T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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149.1 | My tuppence worth. | DUSH04::JEFFERY | Ring Carlsberg Customer Complaints Dept. | Mon Feb 19 1990 21:32 | 16 |
| Hmm tricky one that.
I've got a similar problem, but as I have no money, my upgrade fever is
temporarily cured!!
I tried my REGA into a Linn Amp/ Linn Isobarik system, and whilst it sounded
a lot better than my system. It exposed the flaws in the record deck pretty
ruthlessly.
I reckon your Ritz Diamonds will perform well, even with a good amp. So I'd
be tempted to go for the amp first. Then, when you are better settled, go
for the Deck, and then finally the speakers.
Anyone want to shoot me down?
Mark.
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149.2 | You get what you pay for :-) | VANDAL::BARRON | Snoopy Vs Red_Barron | Tue Feb 20 1990 10:26 | 17 |
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1) Do nothing until you are settled!
2) In the meantime save for a new Sondek (All current mods, no wear, etc.)
3) When ready sell current turntable/arm ( to add to funds) privately.
4) After Linn purchase change amp next and then speakers.
5) most all all before you buy... try.
Not just at the shop but at home as well. Get the dealer to lend you
equipment for a week. Avoid the low interest finance, low price specials,
and pay full price. Good dealers will usually supply GOOD quality speaker
cable but nothing else material. If you don't cut the dealer margins you'll
get the service and once you find a good dealer don't change.
Go for the pre-sales and post sales support.
Happy listening.
Dave
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149.3 | wait'n'see.... | BAHTAT::SALLITT | Dave @RKG, 831-3117 | Tue Feb 20 1990 14:31 | 17 |
| I concur with .2; your Rotel amp is perfectly adequate in that it will
reveal the benefits of a Sondek, although perhaps not the "mega" arms
and cartridges normally associated with the LP12 - these can come
later. Take your Rotel to a dealer who can prove this for you. Don't
ignore other turntables like the PT2, or Roksan Xerxes, although you
may have trouble finding a dealer who can dem all 3. Also the LP12 is
by far and away the most cost-effective source yet, but then I'm a
hardened Linnie!
You may get improvements by changing electronics first, but ultimately
I believe you will be unhappy - I know, I've been there and it's
expensive - as the improvements will not be the ones that give you more
access to your records.
Above all, listen before you part with any cash....
Dave
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149.4 | Any more opinions ? | SUBURB::COLEJ | Villa For the League and Cup | Wed Feb 21 1990 11:22 | 18 |
| Hello,
Thanks for the advice, nice to hear some different views.
My problem is that I won't be settled for a while (a year and a
half) and that the Hi-Fi will be moved about 3-5 times in this time,
which was why I was lothe to spend the money on a Deck. Apparently
Linn's don't travel well....
Another problem was that, due to my financial resources, I have
cash to spend now, that I won't have again as I am working now,
but go back to being a student in 4.5 months time....My rationale
was that if I got the Amplification sorted, then I need never worry
about it again (well, for years anyway)
Juju
xxxx
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149.5 | Aw, go for a Linn..... | BAHTAT::SALLITT | Dave @RKG, 831-3117 | Mon Feb 26 1990 13:03 | 14 |
| re last:"Linn's don't travel well...."
Latest model Linns travel fine, so long as you're careful and use the
original packing. Mine's travelled the 80 miles return to/from York for
upgrades, checkouts, etc. several times, just "naked" on car back seat.
I always remove the main platter, lock the suspension with a couple of
bits of polystyrene under the inner platter, and lock the arm with a
tiewrap, and it's been just fine. I do my own maintenance now, though.
It all depends how far you'd be moving, and how, as well as how often.
If you buy the electronics you suggest now, you could be disappointed.
Dave
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149.6 | Shot down by the majority! | TASTY::JEFFERY | What's the slipperiest thing you can think of? | Mon Feb 26 1990 14:35 | 10 |
| OK, the concensus seems to be the record player first. Having seen a friend of mine not
content with his Planar III through a more expensive Amp, I think there may be some
substance in Dave Sallitt's remarks.
Don't worry too much about travel, as Dave says, if you take the right precautios, then
you'll be OK.
Let us know what you decide to do!
Mark.
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149.7 | | SUBURB::COLEJ | Set Head/full=jelly(s2020).yuk | Mon Feb 26 1990 14:46 | 20 |
| Firstly, It's nice to see some disagreements...Proves that there
is no right or wrong as such, just better and worse ways of going
about things. I find Dave Sallitts remarks very fair, especially
as I was considering a quality pre/power amp (see note 12.16). You
will never make a salesman Dave....
It does seem though from advice, that the deck is probably the way
to go though, which brings a whole new set of issues, touched upon
by some of the replys. Should I go for new or second hand. The
point is that I can get a relatively newish Sondek with a quality
arm like the ittok for about �600 pounds round about, or a new axis
or similar for about �400 . Alternatively, I could save a little
longer and get somthing covered by guarantee, such as a Sondek and
Akito.
Or are there any other options that you feel I ought be considering?
Juju
xxxx
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149.8 | You pays your money..... | BAHTAT::SALLITT | Dave @RKG, 831-3117 | Mon Feb 26 1990 16:23 | 17 |
| Ah well, a real salesman understands needs ;-)
If you can find a Linn+Ittok with a history you know, buy used. If in
doubt, go for a new LP12 with Aikito....after eliminating the other
options like PT, Roksan, etc. Although the Linn may (or may not) travel
better than either of these, if you have problems the Linn would far
more easy to put right than the other two, as support is better and
more widespread.
The Aikito is a gem, *very* close to the LVII Ittok - the LVIII is
better again, but costs. In my view, the Aikito outperforms the Naim
ARO at 1/3 the price. An LP12+Aikito may be the last you ever need
to buy.
Have fun.
Dave
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149.9 | | SUBURB::COLEJ | Set Head/full=jelly(s2020).yuk | Mon Feb 26 1990 17:27 | 17 |
| At danger of going down a rathole Dave, I would be interested to
hear a little more of your opinions on arm choices, ect such as
how does the akito compare to an rb300. I know someone who has one
fitted to a sondek ( a little strange !) but after having had his
suspension reset, says it sounds fine to him. Also the differences
between the various ittoks and/or basik/akito's.
I have an old Basik w/detachable headshell. Is this far worse than
an akito ? One friend says yes, one says no. Another Linn dealer
I know, feels the akito is a waste of time and is not worth the
extra over the cost of remaining stock basik's that he holds.
Any opinions ?
Juju
xxxx
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149.10 | For what it's worth.... | BAHTAT::SALLITT | Dave @RKG, 831-3117 | Tue Feb 27 1990 13:33 | 61 |
| There's about as many right answers to this as there are questions. The
following represents my opinions based around what I've auditioned
and/or owned.
Firstly the old Basik; if you mean the "bent" LVIX, this was an
OEM design bought in by Linn as something passable to put on the LP12
until replaced by the LVX, the "straight" all-black arm. The LVX+ was
the fixed-headshell version of the LVX. All of these arms became
standards by which other budget models were judged, simply because they
were relatively low-cost, were simple to install and set up, and they
worked. They were all bought-in designs, and their performance was
limited by the quality that Linn could remotely extract from the
Japanese maker. Even so they were a hard act to follow. I owned an old
Ariston RD80 with the old LVIX Basik; I replaced the Basik with a
Syrinx LE1. Although more detailed and smooth at only slightly higher
cost, the Syrinx didn't play tunes properly, (I started listening
properly about this time), it was unreliable and an animal to set up; I
put the old LVIX back on, and it stayed until I swapped the RD80 for my
LP12. That's an example of how the early budget Linn arms won their
reputations.
I've heard the Aikito with a K5, compared to the Ittok with K18, Ekos
with a Troika and a Naim ARO with a Troika, all in the same dem. Having
owned an Ittok with a K9 and an Asaka, I was fairly familiar with it's
characteristics. Obviously the Ekos/Troika combination was good. The
Aikito's sound was so close to Ittok to make it almost redundant -
maybe that's why Linn brought out the LVIII Ittok a couple of months
ago. I had a LVX+ with K9 on my Linn in the early days, and I would say
the Aikito was vastly superior in every respect; indeed as I've said
elsewhere, it also outperformed the ARO, even when the ARO had a Troika
on the end. The ARO was very clear, smooth and detailed, but it just
didn't play tunes so good; when the ARO was playing, I wanted to try
different tracks to see if it overcame certain "technical" things, but
when the Aikito was on, I just wanted to sit back and enjoy a whole
side without moving - once you experience this in a dem you never
forget it, which why I always say listen first.
As to the superiority of the Aikito to an LVX, yes the the Aikito will
be better (that's NOT the same as saying the LVX is worse, it's just
less capable and flexible with respect to cartridges you can use). If
you are referring to your Revolver then the LVX is perfectly OK; the
Aikito's extra performance would be wasted. This may be where the
dealer you mentioned is coming from, but be careful; if he's
overstocked on Basiks he may have other fish to fry than giving you the
best sound!
Finally, the RB300. I've never heard it but it's earned a good
reputation. As to fitting it to a Linn Sondek, the dealer I use sells
both Linn and Rega products; ultimately they prefer not to sell the
LP12 with an RB300 as in their experience it doesn't perform as well
as, say, an LP12 with an Aikito or a Roksan with an RB300. My
experiences in their dem room has led me by and large to respect their
judgement. Also it's an opinion I've heard elsewhere.
But this all just my opinion, albeit based on experience; it's just
second-hand news. If you're in the market for serious hifi you really
must get out and find a dealer who will help you to educate yourself in
identifying your needs. It can be easy with a good dealer, and a lot of
fun!
Dave
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