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Review NaN of
Price Paid:
$370.00
from commercial electroni Summary: This review is of the debut 3. I was actually looking for used speakers in the basement of a local hi-fi store when I noticed the line of Pro-ject tables on display. Turns out that I had enough cash on hand to take home the debut 3.
Although I was told that it was easy to set up, this may not be the case if you have never set he downforce on a tonearm. The instructions are written in a way that clouds the obvious. Once I figured it out the instructions seemed to make sense, but it took me an hour or so to figure out the counterweight!
Now the fun part. My system at the time consisted of a panasonic dvd player, vintage Rotel reciever, and Acoustic Profiles standmounters. I was hoping to be blown away by my first experience with a quality TT, but this was not the case. I would say the sound was slightly better than the Panasonic DVD.
After a round of upgrades my digital source was a Nad 541i, and the Debut 3 had an Ortofon MC1 turbo installed. /With the MC1, the Debut smoked the NAD. When the MC1 wore out, i re-installed the stock om5. With the om5 cartridge, the debut lost by a hair to the NAD. It is a tough call to make becasue CD and LP sound so different, but I was playing more CD's than LP's and itching for an upgrade.
This is perhaps the achilles heel of the Debut 3. Now I was hearing that MC Cartridges are not reccomended for the Debut because the metal platter may damage the magnet (although my MC1 worked fine till the stylus wore out) , and due to the non adjustable VTA on the debut's arm the only real upgrade options are the Ortofon OM20 and OM 30. I thought the OM 20 would be a good choice, but commercial electronics doesnt stock it. They said they could order it for around 160-170 cdn. I held off, and was considering saving for a Clearaudio Emotion or Project RPM5. Then I decided to give the debut one more shot. I found an OM 20 at another store, at a whopping 70% over suggested retail (what gives!?) Shook my head and walked out. Then I went back to Commercial Electronics. Still no OM-20, but they had a Goldring GX-1012 for $215. It is nearly a gram overweight and I wasnt sure how the height would work, but I took a gamble. I had to "guestimate" the downforce, and the Goldring is shallow, so I stuck an old 78 rpm rocord from the thriftstore under the felt mat to get the arm parallel. Audiophiles everwhere may cringe, but the set-up smokes my CD player again, and that is all I really wanted.
Strengths: More detail than CD, and you can play music much louder than CD without discomfort.
I've had it over 2 years without any trouble.
Terrific customer service by pro-ject. I e-mailed their web-page for cartridge advice and had a detailed response in less than 24 hours
Perhaps the biggest advantage of LP over CD is not well expressed in language. Vinyl has a certain excitement that makes CD sound flat and dead. I have found Vinyl to be at its best with Meat and Potatoes Rock Weaknesses: Cartridge upgrade limitations
Will not knock yer socks off with the stock cartridge Similar Products Used: none
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