Hi Rando, I simply posted those videos to demonstrate that some tables, and particularly this 40 year old vintage table, can hold a pretty stable and accurate speed. I've seen well regarded contemporary tables not able to do so. I once started a thread asking people to post publicly results of other tables using the Sutherland TimeLine. The thread died quickly as no one took up the challenge. A WBF member from Germany suggests taking the TimeLine for testing contenders if one is in the market for a new turntable. I think it is an interesting idea. I've heard reports of dealers not allowing clients to bring that device into their shops.
Do you think that Lamm dealers would allow consumers to measure the distortion of the Lamm amplifiers at low frequencies in a comparison with other solid state amplifiers before listening in their shop?
You systematically failed to define what you mean precisely by "stable speed", trying to debate technical matters in a vague and ambiguous language, avoiding quantification. You do not tell us what you think is the needed accuracy. Why should people use instruments if they do not know how to interpret the results clearly?
One friend let me put it on his table and the results were terrible. He was using the VPI motor controller. He concluded the TimeLine is flawed. He theorized that the weight of the unit placed on the spindle of his turntable changed the performance of the table, or that the strobe is inaccurate. This is one reason I wanted to show both the TimeLine and the RR tachometer working concurrently to confirm accuracy of both devices and that the speed does not change when the Timeline is placed on the spindle and removed, at least not on the Micro Seiki.
I think speed is a primary criteria for a turntable, and it is indeed audible at some measure of accuracy and consistency. Tim commented about this regarding his Grand Prix Monaco 2.0. What degree of accuracy and consistency or how "thin of adjustments are necessary" or audible is a debatable subject as others have pointed out.
What do you exactly mean by the results were terrible? Was it a faulty unit or simply a poor turntable?
IMHO if we want to propose, support, disseminate or compare any kind of objective measurement in public we must master it and be able to discuss it.
BTW, IMHO LP eccentricity is far more critical than accuracy to 5 digits. Yet only a few turntables compensate for it.