Garrard 301 - Project


I have been contemplating for a while which turntable to pursue given so many choices. Every time I look around, I just can’t help drooling over a fully restored Garrard 301 or 401. Aside from being an idler-drive, I keep reading and hearing about their unique ability to reproduce music with its sense of drive and impact thus making them very desirable to own. And with available meticulous restoration services and gorgeous plinth options, what’s not to like, right!

Would you please share your experience, good and pitfalls (if any) with a restored Garrard 301 to avoid before I go down this path.

And what about the IEC inlet and power cord, would they be of any significance. My two choices would be Furutech FI-09 NCF or FI-06 (G) inlets.

I have already purchased a Reed 3P Cocobolo 10.5” with Finewire C37+Cryo tonearm/interconnect phono cable with KLEI RCA plugs option.

Still exploring Cart Options, so please feel free to share your choice of cart with Garrard 301 or 401.

And lastly, I would like to extend my gratitude to @fsonicsmith, @noromance ​​​​@mdalton for the inspiration.

lalitk

@audphile1 

Thank you! 

I would like to indulge a bit more, especially since you’re returning to playing records again. There’s something almost sacred about lowering the needle these days, and much of that renewed joy comes from installing my 301 into the Woodsong Audio plinth.

This plinth hasn’t just improved the appearance of the Garrard 301 or my system… it has transformed the way I experience vinyl. The music took on a calm, effortless presence that immediately draws me deeper into the performance. Notes bloom with ease, bass tightens with intent, and there’s a solidity to imaging that I simply never had before with the DAS plinth.

But beyond the sonics, it’s the feeling that’s different. There’s a sense of craftsmanship, warmth, and permanence that makes every record feel like an occasion. Touching the gorgeous Hawaiian Koa wood, watching the grain catch the light, feeling the stability of the platform, it all adds a grounded intimacy to each listening session.

The Woodsong plinth didn’t just upgrade my turntable, It has elevated the ritual.

When was the last time a piece of gear genuinely moved you the way this upgrade just did for me?

Well the good news is that with vinyl, especially if you play 45 rpm audiophile pressings, you get to experience this ritual of lowering a needle onto a record very frequently. Lol

All jokes aside, I think for those who appreciate being involved in a process as opposed to just plopping down into a chair and pressing on a tablet screen, turntables and Reel to Reel decks are a real treat. I totally understand the enhanced joy from the experience itself. I imagine it sounds at least as good as it looks. 

@lalitk Usually I am quite prolix in how I write on this forum.

In a 'nutshell' I totally get the indelible impression that has been made, hence my encouraging the investigation of the mechanical interfaces for the Analogue Source Trilogy. 

As the Albums played increases, there are to be many more edge of the seat moments and a revisit to a track that really stood out.

In relation to music, I like to discover how noticeable is the 'Envelope', which for myself as a description is as follows:  

A term most often used to describe the shape/forming of a note created by an electronic/acoustic instrument.

The envelope of a note when played various instruments will be quite different in how they become structured. The shape/form can be split into three sections.

Attack – how long a note takes to rise from start to maximum volume.

Sustain – how long a note stays at maximum volume.

Decay – how long a note takes to die away.

Now a substantial improvement is in place, resulting in removal of a large proportion of the poor mechanical interfaces being resolved within the assembly. when using the 301's new design, how noticeable is 'Envelope' able to manifest within the End Sound. 

@pindac 

Your explanation of the envelope and how it reveals itself through improved mechanical interfaces truly resonates with what I’m hearing from my Garrard 301 in the Woodsong plinth.

With the new plinth coupled with Artisan Fidelity’s hybrid platter + bearing, the envelope is not just noticeable… it’s unmistakably clearer and more truthful. Notes have a more natural rise; transients feel quicker yet unforced, like the table is no longer holding anything back. What stands out most is how the sustain has gained stability, tones just hang in space with more confidence, without that subtle blur or soft wobble that can creep in when mechanical grounding isn’t fully sorted.

And the decay… that’s where I’m hearing the biggest step forward. What I didn’t hear before is the tail end of notes fading with a kind of calm precision that makes you lean in. Piano and upright bass especially reveal that “last bit of truth” in how a note naturally dissolves into my acoustically treated room.

I’m finding myself doing exactly what you describe, going back to my most played tracks just to experience that envelope again, because it feels more complete and more “alive” now.

Let’s just say, the mechanical foundation is no longer a bottleneck; it’s an enabler. 

Cheers! 

@lalitk stated " like the table is no longer holding anything back "

It is difficult for Analogue Source users to grasp when not having had a experience, but when a mechanical interface has become optimised, especially to the point where it is undoubtable that a valuable design is in place. It becomes very easy to discern how constraining and lacking in articulation a non-optimised interface is able to influence on the structure of sound being created within an End Sound.

Whilst revisiting your thread, and getting the impression you were dedicated to doing the foot work to making discoveries. Much of my instincts were aligned with receiving reports of your getting to this place where perceiving a full articulation of produced sound has become so impressive to you. 

From my end, I know where you have arrived and with confidence can assure you that many interesting experiences are still to follow, along with ponderings on how to fully exploit what is available.