Graham Engineering
Turntable Tonearms
Best Known For
Turntable Tonearms
/
Used Products
44
 Available
Average Price
$10,001-$20,000
Brand Popularity
167
 of 900+
Products Listed
2
Review Count
5
Founding Year
1960
Headquarters
United States
Graham Engineering
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

What's unique about the brand

Graham Engineering is known for their tonearms that use magnetic stabilization to control wobble and allow users to adjust tracking angle while records are playing. Their flagship Phantom series features interchangeable armwands in different lengths and a unique unipivot design that minimizes resonance through its removable headshell.

What reviewers are saying

We read all the reviews. Here's what reviewers feel most strongly about:

Our favorite reviewer quotes:

Want to report a correction? Please contact us. We'd love to hear from you. Note that much of the data, recommendations, and summaries on ExtremeHiFi are researched after thousands of hours of loving labor. We archive our site's data and its pages on Archive.org and monitor for those repurposing the data. We also fingerprint data to know when text and numbers came from us.

Our interview with the brand

What are two key technological innovations or strong opinions that differ you from other brands?

What's your approach to customer support?

What are your favorite tracks for showcasing the strength of your products?

What other products pair best with yours?

From Julian's interview with
.

Lineup comparison

We think it's helpful to understand how their products compare. To learn more about each, scroll to the section above to click through to individual product pages.

Graham Engineering Phantom III SE:  

  • Positioning: An entry-level tonearm offering patented stabilization at an accessible price.  
  • Description: Provides essential magnetic stabilization and a basic unipivot design that delivers consistent playback in modest settings. Compared to the Phantom III and Elite, its simpler build suits buyers with tighter budgets who need standard performance for smaller rooms and limited mounting features.

Graham Engineering Phantom III:  

  • Positioning: A mid-range tonearm that refines traditional design with improved internal components.  
  • Description: Features refined pivot housing, upgraded wiring, and enhanced Magneglide stabilization to yield clearer dynamics and soundstaging. Compared to the entry-level SE and the premium Elite, its balanced technical improvements provide a middle ground in cost, performance, and adaptability for varied turntable setups.

Graham Engineering Phantom Elite:  

  • Positioning: A high-end tonearm featuring the latest refinements and engineered precision for superior playback.  
  • Description: Features an advanced pivot assembly with constrained-layer damping and a removable, rigid titanium armtube that delivers excellent energy control and alignment accuracy. Compared to the Phantom III and SE, its state-of-the-art design commands a higher investment.
Website author headshot
Julian Shapiro
ExtremeHiFi Writer

Search hifi products

Explore our database of 10,000+ new and 25,000+ used hifi products.

Similar

Turntable Tonearms

brands

Known For
Turntable Tonearms
/
Average Price
$10,001-$20,000
Used Products
0
 Available
Brand Popularity
516
 of 900+
Headquarters
Germany

About the brand

Genuin Audio is known for developing its own music server to avoid jitter and integrating phono stages directly into record players for improved signal amplification. Their Ava and Neo speakers use sophisticated digital signal processing and coaxial drivers to achieve high efficiency, making them particularly well-suited for low-power tube amplifiers.

Our interview with the brand

What are two key technological innovations or strong opinions that differ you from other brands?

What's your approach to customer support?

What are your favorite tracks for showcasing the strength of your products?

What other products pair best with yours?

Website author headshot
Julian Shapiro
ExtremeHiFi
Brand Page
Known For
Turntable Tonearms
/
Average Price
$1,001-$2,500
Used Products
0
 Available
Brand Popularity
548
 of 900+
Headquarters
Austria

About the brand

Korf Audio stands out for its fully ceramic headshell and aerospace-grade flexure bearings that eliminate bearing chatter without lubrication in their tonearms. Their tonearms use high-mass steel tubes and widely spaced vertical hybrid ceramic bearings, paired with a unique compliance calculator to ensure precise cartridge matching.

Our interview with the brand

What are two key technological innovations or strong opinions that differ you from other brands?

Korf Audio is known for (1) use of zero-friction, zero stiction, zero play aerospace-grade flexure bearings for tonearm's horizontal axis and (2) for our focus on tonearm's rigidity, providing a stable platform for the pickup cartridge through the whole frequency range. Korf Audio uses advanced materials such as monocrystalline sapphire, alumina oxide ceramic and aerospace-grade stainless steel to achieve this goal.

What's your approach to customer support?

We provide 3 months' free email/call/video call support for all customers. In addition to that, all our customers, including our direct customers, can count on assistance from our dealers. For smaller items, the customers can expect immediate replacement once the problem is confirmed. For the tonearms, we either provide a replacement or service the customer's existing tonearm in our service center. Currently, Korf Audio operates service centers in the EU and US.

What are your favorite tracks for showcasing the strength of your products?

  • Stravinsky conducts Stravinsky, Firebird, CBS, Columbia Symphony Orchestra, 1967. This recording shows Korf tonearm's superlative dynamic abilities, fine resolution, tonal correctness, ability to project large, deep and palpable stereo image
  • Jojo, from Boz Scaggs' "Middle Man", Columbia, 1980. This track highlights the whole playback systems' ability to maintain propulsive pace set by Jeff Porcaro. It is also a good test for midrange "substance" and "flesh"
  • Papillons, Robert Schumann, from "Richter in Italy" live album, EMI, 1963. No test is ever complete without solo piano material. Attacks and delicate sustains, tone, timing. Plus, this recording beautifully reproduces the ambiance of the recording venue.

What other products pair best with yours?

Korf tonearms pair well with most competently designed turntables and cartridges. Our unique zero-friction bearing enables Korf tonearms to work with the widest possible range of cartridges, from ultra high compliance Shure V15VMR to Koetsu and SPU low compliance cartridges. We use TechDAS turntables in the development process, and they are a fantastic match. 

Website author headshot
Julian Shapiro
ExtremeHiFi
Brand Page