Reason for buying old/classic turntables


Could you please clarify why many people buy old/classic turntable from the 1960's or 1970's? Are those turntables better than the contemporary ones? Is it just emotion and nostalgia? I'm also asking because these classic turntables are often quite expensive (like vintage automobiles and wine). Recently I saw an advertisement for the Technics SP-10 Mk II for $3,000 and a Micro Seiki SX-111 for $6,000. You can also buy a modern turntable like an Avid, a Clearaudio or Raven for that kind of money. Or are these classic turntables still superior to the modern ones?

Chris
dazzdax
Jloveys, I can only hope that my idler project, which awaits in the everlasting projecthood limbo, will perform as well as your 124 once completed. I now have a second project also awaiting, and a stock Diatone LT-1 to play with over the holidays. I have reasonably high hopes for the Diatone, but it too eventually may have to be re-plinthed.
If there is NO sonic difference between vintage and contemporary turntables, then we don't need the VPI's, TW Acoustics, Avids, Brinkmann's, Teres, Basis, Galibiers, etc. This is a sad conclusion for those manufacturers.

Chris
>>There is no reason a TT from forty years ago shouldn't sound as good as a table built today.<<

Wrong.

Computers and sophisticated manufacturing techniques enable components to be built to far tighter tolerances.

Not to mention that some of the new materials such as acrylic, rare woods, and titanium that weren't used years ago.

Your assertion "of draging a needle through a groove is essentially the same as it was when Edison did it" is far too simplistic.

Contemporary tables, tonearms, and cartridges are superior with the exception of a very small handful of examples.
Hello,

I would like to clarify a bit, I really think you need ultra high end flagship tables: SME 30, Raven AC-3 etc., to surpass by a meaningful margin, the great vintage stuff. Mid level current product is NOT going to do it IMO. Hence the vintage has a VERY strong value position and is great in absolute terms as well.
Audiofeil, Wrong! My father is a machinist. I have seen him create some of the most incredibly precise parts, with tolerances in the ininth degree from old presses, and lathes using extremely old hand match machine calipers. You don't think that Thorens, Dual, Garrard etc, knew how to build a bearing or a race? Or that one built then, wouldn't be as good as one built now? HA, ha, ha, ha, ha ha ha ha ... can't stop laughing... :) By the way, I wear a 1874 Eligin B.W. Raymond pocket watch that has more precision in it than any turntable need every have, and it is well over one hundred years old. (It was my great, great grandfathers) No computers or sophisticated manufacturing techniques were used to build it extremely tiny incredibly precise parts. Oh, and keeps magnificent time.