Is the Denon DP 37F an audiophile turntable?
Is the Denon DP 37F an audiophile turntable?
The Denon DP-37F is an underrated aspiring audiophile turntable. While the 47F gets all the escalades, some major European HiFi magazines rated these two tables very similar, if not to say the same.
Which is better the Denon dp-80 or the DP 75?
From my research and moving down the list, the DP-80 is advanced and pretty, but it runs on 100V and requires a step down transformer. The DP-75 doesn’t have that restriction best I can tell, and it appears to have better specs than the DP-80 oddly enough. But I think those are both just turntables.
How big is a Denon dp50l turntable platter?
Somewhere in the Denon turntable timeline, the products start to become a little more plasticky. The DP50L is from the era of 20mm MDF cabinets ( 60mm under the arm ), 1.2Kg platters, metal arms and quality engineering. Even the mat has its own laser holographic analysis:
What kind of tonearm does a Denon turntable use?
I have owned two Denons; a couple decades ago a DP-1200, and more recently a DP-80 which I mounted into a Denon DK110 plinth and added a Reed tonearm. Any of the quartz lock models especially will make a fine addition to a 2 channel system.
Is the Denon dp-37f a semi automatic turntable?
The Denon DP-37F can be operated as a semi-automatic turntable if desired, since lifting the tone arm from its rest also starts the turntable motor.
How big is a Denon dp-37f dust cover?
The Denon DP-37F has a handsome vinyl-veneer wooden base and a hinged, slightly tinted plastic dust cover. It measures 17 inches wide, 16 inches deep, and about 5-3/4 inches high, and it weighs approximately 16-1/2 pounds. Price: $325.
How does the tone arm work on a Denon turntable?
Another route is to damp the tone arm electrome-chanically. This latter is the path Denon chose for its DP-37F, a fully automatic direct-drive turntable with a microprocessor-controlled tone arm whose low-frequency resonance is damped in both the vertical and the horizontal planes by an electrical servo system.
From my research and moving down the list, the DP-80 is advanced and pretty, but it runs on 100V and requires a step down transformer. The DP-75 doesn’t have that restriction best I can tell, and it appears to have better specs than the DP-80 oddly enough. But I think those are both just turntables.