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Hell, I love auto-lift. Running to fetch your needle scraping against the record label is quite painful indeed I had a Thorens and used a Q-up device (a little mechnical end-of-record thingee)...it worked 75% of the time. Not bad..but 100% is so much better.John
I had one of the AT risers a few years ago. They are tough to find and if you do they go for about $100.I got one new direct from Japan at HiFi DO for $50. Would love to visit that place. Changed tables and sold it for $100.Very nicely engineered and sharp little ditty.Den
Quote from: bacobits1 on 2 Apr 2008, 03:10 amI had one of the AT risers a few years ago. They are tough to find and if you do they go for about $100.I got one new direct from Japan at HiFi DO for $50. Would love to visit that place. Changed tables and sold it for $100.Very nicely engineered and sharp little ditty.DenI think I might have one of the AT risers / lifts sitting in a drawer. Does someone want it? Can I really get $100 for it?I do like having a gizmo to pick up the needle at the end of a record. I've been using a Thorens TD524, which has an OK tonearm - the TP16IIIL. I've been thinking that sound quality would benefit by fitting a better tonearm but there is a built in optical detector that automatically raises the tonearm at the end of the record and I'm reluctant to give up that very nice feature. So I guess I'm falling in the camp of preferring convenience over sound quality - at least for now. The tonearm actually does sound OK - I just think that it could be better. But for now inertia wins out of the theoretical possibility of sound. ---Gary
i have seen the q-ups & the a-t risers both sell for >$100.you should upgrade your tonearm if you have an a-t lifter awreddy, what conwenience are you giving up by ditching the tp16iiil arm?
Quote from: doug s. on 3 Apr 2008, 12:25 pmi have seen the q-ups & the a-t risers both sell for >$100.you should upgrade your tonearm if you have an a-t lifter awreddy, what conwenience are you giving up by ditching the tp16iiil arm? Doug - I guess you're right. I guess it's just the engineer in me likes the engineering of the auto-lift on the Thorens. It's got an optical detector so there is no mechanical interaction between the tonearm and the autolift until the tonearm is off the record. It even turns off the turntable so that the record stops spinning. It's really nicely done. Compared to that, the AT seems fiddly and a bit of toy - although in the end it does exactly the same thing.---Gary