BTW, I am hoping that Mosin will introduce himself especially describing his product which will interest all vinylphiles here
BTW, I am hoping that Mosin will introduce himself especially describing his product which will interest all vinylphiles here
BTW, I am hoping that Mosin will introduce himself especially describing his product which will interest all vinylphiles here
Hello, jazdoc and duly noted.For those of you who haven't had the pleasure to meet Win he's one of the nicest guys in audio and his Saskia turntable is absolutely killer.
For those of you who haven't had the pleasure to meet Win he's one of the nicest guys in audio and his Saskia turntable is absolutely killer.
Buy 2
(1 for the replacement parts)
Steve,
I will be happy to do that. Let me write it, edit it, write it again, edit it again....
Wait...I've been doing that!
I want to start with my best foot forward.
Win
Saskia Turntables
Glad to see you around Mosin! We talked some months back around the Blue Angel Mantis...
I do recall Uncle Mikey "dissing" his copy of the Continuim in defense of his preferred price. Potential buyers do your due dilegence.
Hi
My experience with these extravagantly priced tables is scant. I heard the Rockport Sirius and at Walker TT... Have not heard the Continuum or tables of its ilk .. I am asking the question with all sincerity: Do they sound that great compared to more pedestrian TTs like a SME or A Wlaker or Kuzma ,... Say less than $20K TT? Do they really? Can a person walk in a room and say HA! That is the COntinuum paying the way any person wouild come to a room and be overwhelmed with the sound of the Aexandria X-2? Or the MG 20.7 or the Acapella or the genesis 1.1 or the ? Is it the case? I have heard the Rockport, an incredibly silent TT, at the same level with the Goldmund Reference with which I have a good experience.. A good friend of mine had the second from the Reference Studio I believe, Utterly silent and so was the Rockport... I didn't leave, feeling that I needed a Rockport.. I heard the X-2 and my feeling was .. Damn! I need to get my system to that level.. Upon auditioning the MG 20.1 I moved in a heartbeat from the 3.6 to the 20.1 .. it was a clear thing .. No doubt , no sweat .... I have heard in two occasions a modded Technics RS-1500 and the impression was that I have never heard any better analogue .. The experience is the same with other RTR , The Studer A 820 for example is shockingly good and if I have to go analogue I know where the standard is: R2R.. Clear-cut no straining necessary... I haven't had that experience with The Rockport and Walker the only over $50K TTs I have heard ... Am I alone or is the "performance" of these TTs more a mind-construct than an objective reality? The kind of thing that you would like to be great because after all it cost sooo much and all your audiophile friends are raving about but you find yourself deep inside unimpressed?
I certainly experienced better sound when moving up from SME 10 to 20 to 30 with the same arm and cartridge (SME IV-VI) and then again on the SME 30 moving to the 10 inch Da Vinci Grandezza arm.
Vinyl is a physical medium, turntables are vibration detectors. Larger, more expensive tables increase the weightiness of the presentation, the image size, the internal details and the dynamics, and give the kind of textured, colorful bass that seems exclusive to vinyl playback. They also seem to reduce the noise perception of playback and allow deeper recognition into the noise floor of many records.
I think I heard the same Rockport Sirius III that you did, Frantz, at Grellberg's BAAS get togethers. I have heard it a couple of times. Great sound, but not enough of an improvement to pay bigger bucks from the SME 30 in my estimate.
I think that the owners of Audio Federation in Colorado said it best, when you go above the 20K level in turntables, you are talking about a couple of tweaks worth of improvement. You can get a less expensive turntable to sound probably close to a more expensive turntable by improving the amplification chain in various ways or by using various and sundry bases, plinths etc., which to me is saying that you are really in the long run for a short slide territory when you buy the most expensive tables above a certain price point.
One must also ask, since even modest turntable sound good to me, what increases in musical appreciation and enjoyment ensue as you go up the price chain, a question that can only be answered by the individual.
I'm not surprised that the Caliburn sounded awful under show conditions. Most of the more expensive turntables and tonearms are akin to Forumula I cars in that you are always close to the edge performance wise. It requires meticulous attention to detail to get these high end analog systems optimized and oft times, the magic lies in the final miniscule adjustment. Certainly true of my Durand Telos arm which has take me a few months to get my arms around. I heard several high end cartridges behave the same way.
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