Linn launches £25,000 Sondek turntable, made from old Whisky casks

Full story here.
Moderators: slparry, Gromit, Paul
And the irony is that Linn copied an Ariston design (the RD11) with the LP12, and the Ariston itself was a copy of the Thorens TD150, built much earlier in the mid 60's.Twinspark wrote:We have an Ariston made copy of a Linn design here.
Very much so, In the late eighties/early nineties Linn actively forced dealers who wanted to stock the Sondek into 'not' holding stock of any other brand or they would lose the Linn concession. A lot of upset in the HIFI world back then.Gromit wrote: A sad time the 70's/80's, where Linn basically ran what could almost be described as a cartel to push out superior designs - the PT (for example) was a superior turntable, as was the Logic DM101, and of course the high end Japanese direct drive stuff.
Ain't that the truth.f90x wrote:
Once a HIFI anorak always a HIFI anorak![]()
You displayed real credibility.......................f90x wrote:Linn was always about marketing, and they were extremely good at it. Having worked within the domestic HiFi market throughout the eighties and most of the nineties it was a well known fact that there were better (and cheaper) turntables out there but the consumer was won over by the marketing hype and advertising. Also, Linn were the company that swore they would never make a CD player (but they made them for nearly 20yrs until recently) as it could never sound as good as a turntable and would regularly try and trash the reputation of various expensive CD players. In 1990 at the London HiFi show they had purchased our most expensive (at the time) Denon DCD3560 at £1000 and had listening comparisons in their demo room. They would first play a track from a CD on the Denon and then play the same track on the Sondek. Well, one will always hear more of any piece of music when played the second time but Linn would claim it was because of more detail from their turntable. A moot point but when we requested they did the demo the other way around they declined. Linn still make the Sondek as it is a huge seller for them and it's what made the company even though (as Richard stated) it is basically a Thorens TD150 in it's original incarnation, but they are not really a Hifi company now as most of their products are geared towards Multi room systems loved by wealthy footballers. (albeit very expensive ones)
For the record, (no pun intended) I am a vinyl fan and will always prefer to listen to my records over my CD's and did actually run a Sondek in the early nineties that was on permanent loan to me. It wasn't a bad deck; almost as good as my Garrard 401.
Personally if I were going to drop £25k on a turntable I'd have an SME30/12 with a series V/12 arm and that would still leave me with £5k to choose a cartridge.
Once a HIFI anorak always a HIFI anorak
Oh and as for the booze, Tesco's are doing Jack Daniels at 20 quid a bottle at the moment. sorted.
It's still one of the world's great turntables Al - I had mine for 6 years and it kept me very happy. The reason there's been such a backlash over the last few years is simply down to what Linn did to the British audio industry in the 80's and the almost religous, blinkered following the thing received. All down to marketing.Blackal wrote:
(I still rate my Linn, though)
Al