|
afaik, the Technics 1210 had quite a good reputation as an audiphile turntable, too. The LPs are not made "more durable", they wear and tear just the same, acetates even faster. As for stylus pressure, the DJ cartridges are usually set up with more weight to prevent needle skipping. In the "audiophile" setup you have no floor shaking and scratching going on so you can use less weight which reduces stress on the vinyl. But the needle needs to be made for using little weight (maybe 1g-1.5g).
The audiophile TT will have the most stable engine with no speed fluctuation at all (DJ TTs try to do the same, but that is very expensive). The audipohile TT will have a very solid platter, to prevent any shaking, and will have some "suspension" to keep the bass from the speakers from moving the record (same for DJ TTs, but again price is the problem).
You can spend 10.000$ on the tonearm alone, so there seems to be lot of room for improvement from a DJ TT to the audiophile one.
The "perfect" DJ TT would be taking the best audiophile TT and adding pitch-control, a high weight cartridge/stylus and making it stable in terms of abuse (Beer, smoke from Cigs and machines etc...)
but i'm no expert....
___________________

RetroActive 4
|