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best turntable ~$1000? $1500?


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oh I definitely agree.  I actually bought a demo version of that scale for $65 because I really balked at spending $80 for it.

 

I should have asked here about the cheaper scales on Amazon first.  I ended up going with the more expensive model because I didn't want to have to second guess the accuracy.

 

Funny you should mention anti-static guns...I have been looking at these two VPI 16.5 bundles.  The more expensive bundle comes with an anti-static gun.  are those things worthwhile for the price? 

 

http://www.musicdirect.com/p-5841-vpi-165-deluxe-bundle.aspx

 

http://www.musicdirect.com/p-5840-vpi-165-basic-bundle.aspx

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Did you fellows find that setting the tracking force weight as directed in the instructions worked out correctly? 

 

I have a digital gauge on order, just wondering if either of you were able to verify the weight after setup.

 

Mine came out to 2.3 using their method. To be fair I had scale so I wasn't to concerned with the accuracy of my 4.2 turns of the weight. Just used it to get close to fine tune with the scale.

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oh I definitely agree. I actually bought a demo version of that scale for $65 because I really balked at spending $80 for it.

I should have asked here about the cheaper scales on Amazon first. I ended up going with the more expensive model because I didn't want to have to second guess the accuracy.

Funny you should mention anti-static guns...I have been looking at these two VPI 16.5 bundles. The more expensive bundle comes with an anti-static gun. are those things worthwhile for the price?

http://www.musicdirect.com/p-5841-vpi-165-deluxe-bundle.aspx

http://www.musicdirect.com/p-5840-vpi-165-basic-bundle.aspx

With a wet RCM, anti-static sleeves, and no felt mat on your plater, you should have little to no use for an anti-static gun. They are so cheaply made and are so expensive.

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This officialish looking review (PDF) refers to it as "a variant of the Satisfy tonearm with an aluminum arm tube".

 

It seems like most of the Satisfy arms you see for sale have a carbon fiber tube, but I poked around and found reference to variations with aluminum and ebony wood.

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my digital scale should show up today.  I put it on my shure scale yesterday and it came up light, but did not really monkey with it to get an accurate weight.

 

regarding the value prop question...maybe the Marantz order gave them enough economies of scale to make it work?  It is a bit odd that all the info out there seems to suggest that if you were after that particular arm/cart, that you would save a bundle just picking up the Marantz table and chucking all the other parts.  

 

Not that the retail prices have anything to do with how much it costs Clearaudio to actually manufacture this stuff.

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It looks just like the Satisfy. Comes with either black or silver arm (mine's black, but it's metal, no wood). But it can't be a Satisfy. Must be a proprietary one. I'd be interested to know the differences. The price points just don't add up. $900 cart, $1600 arm, and then everything else?

 

 

It's definitely the Satisfy arm, but the standard version. The one selling today for $1600 is the carbon one.

 

You also have to take into consideration that back in 2008 prices on everything were different, and this Marantz package still retails for the same it did back when it came out.

 

I only have a EU price list, but back then the standard Satisfy arm retailed for 625 eur (carbon was 870) and the Virtuoso Wood was 550 eur. By 2008 conversion rate that was roughly $1650, so you pretty much got a free table for buying the tonearm/cart package.

 

Though it's possible that the US price list from that time would be completely different. 

 

Edti: just found some prices from 2007, apparently the Satisfy retailed for $1000 and the Virtuoso for $750.

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http://clearaudio.de/en/_archive/tonearms-satisfy.php

 

If you wait on the page the picture switched between the different versions. This is the aluminum, just black instead of silver. I have set up clear audio tables with the Satisfy arm. This is the same. Only difference is the headshell on the marantz have the posts on it so it bolts to the arm in the proper location for the virtuoso. No need to align the cartridge. The others dont have that and you have to align yourself.

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