Last evening, Chris Brady invited a group of audiophiles to his house for the unveiling of two, new prototype TT.
The first is the 280. This is said to offer "the most bang for the buck" in the Teres line.
Please excuse the poor picture quality. It was taken without a flash under flourescents.



The base and platter are made of Baltic Birch. There will be roughly 32 lbs of lead shot in the platter. An equal amount will be used in the base.
The ball park price for this table is said to be "under $3,000"
Chris says it should deliver 80-90% of the sound of the Teres 320 for 1/2 the price.
We were able to directly compare the sound of the 280 to the 320. The 280 is a bit "softer" sounding. It does not have quite the definition of highs or dynamics that the 320 does. They do both share the warmth of the full wood Teres sound.
The next table is still a work in progress, the 400

This has a DIRECT DRIVE motor!!. The mass of electronics you see to the left in the photo is the prototype motor drive controller.
Chris said he started on this project as an outgrowth of looking for the best belt material. He noticed that different material changed the sound. He started looking for something to eliminate that variable .
This is still very much a work in progress. The base shown here is Baltic Birch painted black. Current total weight of the table is 135 lbs. He will try to find other finish options. He still needs to refine the controller and put it in an appropriate case.
The sound of the current prototype is flat out amazing. It has absolute perfect pitch stability. This is not anything you would notice unless directly compared. It has far more dynamics and speed of attack on transients then the belt drive.
He has added a torque control to the motor controller. By changing the torque setting you CAN change the sound of the TT. Towards one end it becomes very "steely" and bright. All hard transients. Towards the other end, the highs soften up and the bass loosens up, as well. Quite an interesting effect.
Chris is ballparking that the direct drive option would add about $4000.00 to the cost of a Teres. He is thinking of only making it available on the top two models.
I came away very impressed with the sound and the looks of the new 280. I will have to bring my 255 up to Chris' for a shootout with the 280
