match for the N1. In practical terms, this should make setup easier and reduce the chances of running into compliance, counterweight, or tracking-force issues. Very German problem solving: make it lighter, stiffer, and harder to blame on the tonearm.
Output voltage is rated at 3.3mV, putting the N2 on the same level as Clearaudio’s Concept v2 series. That makes it suitable for standard moving magnet phono inputs without requiring extra gain, a step-up transformer, or other system changes. For most users, the N2 should slot directly into an existing MM setup.
Clearaudio also pays attention to the small installation details. The laser-finished black housing gives the cartridge a more precise, industrial look, while integrated threaded inserts should make mounting more secure and less frustrating than designs that rely on loose nuts and tiny hardware.
At £250, €250, and $290, the N2 is not chasing exotic cartridge money. It is a lightweight, rigid, low-resonance MM design aimed at improving mechanical stability, tonearm compatibility, and everyday usability without turning cartridge setup into a weekend engineering project.
The Bottom Line
The Clearaudio N2’s most interesting feature is not simply that it is another affordable MM cartridge. The hook is the engineering: a 3D-printed PETG-CF carbon fibre-reinforced body, low-resonance construction, 8.5g weight, integrated threaded inserts, and a 3.3mV output that should work with standard MM phono stages. At $290, that puts it directly against the Audio-Technica AT-VM740xML and AT-VM745xML, Goldring E4, Grado Gold4, Grado Opus4, Sumiko Olympia, and the unavoidable Ortofon 2M Blue.
Some of those rivals offer more advanced stylus profiles. Some have stronger name recognition. What Clearaudio brings is materials engineering and resonance control in a lightweight cartridge that should be easier to mount, easier to match, and more practical than a lot of high-end analog hardware wearing a scarier price tag.
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