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Our youngest decided he wanted to dip his toes into collecting vinyl. We had been looking for a nice vintage turntable on Marketplace. Nothing decent and affordable popped up here in town, so I bought him a Fluance RT82 for his birthday. It showed up today - his birthday was yesterday. Tonight we were playing around with my little collection of used cartridges. Most came from pretty average garage sale/Goodwill tables. It was interesting to hear the differences and reminded me of hearing everyone's speakers at Iowa. All sounded good, just different flavors of good.
Comments
First impressions of the Fluance? Pricing seems almost too good to be true.
I wish I could answer that. We were using my old Technics SL-1700. He didn't open the box while he was here, so I haven't even laid eyes on it yet. I was waffling between the Fluance and a U-Turn Orbit. I'm sure they both have pretty similar build quality and both get decent reviews for budget tables. I went with Fluance mainly for the removable headshell and auto stop. I also sent him home with a vintage Philips receiver since the RT82 doesn't have an onboard phono preamp.
I don't have the RT82, but I do have the RT85. I think it is a great turntable. Biggest difference, is I have the Ortofon 2M Blue Stylus, and the acrylic platter. Rest of the turntable is the same. I have had it for 3 years and really like it. I think I would have to spend well over $1000 to get a noticeable upgrade.
That's great to hear! Knowing my son, he may upgrade the platter down the road if he really likes the whole vinyl vibe. I'll probably give him a second cartridge to play with too. I have a few Audio Technicas that are decent. I will say one of my favorites in my limited collection is an old Ortofon FF15E Mkii. I might even prefer that to the V15iii, but I need to do more listening to each of them.
I have a U-Turn Orbit and the AT LP3BK I bought for my daughter is a way better value. It also served to remind me how good inexpensive AT carts are.
I definitely like the belt type on the Fluance far more than the Orbit. The Orbit belt is basically a 14" buna-n O ring. It deforms over time, so I have to let the thing spin for a good 5 minutes before the kink works itself out. Here's a vid of the issue, where the table had only been sitting for a day. Let it sit unused for a week or more, and the kink is way more pronounced:
NGL...it's purdy, though:
I hadn't heard anything about belt issues with the Orbits. I waffled back & forth quite a bit between those vs. the Fluance models. I like the look of the Orbits a little better too and they are made in the US! But since this was a gift for an easily distracted 24yr old, the auto stop on the Fluance seemed like a desirable feature.
I decided to dig the old AR turntable out and see if it still works. The motor was noisy, so I took it apart and cleaned the bearing. Now it’s nice and quiet. It needs some serious cosmetic work and that might be the next project.
I had put together the unipivot tonearm ages ago, mostly just to see if I could. It’s mostly made from surplus aluminum bits and a carbon fiber arrow shaft. Playing Kansas now and it actually sounds really good!
I watched a documentary on Kansas the other day. Pretty cool story on how those guys started out and such.
I watched that same one on YouTube! I was shocked to hear Kerry Livgren's speaking voice. Not at all what I imagines. Leftoverature was the first album (actually an 8-track tape) I bought when I was just a kid.
Is it me or is that cartridge aligned way off the tangent line?
It's not just you! That was just a quick trial run to see if that cartridge was still among the living. I did align it with my trusty gauge after I took that picture. Azimuth was off too. You can see that in the first photo. That arm is a little too finicky, so I'm working on cleaning up the stock arm tonight.