The Mercury News

Music Hall MMF-1.5 turntable scores with looks, quality, sound

- Don Lindich Sound advice Contact Don Lindich at www.soundadvic­enews.com and use the “submit question” link on that site.

Q

My son recently appropriat­ed my albums from my college days and he and his friends are playing them on, shall we say, less-than-optimal equipment. I would like for him to have something bettersoun­ding, and I also don’t want my records damaged on that cheap turntable! What is the best we can do for $1,000 or a little more?

— W.V., Cape May,

New Jersey

A

For $1,000 we can build something with high-end flair that sounds fantastic. Two products I recently discovered make this possible, and fortunatel­y they are the turntable and the speakers, which are the most important parts of any vinyl playback system.

First is the $399 Music Hall MMF-1.5 turntable, which recently received a rave review in this column and on my soundadvic­evinyl.com website. In terms of looks, quality and sound, the MMF-1.5 is a noticeable step ahead of anything else under $600 and will provide unmatched satisfacti­on and pride of ownership. musichalla­udio.com

The speakers are the most recent find. I recently tried the $299/pair Polk Signature S20 bookshelf speakers and I’ve been anxious to tell readers about them ever since.

Polk bills the speakers as “American HiFi” and as I tested them I realized what an appropriat­e tagline it is. Speakers from certain places tend to have a certain reputation and sonic signature. British speakers tend toward the warmish side, German speakers were once known to be shrill, and Japanese speakers, somewhat analytical. What is at the top of the heap? The very best highend speakers are (wave the flag and cheer) American speakers!

Speakers from the top American manufactur­ers have clean, neutral yet engaging sound quality that really brings the music to life. They also sound good with all kinds of music, so you do not have to qualify them as “good rock speakers” or ‘well suited for jazz and classical.” I should also note that speakers from Canadian companies like Axiom Audio and Paradigm share this superior reputation. (Maybe it is a North American thing.)

The Polk Signature S20s are largish bookshelf speakers with a well-executed retro design and Polk’s rear-mounted PowerPort, which means they can be used close to the rear walls. The sound lives up to the “American HiFi” tagline as the Signature S20s are cut from the same cloth as the best American speakers. My vinyl system has $6,500/pair Ohm Walsh 5000 speakers and when I switched to the Signature S20s, I was struck by how the overall character and pleasing nature across musical genres resembled the Ohms, which cost over 21 times more. Obviously the Ohms are significan­tly better and play in a different league, but the Signature S20s are worthy of the “American HiFi” name. The bass is also surprising­ly solid given their size. The Polk Audio Signature S20s are now my top speaker pick under $300. polkaudio.com

Providing the power is Onkyo’s TX-8020 receiver for $199. This old stalwart is the go-to receiver for budget stereo applicatio­ns and has clean, ample power and a phono input. onkyousa.com

This brings the total to $897. Add some $50 Sanus speaker stands (a must) and $10 for 16-gauge speaker wire, and you have a really sweet system for under $1,000.

For more detailed and dynamic sound I suggest you upgrade the turntable stylus (needle) to the $29 Carbon Fidelity CFN3600LE from LP gear. If you can stretch a little more, get the $148 LP Gear The Vessel A3SE Ultimate Set. This pre-mounted cartridge plugs right in to the MMF-1.5 and will improve the sound by more than a few notches. lpgear.com

 ?? MUSIC HALL ?? The MMF-1.5is a noticeable step ahead of anything else under $600.
MUSIC HALL The MMF-1.5is a noticeable step ahead of anything else under $600.
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