0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 66354 times.
\
Thanks for the review. The issues you mentioned don't seem to merit returning it though : you were able to set it up with at least a Baerwald alignment & get the anti-skating right even if the dial had to be turned up higher, and many better tables also hum with Grado cartridges. None of those seem like a deal-breaker. I doubt many prospective buyers of this table are going to sweat less than perfect overhang or AS, though I suppose the Grado hum issue could be a bigger deal for sum.Does it otherwise sound like a decent table? Have you checked if it's otherwise accurate on the speed (e.g. either using a strobe / disk or Dr Feickert app & 3150 Khz test tone record)? Seems to me at $700 if it otherwise sounds decent & and is able to maintain good time, then it should be a keeper. There are obviously other budget tables such as Pro-Ject Debut carbons etc that are decent tables at around or less than $700, but nothing direct drive with that kind of mass.
I aligned the table the first time in a hurry. On second check, it was off a bit and the reality was that it could not be put into a Baerwald alignment. The AS dial for 1.5 setting was at 5.5, leaving .5 until the end of the dial. and yes it hummed.If you bought a new car and it had three major problems, would you start re-engineering it or take it back to the dealer. In this day and age, with CAD (computer aided drafting), 3D modeling and CNC manufacturing machines, there is no reason why I have to buy something and then modify it because the manufacturer was either to ignorant, didn't care or a host of other reasons to make it work in today's world. The entire product lineup of Hanpin has all of these same problems.Could you imagine how many tables they would be selling if they knew geometry? Or understood how AS works, or that some people might want to plop a Grado onto the deck. I'm not going to reward people that make bad designs. I'm tired of making things "work".To Neobop,s comment, yes I could of made those things work, except for the hum. Maybe with a few sheets of Mumetal, I could have knocked that down too. But for a new table to have these many design flaws, I have to ask who is "asleep at the wheel"?It's funny that we all bitch about the records that are being pressed, while we ignor the horrible tables being made. They all have their own problems too. Why is it so hard to make a table that has all the things right?Thank God for vintage.....Wayner