Many of the old wives tales about direct drive are just that, and tons of engineering research went into the design of these turntables.
With all due respect, I beg to differ with your analysis. In audio, fashions shift almost as quickly as clothing fashions do - push-pull, single ended, direct drive, belt drive, idler drive, perfect sound forever, analog ... you name it.
In my experience, I continue to see convergence across seemingly competing architechtures, with no clear winner - only clear preferences. While the basic characteristics of a chosen architecture are evident, components designed by competent designers who have a clue about what music sounds like sound far more more alike than they do different.
Surely, differences will be heard. A box speaker will typically image better than a horn, and a horn will have superior dynamics and noise floor, and will charge a room with air the way that a box speaker cannot. The the better the expression from each design school, the more they will be alike than they will be different.
On the topic of the ineherrent inferiority of belt drive turntables, I offer the following annecdotal comments.
One of Frank Schroeder's good customers runs a Loricraft 401 and 501 - each with its own dedicated Schroeder Reference tonearm. The two turntables sit on a wide shelf, adjacent to each other. Frank suggested an experiment - that one turntable serve as a motor drive for the other one - linking the two with a thread serving as the drive belt. This customer hasn't looked back and continues to run his rig in this manner.
Do I look at this as an inherrent superiority of belt drive over idler drive? Not necessarily.
Another case ...
Most of Doug Sax's work was mastered with either a Scully or Neuman lathe. A few different motor drive systems were employed for the Scullys. One of them comprised a series of cloth belts. In another configuration at The Mastering Lab, he drove two lathes with a third one - in the manner of Frank Schroeder's experiment with his customer's Loricrafts.
There's more than one way to skin a cat.
Cheers,
Thom @ Galibier