Yes, not an idler wheel in sight ! But there’s no misleading blurb in the website:
motion is supplied by a BLDC motor, epicyclically driving the aluminum platter through an urethane drive wheel
SPECIFICATIONS
- Epicyclic drive
What I set out to do was to imagine what an idler could be like today, freed from the limitations of 60 years ago.
And today you don’t really need an idler. Now you can get a motor to run at 150rpm, smoothly, silently, cheaply enough and you can switch speeds electronically.
In the 60’s you couldn’t have that (at least in a consumer product), hence the need for an idler wheel and the added mechanical complexity.