Buying a new TT today


So I’m pretty hellbent on buying a new TT today! Or should I be?!?!? 
I started off kind of sour on vinyl several years back when I ignorantly bought a cheap TT that had a built in phono stage.... Talk about a disappointment! And a buzz kill for vinyl!
Anyway a year or so later I bought a Project Carbon Debut and it blew my mind!!!!  The step up in most aspects of the TT, carbon fiber tone arm/heavier plinth/much heavier platter/motor and remote position/better cartridge in a Ortofon m2red, along with the fact the it was now running through my Integrated’s Phono Stage was just such a leap in sound that I never expected, that now I’m looking for yet another leap like that again lol
Anyway, with pocket flush with cash and headed to two hi-fi shops I pause....
In my new price range, $2,000 or so, should I be looking for a new TT? Or a new cartridge for the TT I have ?
thoughts.
264win

Showing 1 response by snilf

So many reasonable opinions and suggestions here. But I'm going to be a contrarian. I owned a ProJect Debut Carbon DC for a few months, and...sorry, despite advice from well-informed friends, despite all the rave reviews, I HATED it. First of all, it made a mechanical hum that was infuriating, especially once I found out why. The internet will tell you, because many people have had this problem. The motor is isolated from the plinth and the platter by a rubber assembly that lets it "float"--except that the tension from the drive belt bends the capstan, in its floating mount, toward the platter, which apparently throws the speed off. So, to compensate for this, ProJect anchored the motor to the plinth with three screws and rubber washers. Of course, that "solution" simply negates the vibration isolation of the original design! I tried loosening the screws, removing them entirely, using different washers...I only got different hum frequencies and intensities.
The table also has a cue that never drops the stylus where you think it will. And the stand for the tone arm is just stupidly designed: too high, so that you have to learn to lift the arm high to miss bumping into it. And it's ugly to boot. So I sold it. Everybody wants them, for some reason, so they're not hard to re-sell.
I replaced it with a 15 year old Denon, and installed the Ortofon 2M Blue in it.
I've owned tables by Thorens, Lenco, AR, Gerrard, and Linn; the Denon is sweeter than any of them. I say "sweet" because it's more than just the sound. In fact, the Denon does sound great with the 2M Blue: very low noise floor, no hums at all, no audible variations, slow or fast, in pitch, etc., and the Ortofon cartridge tracks infallibly in the rather weird Denon arm, even on badly warped or damaged records. Vibration isolation is also great; I've had dance parties with no problems. But, besides the fine sound, this machine also performs beautifully. By "performs," I mean all the automatic things it does with balletic precision. I've always preferred manual tables, until now. Part of the pleasure I take in a piece of audio equipment is superlative engineering, and this table is so efficiently functional as to transcend mere engineering. The cue is precise every time, the buttons sure in feel, start and stop routines are carried out with real grace. And, in my opinion, it's a lovely object, too.
I mentioned the weird tone arm. Tracking and anti-skate are controlled by a chip; with the turntable turned off, the arm levitates at 0 grams. This is disconcerting, and if the chip ever fails, probably the whole thing is junk. But it's already more than 15 years old, and it functions flawlessly still. 
And the cost: bought used and then fitted with a new Ortofon 2M Blue, under $500!