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Micro Seiki DQX-1000
2 Reviews
rating  4.5 of 5
MSRP 
Description: Direct drive high-end turntable


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Cosmo
(Audio Enthusiast)

Review Date
February 7, 2001

Overall Rating
 5 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
4.75 of 5, 4 votes

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Review NaN of , from Denmark

Price Paid:  $250.00 from Hifi-klubben in Denmark

Summary:
It is a formidable steady turntable, rock solid and really heavy. As described below, it has 3 feet that swallow any vibrations. I never had problems with isolation, perhaps because my set is pretty heavy.
Anyway, I use an Alphason HR-100S tone arm and a Denon DL-304 cartridge. The result makes me very proud, I will never have to look for another turntable. I can spend the rest of my life trying to reach the bottom of the sound it delivers, and never get to it.

Strengths:
It can play through earthquakes. Quartz lock makes wow history.

Weaknesses:
You need to REALLY know what you're doing when mounting the arm and cartridge.

Similar Products Used:
Micro Seiki BL-77


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Rating
Reviewed by:
Bima Stagg
(Audiophile)

Review Date
October 18, 1999

Overall Rating
 4 of 5

Value Rating
 5 of 5

Used product for
More than 1 year

Visitors rate this review
4.29 of 5, 7 votes

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Review NaN of , from Los Angeles

Summary:
This is a gorgeous turntable, simple and elegant, a heavyweight platter "floating" on three pods: no plinth, no cabinet, just the bare essentials. A friend asked me "Is that your spiritual gyroscope on your journey to Mars?" It's direct drive, an audiophile no-no, but its rumble figure is slightly better than my suspended chassis belt drive Linn LP 12. It's able to mount three tonearms at once, a pretty pointless attribute, though I have ocassionally had MM and MC cartridges mounted simultaneously. The great advantage of its arm-mount design is that it's rock solid and, even more important, height-adjustable, invaluable to users of arms such as the Rega, which has no VTA adjustment. My high end turntable journey led through most of the classic Thorens range, to a Linn/Valhalla/Ittok (arguably inferior to the Thorens TD126) but with a tremendous reputation and pride of ownership. But when I got the MicroSeiki, I retired the Linn to the garage: theoretically it's a better table, but I didn't hear any superiority, and preferred the Seiki's simplicity and solidity to the Linn's fiddly eccentricity. True, I never mounted the Ittok on the Seiki with the identical cartridge for a true head-to-head contest, but my satisfaction with the Seiki was so great I never felt the need for precisely fine comparison. I admit I'm swayed by glamour, and putting a record on the Seiki is a thrill every time (that 'spriritual gyroscope' thing), whereas the Linn is a hassle. The Seiki has two drawbacks. 1) Isolation. If I stamp on my suspended wooden floor, I hear thumps through the Quad 63's (on the other hand, the Linn also not only thumps but skips grooves — the Seiki is better in this department), and 2) the armboards are hard to obtain and if you buy them new cost $300. That's what I paid for the whole table! I am able to make my own armboards, customized for any arm, but if you don't have that ability, you might think twice. But if you can buy a DQX-1000, with a suitable armboard, at a good price (under $500) don't hesitate.

Strengths:
solidity, stability, reliability, beauty, simplicity and elegance of design

Weaknesses:
isolation

Similar Products Used:
Linn Sondek, Oracle, Thorens


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