Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Hold on to that older CD player

- DON LINDICH

Q. I want to get a turntable and upgrade my CD player, which is an old Technics SL-PG100 from the 1990s. I have $1,000 total to spend and figured I would spend $500 on the turntable and $500 on the CD player. I planned on getting the Music Hall MMF-1.5 “Vessel Special” for $499 from LP Gear. Is there anything else that might be better for around $500, and what would you recommend for the CD player?

— J.F., Minneapoli­s

A. My recommenda­tion is going to be a bit different than you might expect, but it will definitely get the most out of your $1,000.

I’ve tested a lot of turntables selling for $500 or less and there is still nothing that I prefer over the Music Hall MMF1.5 “Vessel Special” as sold by LP Gear. The combinatio­n of the finely crafted MMF-1.5 turntable, its precision arm and the Vessel A3SE cartridge makes beautiful music and looks great, too. The tactile qualities are a cut above what you typically find for $500 and it is very nice to operate, which adds to the pride of ownership.

That said, there is a better way to spend your $1,000 and I will spell out why before providing my recommenda­tions.

With vinyl playback components like turntables, cartridges and phono preamps, the audible difference­s tend to be quite large and immediatel­y obvious. Conversely, the difference­s between CD players tend to be small and some old players from the 1980s can still sound quite nice. I have a Nakamichi OMS-1A from 1987 that I would not hesitate to use in my very best system. (It was a great thrift shop find for under $20.)

Your Technics SL-PG100 CD player was very well regarded in its day, and if you compare it to modern CD players you will find the SL-PG100 has a larger, more detailed display, more front-panel buttons and extra playback features. That is because manufactur­ers don’t devote the amount of resources to the format that they used to. Given this, I would invest more of the $1,000 into your turntable system and less on a CD player, or even just continue using your Technics.

As nice as the Music Hall MMF-1.5 is, the $599 Music Hall Classic is even nicer. It must be seen, touched and heard to be appreciate­d and I suggest you visit musichalla­udio.com to check them both out. As nice as the Classic looks in the pictures, online images cannot do it justice.

LP Gear has a “Music Hall Classic Fantastic” version upgraded with a pre-mounted Vessel A3SE cartridge for $698, and this is the one I recommend you buy. See it at lpgear.com.

This leaves about $300 for the CD player. I recommend using the Technics for a while longer until you can make a big upgrade, like Emotiva’s $599 ERC-4, which also serves as a digital-to-analog converter. If you want to buy now a $349 Cambridge Audio AXC35 would be a good choice, though you have to stretch your budget a bit to $1,047. Visit emotiva.com and cambridgea­udio.com for more info.

Read columns and product reviews by Don Lindich at soundadvic­enews.com.

 ?? Musichalla­udio.com ?? Music Hall Classic Turntable
Musichalla­udio.com Music Hall Classic Turntable

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