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call bill at response-see the comercial sales posts area-he has a clearance sale, you might get a deal on a tt
I was all set to buy a Music Hall MMF-5 for $489, when I found an ad for a Pro-Ject RPM4 for the same price. I've heard the MMF-5, but not the RPM4. Seems like they share the same tonearm? In fact it seems that they share a lot in the construction. Anybody have any pointers, opinions, hints or anything else to go on? I'll be running this through a Hagerman Cornet and AKSA pre-, amp and speakers.Thank You!!
I still think that budget analog starts at about a Rega Planar 3 2000, where you get PRAT and an excellent arm.
Those "lesser belt drive" units, as I call them, will not give you proper speed/rotational stability. Your music will sound bland, unfocused, without snap and with wobbly transient decays.
There's absolutely no way a poor measuring platter will sound good.
Uh, I've heard plenty of what you call poor measuring platters that have sounded fantastic, but I guess I shouldn't trust my ears and should listen to your measurements, Psychicanimal. I've helped friend's set up Nottingham's, Oracle's, VPI's Aries, and a Rega P2- all of which were not quite "spot on" when I measured them with the KAB strobe. None were off by more than 1% and when we put the VPI SDS on the Aries and it ran 33 1/3 exactly, I couldn't hear a difference honestly, but I don't have perfect pitch to hear a 1% speed error in a table.
Platter speed is only one aspect to a turntable, albeit an important one. What is also important is how well the table maintains the relationships between its various drive/suspension and pickup sub-components, and how rapidly it can recover from disturbances and suppress or dissipate resonance evenly across the frequency spectrum.
Thus, your "over-generalization" that my ocassionaly off speed Rega can't sound good doesn't cut it with me and btw, both of my inferior sounding Direct Drives did measure perfectly by my KAB strobe, so what's up with that?
Stylus drag cannot be discerned by looking at the strobe light's pattern. Speed changes are so minute and instantaneous that the ear must experience it. It takes time to get used to, but the best thing is to compare same albums in CD and vinyl.
If you need further assistance give Kevin Barrett a call. Be prepared, though--he'll tell you that beating a Linn is not hard to do... www.kabusa.com.
Actually, I think I'll pass because NathanM has me sold on the Proselytizer BS1 turntable by Paradox Audio. I'm gonna get me one of these