Plus a very big, strong motor & top class bronze bearings.
The MR 611 was in some ways different: no sprung subchassis, and a lighter platter (only 1,6 kilos) which was instead bigger in diameter. Some Vintage Turntable Collectors rank this model soundwise higher than the early Linns or Aristons or the Thorens TD 125 (150/160/166). Hamish too is sadly no longer with us, but his legacy lives on with some fine turntable bargains on the secondhand market.īack in 1972 Micro Seiki in Japan introduced the MR 611. But the advent of CD effectively finished Ariston, and despite some last-ditch attempts at diversifying into electronics, it was ‘game over’. The company went downmarket in the early eighties, making some pretty good budget tackle like the RD40, RD80 and Icon. Sadly the Ariston story does not have a happy end. Better still, many Linn parts fit the RD11, such as the Valhalla power supply, Nirvana spring kit, etc., although the main bearing and armboard are entirely different things. If you’re looking for one secondhand, then pay £200 for a good early RD11 or £350 for a later Superieur version and you’ll have a cracking high end deck for sub-Rega money. These days the obvious choice is Rega’s RB300 and its later derivatives, although SME’s 309 and IV work well too.
Other popular suitors were with Grace’s G707, ADC’s low mass LMF arms, Rega’s Acos-derived R200 and SME’s ubiquitous 3009S2.
SME’s Series III tonearm was a favourite partner to the RD11, and the two worked nicely together. Modern super-decks are often too analytical for their own good, a criticism you couldn’t level at the Ariston which sounds big, fat and warm regardless of the what’s actually on the record! By modern standards imaging is rather diffuse, the midband coloured and the bass loose, but it still makes a pleasingly large, expansive and euphonic sound. The RD11 sounded excellent in a nineteen seventies sort of way, being clean and open with powerful, extended bass and crisp highs. The only obvious visual differences were the smaller, circular armboard the Ariston used, the position of the on-off switch which was on the front right of the deck, and the very seventies pin-stripes around the inside of the plinth top. True enough, this will all be familiar to LP12 owners, even down to the heavy rubber platter mat which early Sondeks also had. The steel subchassis was decoupled from the armboard for isolation from external vibrations, and sat on three pliant coil springs to decouple it from the heavy real wood plinth, and a decent acrylic lid completed the package. Ariston claimed a wow and flutter figure of 0.06% and rumble at -78dB, which was excellent by 1971 standards.
A slip-clutch mechanism on the belt drive prevented stretching, and the motor provided two speeds, with small front mounted trim pots for fine speed adjustment at 33.333 and 45RPM. This rested on a single-point main bearing with “precision ground mirror-finished shaft” and a “perfectly spherical ball-bearing”. It sported a “high torque” 24-pole AC synchronous motor, “specially designed by Ariston engineers”, driving a two-piece 3.2kg platter via a square-section rubber belt. Indeed, the RD11 was described by Ariston as “very simple in design concept”. In truth, until the advent of the Oracle and Michell GyroDec (which appeared within weeks of each other in 1981), all belt drive decks were pretty similarly fashioned with a plinth enclosing a sprung subchassis onto which the motor, bearing and armplate sat. Both owed much to the Thorens TD150 in design terms, not to mention the original AR turntable. Meanwhile, Ariston was taken over by Dunlop Westayr Ltd and renamed Ariston Audio Ltd, and Hamish Robertson left.ĭespite the obvious similarities between the two decks, neither was the height of engineering innovation. started selling turntables made by Castle Precision Engineering, which were apparently very similar to Aristons. – Ivor Tiefenbrun’s father Jack’s company – to make the deck for him back in 1970. The RD11 was developed by Hamish along with Ivor and Jack, and distributed by C. The company was started by Hamish Robertson, who contracted Castle Precision Engineering Ltd. Nowadays though, the brand is a shadow of its former self, long gone and almost forgotten, and the RD11 story remains clouded in controversy… The proud name on one of Scotland’s finest turntables, it was revered by many a well-heeled nineteen seventies audiophile. Ariston was once one of hi-fi’s illustrious brands.