It is pine with a supposed rosewood stain. Can’t make out the corner joints. Could be dowels or biscuits. They should have been able to make the sides with solid pieces of pine as it is relatively cheap - not a bunch of short scraps. Pass!
Wouldn't it have been cheaper to use full pieces? Cutting, fitting, gluing, finishing,etc. all those pieces surely would take some time. Perhaps he was going for a butcher block look? Not my taste, but imo looks good. Still want to see how the TT is supported/suspended.
Yeah auction text are lacking. How does it fit with lid hinges and feet attainable for adjustment,? does the plinth have some protection below like a rubber dot to a buttom ? pictures and information needed
Maybe I’m misunderstanding, but I’m seeing some things recent things posted about an SL-1000RE-S - is this some sort of new model/upgrade over the existing SL-1000R?
Specs on their site look identical, and none of the descriptions seem to have changed. I also notice a lot of the articles posted are identical as well. Off the cuff it smells like a marketing re-launch. Did find a 1200GEG-S as well.
Correct. The standard global designation is SL-1200G/GR (1210 for black) with the trailing letters being the country/region for its intended sale and colour designation. The final S or K refers to silver or black. See these posts from late last year: The Technics SL-1200 GAE/G/GR general questions thread The Technics SL-1200 GAE/G/GR general questions thread
Both of my 1200Gs are labeled 1200GEG-S. I purchased them new out of the UK a couple of years ago and had them shipped to the US. Of course I had to come up with my own US spec power cables. There were a couple different power cables provided in the box along with some adapters. None of them US spec though.
Those last few letters are the region indication. For example: The full product code of my 1200G is 1200GEG-S, which means the unit was made for mainland Europe. The full product code of the SL-1200MK2 I had was SL-1200MK2-EH, which meant it was made for "Holland" (the Netherlands is often mistakenly called Holland).
Ya. MC used to be North American in old Technics nomenclature. Strange to include region destinations in a marketing push. On the other hand, new Technics has never been good at marketing by any stretch of the imagination. It is, but only because the 10R is in a plinth sitting on the photo bench, sans arm. Last time I used it was a couple (?) years ago to measure W&F performance across different torque settings. A review magazine had published strange result that didn't make sense so I wanted to try to replicate their findings as people were taking the erroneous report as gospel. My main 'table is one of my SP-10MK3 - I've 5 of them. Don't ask me why. If I make a temporary change I'd probably want to live with my TX-1000 or L-07D for a bit. The DP-100 has a 3012 on it as that's the armboard it came with and I don't have any cartridges that really suit it, and I find nothing endearing about those arms anyway .
Always been fascinated by the DP-100. Assuming an equal tonearm, how does it stack up to an SP-10 MKII and MKIII?
only 5? Piker I'm thinking upgrade in the long term. I can't reason that a 1200G would be a justifiable upgrade over my 1200GR. There is a NIB 1200 GAE on the market, but is is a 'special edition' G afaik.
I question whether either is. But does a hobby require justification. The G makes more sense to me than the GAE. But I have it on good authority, my wife, I'm senseless.
Yeah it’s dreadful, hard to watch their campaigns from the sidelines honestly. On the bright side if they were more effective at marketing these decks the wait time would be even longer.
Ok. Quick question. I am installing my Denon DL301MKII on my brand new 1200G to use or not to use is the question — hardware that came with the Denon Cart or the hardware that came with the 1200G for installation of the Denon onto the Technics head shell ? what you say experts ? thanks peeps
I've never used it due to the tonearm/cart issue. Would love to find a DA-1000 and matching armboard for it.