Considering analog...but nervous


Well, I've been here before. Once again, I'm thinking of venturing into the Analog world, but before doing so, I wanted to pose a few questions to fellow agoners to make sure my head (ears?) are in the right place.

Some Background: My current setup consists of a Modwright Transporter, Musical Fidelity KW 500 (hybrid tube pre/SS Amp), and Focal/JM 1027be speakers. My entire current collection is digital and I have NEVER owned Vinyl before NOR have I ever heard a high-end Analog setup.

My Tastes/musical likes: I am all about soundstage and imaging. Vocal accuracy is hugely important and instrument placing (hence, imaging) are part of what I look for when listening. Genre wise, mostly rock, folk, acoustic and blues. Some jazz as well. I generally try to stick to labels that produce good-sounding material...not over-compressed garbage.

On with the questions:

1. One of the biggest things that has kept me from trying Vinyl thus far is the concern of excessive hiss and crackle/pop that vinyl is known for. Is it safe to assume that purchasing new Vinyl and played on a higher quality setup will reduce (eliminate?) the pops and crackle sounds? I have no problem purchasing exclusively new vinyl, knowing full well that the process of shopping used is what draws so many to this market...

2. If I purchase new vinyl, only play it on a decent player, and store it properly, will I still have to clean it? How expensive is a cleaning machine? Are there (reasonable), less expensive alternatives to a cleaning machine?

3. Based on my integrated (tube-pre,SS amp) and speakers, are these a good match for Vinyl? Does anyone know if the KW 500 Phono input is adequate for a good turntable? My digital system has a tendency to be on the bright side for a lot of material, but not everything. Strangly, even at 31 years old, I can still hear up to around 19Khz so I'm a bit picky about the highs...

4. How complicated is the setup of the TT? Being that I've never worked wtih it before, I'm somewhat intimidated by the "setup" requirements of the equipment. What are the core requirements/knowledge to properly setup a TT.

5. And finally, the most subjective question of all. If I had a budget of about $1,000-$1,500 for a TT, Tonearm and Cartridge, what would be a good starting place? I'd obviously be looking for used here from Agon.

I know this was a long post so thanks for hanging in and reading it all :-). Any feedback would be greatly appreciated.

-gh0st
fatgh0st
Remember you auditioned vinyl on totally different systems, so whatever you heard different or liked or not, there was more to it than just vinyl playing in place of CD.
Your description of the second audition sounds like the symptoms typical of an overdamped room. Having a dozen other loudspeakers in the room, especially a small one, would act like tonesuckers, absorbing the low level detail that made the first presentation so appealing. Given that Pro-Ject makes the Music Hall turntables, and that they share same/similar tonearms, the differences you heard *may* be room-related. Could also be everything else--cables, warmup time, component selection, even the cartridge setups themselves.
First new/used does not matter. There is no hiss/pop/crackle in vinyl done right! Second, if your scared or nerves look elsewhere. Third, the mussic you listen too does not matter it is ALL available in vinyl. Forth and finally but not least, vinyl is more then a hobby, vinyl is a commitment. It is like a marrage, you never stop paying for it. It is a way of life a type of obsession. It is not like digital, play and forget. You have to be involved. You do not listen to one or 2 songs on an album an move on. You listen to one sides at a time. You listen. Not to instrument placement or volcal accuracy or even seperation, you listen to music. Rock, pop, jazz, classical, country, rega, indie, it is all here and it does not matter which. Just that you love music and you are looking/willing to listen!
So, thanks to all the wonderful responses I received through this post, many hours of research, and a few hours in various different listening rooms, I have decided to move forward.

After a major budget inflation (didn't someone predict this???), I have decided to purchase new and move forward with a VPI Classic TT and Dynavector 20XH cartridge (although the cart is not 100% locked in).

However, now I find myself wondering if I shouldn't be focusing on the phono input on my Musical Fidelity KW-500 and whether or not I shouldn't replace that at the same time.

I'm starting another post specifically for this discussion.

Thanks again to everyone who contributed. You've made the process that much easier.

-gh0st
Les_creative_edge already summed it up on 1/24. I often reason that if I had it all to do over, I might settle on a good all-tube system and CDs, and just listen to the music. However, the message is in the medium: The LP forces me to focus on a side at a time, as the artist and producer intended, and prevents me from skipping through what I don't think I want to hear, or from walking away to "multitask," because I need to be there at lead-out time. I play CDs; I listen to LPs.