turntable recommendations for a vinyl newbie...


Hello,
As some of you might know, I have invested megabucks into digital audio - now being finally satisfied with my custom Audio Note DAC + PWT transport... So I am curious as to how vinyl may compare... I know, I know, but I want to hear for myself in my own system.

So, I am interested in a turntable set up that will be fairly competitive against my Audio Note digital front end, yet will not be expensive (incase I bail) - in other words used.

I have a Micro Seiki DD-40 in mind - would this work? or is there something else that would sound better for around the sub $1000 mark used???

remember, at this point, I know little about TT. and I plan on connecting to my Atma-Sphere pre...

thank you
grateful
I dont have an equipment recommendation, but I agree with Tbg et al. I tried a budget analog setup (spending about your budget, but new) and have to say it was very disappointing for the most part.

My second attempt cost quite a bit more, but it is a MUCH different, dramatically better experience. I am coming to prefer it to digital more and more (as i get better at setting the table up, acquire more LPs, dropped more $ on a cleaning machine, etc), but there is still a lot of room for improvement in my analog gear.

Bottom line is - I think you gotta pony up to get the most from analog, especially if you want it to improve over an already good digital setup.

Assuming your Atmasphere pre has a phono stage (if it does not, all bets are off), I would suggest getting a "vanilla" Technics SL1200 (or one of the variations of that table) for around $400, maybe even less if you buy it used. Then get yourself a lightly used Shelter 501, and you will have less than $1000 invested, which you should be able to recoup if you "bail out." In my opinion, while this may not equal, much less surpass, your digital rig, that table and cartridge combo will tell you pretty quickly if you want to pursue vinyl or not. If you do, that's a table and cartridge that is way more than tolerable until you can afford to upgrade down the line.

Don't worry too much about the rising cost of vinyl. Part of the fun of vinyl is finding good used records for a dollar or two on eBay or in your local record shop. You'll hit some duds from time to time, but many of them are perfectly playable, especially if cleaned properly. Of course, you will need a good cleaning machine before too long. The VPIs do a pretty good job for $300-400 used.

All of this, IMO, of course. Vinyl takes some time and effort, but it is worth it to me. By the way, I lived with the same combination I just suggested to you for quite some time before I upgraded to the Well Tempered Amadeus. I thought it was a ridiculously good value.
Get something GOOD used that you can resale if you find you do not like it. I'd suggest a fully loaded VPI Scoutmaster or Super Scoutmaster (or something even gooder!)as they go for about 1/2 of their new price on the used market. Resale it for the same or there-about if you do not enjoy it. You have some great gear to try it alongside. I'd also recommend buying used LP's to start. IMO most sound quieter than the audiophile pressings that cost 15X more. I realize my suggestion is not in your $1000 price range, but from the other replies here I'm sure you realize that a grand ain't gonna' cut it in your rig. HTH!
Turntable is a bad idea. You gotta start searching the used vinyl bins at Goodwill. Getting all that BLACK MOLD all over you, your clothes and on the ones you take home, into your toilet (forever, and ever), and lungs. I never HAD black mold until I bought a collection of used classical LPs. Then I had black mold. I still have it. Once you get it, it's yours for life.
Then you gotta worry about the cartridge, and the needle.
Oops snagged that sucker, $500. down the drain in a flash.
Have to reinforce the house foundation, when you walk across the floor the record skips.. $30,000. for the work.
Then you got storage for those LPs. soon they will take over ANYPLACE you put them. You will have to buy new shelves.. more new shelves... shelves that can actually carry the 20,000 pounds of LPs.. Your evicted from your apartment because your LPs are causing the ceiling below to buckle (true story, but not mine)
Then you gotta complain about the ticks, pops, and scratchiness, and buy a $1,000 cleaning machine that will make you deaf in a week, to clean the damn vinyl.
You will become furtive, and bang into the other person browsing YOUR favorite place to buy records. You will not apologize.. after all, they are YOUR secret stash place to buy rocords.
Run while you can... You are a CeeDee person.. you will never be happy with a TT. It is a bad dream.
The upside is all those folks buying TTs and stuff FOR THE FIRST TIME, when they sour on it, are gonna sell all that stuff for cheap and use old timer LP crazies wil LAUGH.