Help me choose TT of these three candidates.


I have narrowed the list down to these 3.
1. La Luce with SpJ tone arm and Lyra Helikin or Titan Cartridge
2. Transrotor Orfeo with Tripalnar tone arm and Sheltor 901
3. Clearaudio Max Solution with Master TQ1 arm and Strvidari cartridge

I have auditioned all of the above three in addition to VPI TNT (too warm), SME 18/2(?)(too slow for my taste),Transrotor Leonardo(did not so much for me), Clearaudio Master solution (liked the sound but chose to go one step up). Of the three 1 and 2 falls in to the category of sound that I prefer: Neutral, dynamic and lush and excellent freq extension at both low and high end. Besides both of them looks gorgeous! There are other TTs that I might be interested in but it is difficult to find dealer that has the set up. Only other alternative is read as many reviews and get opinion of Audiogone members. Since each combo costs $10-$15 K, I would really like you opinion and or your experience on these three choices and any other recommendations you might have.

Thanks.
nilthepill

Showing 3 responses by dougdeacon

I haven't heard any of those tables, unfortunately, but I do own a TriPlanar VII and still have a Shelter 901 lying around somewhere. If you end up with a TriPlanar I'd try to get a better cartridge. The 901 won't give you anywhere near the performance this arm is capable of. I've had the three top ZYX's in my system and they all beat my 901, two of them for not alot more money. A Titan should easily better a 901, and other cartridges probably would too.
If great looks, a compact footprint and a high-mass, non-suspended design are the important criteria, you might also consider a Teres. Those are the three reasons we bought ours, although beauty is always a matter of taste of course.

http://teresaudio.com/t-320.html
Nil,

Teres used to make all-acrylic tables. They were dropped from the line because the resonance-damping properties of dense hardwoods are so much better. Even with lead-shot loading, resonances in the acrylic plinths and platters muddied the sound. This was confirmed by dozens of listeners on multiple occasions where acrylic vs. wood plinths and/or platters were set up for A/B comparisons. Very few listeners chose the acrylic once they heard the lower noise floor and superior clarity of the wood.

If you like the high-tech style of metal and acrylic, I don't think Teres makes anything suitable. Galibier and Redpoint go more that way.