I’m coming into this area as a practical and philosophical result of:
- me wanting to own my music
- CDs are barely being made
2.1. If they are - they’re not being shipped to my corner of the world - Torrenting often failed me in terms of variety.
However - I am absolutely ignorant about equipment, maintainance, and know-hows of the audiophile world.


Vinyl isn’t a cheap hobby.
Many respectable (even high end) turntables have a straight tone arm.
It causes additional wear. Looks modern though.
What’s this about?
vibrations from the speakers can cause unpleasant noise and distortion or even cause the record to skip.
Most likely so that the vibrations from the speakers does not interfere with the records playback. As the needle should touch the LP as lightly a possible.
Oh okay. I grew up with vinyls. I never noticed anything of that sort, though I admit that the turntable wasn’t too close to the speakers. I’ve my clumsy 10-year-old ass did bump a few times into the player, causing it to skip. It was just part of life back then.
Speakers vibrate. You don’t want vibrations getting to the needle or you get feedback.
You also don’t want the player moving around as it can cause the needle to jump.
Ok, thanks. I thought it was something else.
What do you think about audio technica AT-LP70X model? It looks fine for audiophile beginners.
Yeah it’s fine. I started out with an LP60 and I had no complaints.
yeah that’s probably fine, i don’t have any experience with it myself though. AT is known to be decent and deserves credit for staying in vinyl business even when everyone else was exiting it.
I personally would check out the local 2nd-hand stores, pawn shops, and estate sales for a week or two 1st to see if there’s anything laying around though. I paid $75 for my old gemini from a vintage/antique shop 5 years ago and I think all it needed was a new cart and soldering of some new line-out leads. Anything Technics will be overpriced but i regularly come across gear from the 70’s and 80’s that probably work great. I suppose i should buy them up, fix them, and get them into people’s homes.