why SAT? Ron is a very unlikely candidate for that oneI predicted SAT or Vyger.
why SAT? Ron is a very unlikely candidate for that oneI predicted SAT or Vyger.
Your tape machine will be jealous.I am getting a Brinkmann Balance 2 Arm with RoNt III power supply with Mullard GZ34 tube. The Balance will sit on the HRS Brinkmann platform.
I hope to add a Vyger turntable with Vision tonearm and Titan air pump controller in due course.
I will be selling the Denon 62L + Hana SL.
Ron, You cancelled your Nothing Rack order along with the AS2000.
Care to share how you came to your decision?
Your tape machine will be jealous.
Will you set it up yourself?
Your Denon is a direct drive...Selecting a turntable with any methodologically principled rationale behind it based on comparative auditioning is tough!
I wanted to stay with belt drive. It is just too complicated for me to conduct a methodologically valid comparison and figure out if I have a preference among belt drive, idler drive, or direct drive. I've always had belt drive, and it seems fine to me. It is the simple choice with a wide variety of options.
I tend to be skeptical of complicated turntable designs. I tend to be skeptical of designs with elaborate damping strategies or of designs with extra moving parts.
Suspension-less is fine, especially since the turntable is in a different room than the speakers. I like Mark Doehmann's Helix turntables, but I feel like I don't need the Minus K suspension.
I think Brinkmann's machining and finishing quality is excellent. The turntable is a "known quantity," and is highly regarded sonically by people with very different sonic preferences and high-end audio points of view.
Neither Michael Fremer nor any other reviewer whose Balance review I have ever read suggested in the slightest (including reading between the lines) that the Balance is on the slightly analytical, sterile or edgy side of things sonically. I want something that is dead neutral tonal balance wise (whatever that means), or leaning towards very slightly warm.
By all accounts it seems to be a very good overall performer in all areas, not emphasizing any particular sonic quality over any other particular sonic quality.
I have a friend who had a Brinkmann Balance and then replaced it with a TechDAS Air Force One, using a different tonearm, but the same Lyra Atlas cartridge. I had no basis for thinking I preferred the Air Force one sonically.
I wanted a turntable which can easily and happily accommodate two tonearms. I think the Balance should provide a solid and stable platform for both the Graham Phantom Elite and for the Reed 5T.
I wanted a turntable manufacturer who is willing to take the time to work with Reed to make sure the arm-board is drilled properly for the 5T. Helmut and Matthias of Brinkmann were very gracious to think this through with Reed even before I placed the order for the Balance. (I love the 5T, but I think it is not for the faint of heart.)
Anthony Chiarella, the North American distributor of Brinkmann, has been very transparent in communications with Brinkmann, and has been delightful to work with on this project. Joe Cali also has been great and helpful, offering assistance however he can.
Your Denon is a direct drive...
Not jealous, nervous. The tape machine finally will have some very serious competition.
PS: I am continuing to sell sealed duplicates and sealed box sets of vinyl records to fund the purchase of additional tapes.
We have a saying around where I live..My criteria for turntable evaluation was looking for the closest possible to my tapes played with the Studer A80 in my system. Unfortunately it carried me to a too expensive turntable ...
David did not agree to cancel the Nothing stands order. They are on consignment with him because I think that anybody who wants the very last AS-2000 will love the matching custom all-stainless steel stands. I think the all-stainless steel turntable on the all-stainless steel stands will be gorgeous. That's why I ordered the stands in the first place.
Ron, Have you given any thought to what rack system you will buy to replace the Nothing Rack?
What commercially available stands would you suggest?
there is a divergence of approaches you need to work out first prior to choosing a rack. obviously the Nothing Rack and Peter's approach are extreme examples of a solid rack. the Adona is mostly also a solid rack. where you are either using shelf treatments for gear, or zero treatments. but the rack itself is not decoupling. not saying there is zero resonance control, but no real decoupling action. at best a bit of changes in material resonance, and maybe mass loading, at work that contributes to impedance changes to reduce feedback. and with your gear in another room, decoupling might not be preferred. you have mentioned that.What commercially available stands would you suggest?
Wow what a statement ! Ron researches, listens, asks advice, contemplate, shops around, slowly collects a system of the best he can find over some years now ! You might not agree with his choices, maybe because he does value esthetics highly ! I would say he almost overthinks sometime !Ron doesn't think. He just acts. That seems clear after 7~ years....
I hereby retract my defense of you ! And will go back to being a pain in your ass !Jeremy was being sarcastic.