This is the perfect solution for the vinyl newbie, because the table arrives meticulously packed. They had to do that to keep up with Technics, but it’s really not necessary, these tables hold their speed very well.” Neumann added, “The major difference between the 1219 and the 1229 is the later model has a window with a strobe for the speed control. As the big cheese just happened to have a spare Grado Red hanging around, that was the direction this table, a 1219 ended up taking. His cartridge of choice a vintage Shure, or the Grado Black. “I’ve always got at least a few on the shelf, ready to go,” Neumann said when we talked to him.
While a fair price for a budget turntable, this is a testament to the staying power of these turntables, as they were $185 when new in 1970-1972. He charges anywhere from about $100 – $300 to rebuild a table, depending on condition, or you can buy a fully restored model with cartridge installed for about $425, which is just what our publisher did.
#Garrard zero 100 idler wheel full#
Just call Bill Neumann at He’s taken his hobby of restoring these tables and turned it into a full time job, thanks to the demand and word getting around on the Internet. Your chances of getting a clean example, and it not getting trashed in shipping by a non-audiophile are slim to none. Like any fairly complex mechanism, turntables don’t respond positively to being bounced around in an adverse manner. The two most popular models, the 1219 and the 1229 are trading on eBay between $75 and $225, but this is not the way you want to roll. Which can really come in handy if you revisit the state of mind that you were in the last time you listened to Foghat… If you want your audiophile buddies to think that you’ve really lost your mind, grab some dollar selections from your local record store or thrift shop and stack ‘em! Who needs iTunes and Cover Flow, when you can load up five albums to play non-stop. Whether you are new to spinning vinyl, or trying to find something to play those old Foghat albums that you’ve had tucked in the closet since high school, this is a fun record player and it’s fully automatic. If you’d like a taste of the idler sound at a more reasonable price, consider a Dual. On the upper end of the price range, the classic Garrard and Thorens tables have really been making a comeback in audiophile circles, with fully restored versions easily fetching prices in the $3,000 -$5,000 range, with diehard idler enthusiasts claiming better bass response and more lifelike tonality. With the vinyl revolution showing no sign of losing steam, many music lovers have turned to the classic turntables as an alternative to some of the budget offerings from Rega, Pro-Ject and Music Hall. Dual would go on to produce belt (and direct) drive models before fading off into oblivion in the mid 80′s, but their legacy was definitely the idler drive tables. About this time, Linn’s LP-12 hit the scene, offering a new level of musicality along with the direct drive tables from the Japanese that both stole some of the thunder from the idler drives. Built like tanks, the underside was full of springs, gears and of course the big rubber idler wheel. In the mid to late 70′s, these automatic, idler drive tables were top contenders, with stiff competition coming from the likes of Thorens and Garrard. Many of us have fond memories of Dual turntables.