It continues to be “the little table that could.” Now having demoed the Technics GR, I can confidently say I nailed this “system synergy” from the get go. A VPI is the right table for this setup!
The GR did appear to have a bit of a blacker background, and its arm may have tracked just a smidge more accurately. The low end on the GR really slams. It’s very stout. It digs deep. The Cliffwood has a bubbly warmth in the lows to low mids that I have not found from any other manufacturer. It’s a fluidness, it blooms. It’s wonderful. The top end on the VPI is sweet, where on the Technics, I wouldn’t say it’s clinical, but it is definitely less “analog” leaning to my ears - tested with a Grado Opus3, by the way. The GR does a lot of things right! It just wasn’t right for this system.
Now for the wrong…. I will say, the biggest downfall of the table is the tonearm lift. I believe others here have had the same issue with the GR, but it was truly awful. There’s no other way to put it. It doesn’t catch the tonearm until the very top of its range of motion, and when lowering the arm, it doesn’t lower so much as it just slams it down. That detracted so much from the user experience for me that unless this table totally knocked my socks off to the moon and back sound-wise, this was going to be a dealbreaker. This is something Technics really needs to address, and a quick google showed me that I’m not alone with that takeaway.
Compared to the PLX-1000, the low end on the GR is tighter and has more impact, for sure, and the arm most definitely is a better tracker. The buttons have this wonderful “ka-chunk!” when you push them. It’s in charge. I was considering having the GR be an upgrade to my secondary system to replace the Pioneer, but ultimately I just could not get past the tonearm lift. It made the entire experience unenjoyable, and kind of stressful! For more than double the price, it just wasn’t there for me.
Probably obvious at this point, but back it went. In this relative price range, I would be more interested in the $1K range to see how the SL-100C, Debut Pro, and Orbit Theory perform. I think I’d probably also take the StudioDeck over the GR in a relative even cost head to head, but it’s been a while, tough to say. Tactile aspect, nod goes to the MoFi, undoubtedly.
So that’s what I got for ya!