| Brand Name: | Sony |
| Brand Name: | Sony |
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
154 of 161 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Sony PS-LX350H - VG Consumer Turntable,
By RDK (SE MI) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sony PSLX350H Stereo Turntable System (Electronics)
Purchased a Sony PS-LX350H to replace 25 year-old Technics belt drive turntable. The Sony appears to be one of the few Reasonably High Quality options for an Audio (as opposed to "DJ") turntable in the sub-$200 (or even sub-$300) price range.If it runs as long as the Technics, will be quite a buy - for now this must be considered a "preliminary" report(!). Out-of-box Picks: Looks good (& matches other Sony components in system); appears to be solidly built (& comparatively Heavy); gold-plated RCA plugs with removable cables (a nice feature! - although cables themselves do NOT have gold plating, they can easily be replaced); built-in strobe w/slider pitch control; platter/mat combo appear higher quality than Technics. Out-of-box Nits: Gee, manuals have gotten Cheap looking & provide Sparse information! Where is the overhang guide? CHEAP "no-name" cartridge (conical, bonded diamond), NOT properly mounted in included headshell (overhang / alignment guide would be helpful...). Notes: this is "manual" turntable: you lower & raise the tonearm manually. Not as nice as "semi-automatic," where you lower but turntable raises at end of LP. Manual is OK for 'active listening' - but you won't want to forget about a playing LP. At least the arm lifter works well - smooth in operation & easy to control. How does it work? Just fine, thank-you - using one of my existing cartridges, played parts of several LPs & was rewarded with crisp sound & no obvious noise (at realistic, but still moderate, listening levels). May not sound any BETTER than the old Technics did at one time, but speed control appears spot on & songs sound as they "should" (Subjective, of course!). Oh yes: The unit is taller than my Technics: so much so that there was no hope of using it with the supplied dust-cover. Unit is placed inside a cabinet, so cover not needed in this case, but might be an issue if your space is tight and you 'must' use dust-cover. Other units considered included: new Technics belt drive; Music Hall; Stanton; Gemini, & several others (at least "looked at" everything I could find in the sub-$500 range - though budget never called for exceeding $400...). If you eliminate the cheap "impulse buy" models - which includes some brand name items, such as the 'entry' Technics - and draw a fairly strict upper price point (say, under $300), there are not a lot of choices left. Now specify Standard Mount Cartridge, and focus upon basic Audio Performance and Controls - as opposed to "DJ" performance & controls - and your choices really narrow. The Sony PS-LX350H is arguably the best among those that remain, although differing priorities could yield a different alternative.
31 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing Quality Control,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sony PSLX350H Stereo Turntable System (Electronics)
My PSLX350H turntable exhibited the same type of erratic speed that previous reviewers have noted. It ran well for about five minutes, but after that period, it was simply impossible to set a constant speed using the "strobodots" no matter how hard or often I tried. It seems pretty obvious that there must be some consistent defect in the motor or the control hardware, at least in examples coming to market in the past couple of months. At the very least, Sony's quality control is extremely disappointing for this model. I've arranged to send my unit back for a refund. The experience makes me yearn for a turntable like my father's old Thorens TD-265, which is still running flawlessly after some 28 years...
29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Great sound but wide speed variations,
By DOuG pRATt "DOuG pRATt" (Boston, MA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sony PSLX350H Stereo Turntable System (Electronics)
The Sony LX350 sounds absolutely great, but it has wide variations in speed that result in significant changes in pitch, even within a single 3-minute song. I could actually hear it slowing down and speeding up.Belt drive turntables are prone to drift, of course. My 25-year-old Dual 506-1 has a strobe that shows speed variations, but they've never been audible. The pitch on the Dual is adjusted by slight changes in belt diameter, and not electronically as on the Sony, yet it's a much more consistent turntable. That said, when the Sony is holding its own, it really does sound super. I checked the alignment of the pre-mounted cartridge with an old Mobile Fidelity GEO disk and, to my surprise, it was just about spot-on. The cartridge doesn't track warped disks as well as the Ortofon OM-20 that's in the Dual ULM arm, but its sound quality cannot be faulted. Big, full, detailed, spacious, warm but not blurred, etc. All of the typical non-technical, subjective adjectives apply. Overall, a frustrating, hot/cold experience. I'm going to spend 50% more money and buy the direct-drive Audio-Technica PL-120. Obviously, the Sony and the A-T are coming from the same design team and, presumably, production line. The similarities in detail are unmistakable. The cartridge on the A-T, however, tracks at a whopping 3 grams, so it's a D-J thing. I'll give it a try and replace if I have to.
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