Search
Search titles only
By:
Search titles only
By:
Home
Forums
What's new
Members
New posts
Search forums
VIP
OSA Radio
Chat
0
Features
Tunes
Mixes
Events
Flyers
Forums
Log in
Register
Search
Search titles only
By:
Search titles only
By:
What's new
Members
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Install the app
Install
Reply to thread
Welcome to Old Skool Anthems
The Old Skool Resource. Since 1998.
Join now
NATIVE INTERNET WEB RADIO PLAYER PLUGIN FOR SHOUTCAST, ICECAST AND RADIONOMY
powered by
Sodah Webdesign Mainz
Forums
Music
The Chillout Room
Stanton ST 150 MK2
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Message
<blockquote data-quote="Jigsaw" data-source="post: 919485" data-attributes="member: 46605"><p>I did not think you were having a pop and the reasoning for me answering you again is because I was in a record store yesterday and they had a Technic in their so you could listen to your records on them and it gave me some insight what the motor is like on them and how different the torque is on them compared to the Stanton and I can see now if someone had owned a Technic then how they might find it hard to get use to all that torque and would find it hard to get them to mix.</p><p></p><p>I have to say when I first got them, I found it very tricky to get use to all the torque in the motor and it took me about 2 months and a lot of frustration to learn how to get them to mix perfectly and like other I had learnt to mix on Technics. I did not want to give up on the as I had spent nearly £400 on mine and the reviews suggest that these are very good turntable. </p><p></p><p>am use to them now but the way you mix with these it totally different to the Technics because of all that torque on them.</p><p></p><p>You said you mate had some issue with his Stanton keep taken them back and getting them fixed.</p><p></p><p>My brother had a golf over 15 years ago and it was not that old at the time and he had on going issue with the starter motor but this does not make it a bad car but you do get the odd one that has not been manufactured properly.</p><p></p><p>By saying your mate had issue with his Stanton does make them a bad turntable and what I would not like to see you doing is putting people of buying the Stanton's when they are a perfectly good turntable.</p><p></p><p>I have a set of the first generations and they are in perfect working order. </p><p></p><p>But what I would say if you been use to the Technics you might find it a bit tricky to get use to because of all the toque on them and might think they are a rubbish turntable if you can't figure out how to juggle all that toque, because they are totally different to mix with than the Technics.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jigsaw, post: 919485, member: 46605"] I did not think you were having a pop and the reasoning for me answering you again is because I was in a record store yesterday and they had a Technic in their so you could listen to your records on them and it gave me some insight what the motor is like on them and how different the torque is on them compared to the Stanton and I can see now if someone had owned a Technic then how they might find it hard to get use to all that torque and would find it hard to get them to mix. I have to say when I first got them, I found it very tricky to get use to all the torque in the motor and it took me about 2 months and a lot of frustration to learn how to get them to mix perfectly and like other I had learnt to mix on Technics. I did not want to give up on the as I had spent nearly £400 on mine and the reviews suggest that these are very good turntable. am use to them now but the way you mix with these it totally different to the Technics because of all that torque on them. You said you mate had some issue with his Stanton keep taken them back and getting them fixed. My brother had a golf over 15 years ago and it was not that old at the time and he had on going issue with the starter motor but this does not make it a bad car but you do get the odd one that has not been manufactured properly. By saying your mate had issue with his Stanton does make them a bad turntable and what I would not like to see you doing is putting people of buying the Stanton's when they are a perfectly good turntable. I have a set of the first generations and they are in perfect working order. But what I would say if you been use to the Technics you might find it a bit tricky to get use to because of all the toque on them and might think they are a rubbish turntable if you can't figure out how to juggle all that toque, because they are totally different to mix with than the Technics. [/QUOTE]
Verification
Post reply
Forums
Music
The Chillout Room
Stanton ST 150 MK2
Top
Bottom