Retro Turntable

  • The Stanton T.90 turntable is impressive looking, with sleek lines, well-placed features, and a build genius that inspires confidence

  • The T.90 measures 17-inches wide, 14.5-inches deep, and 5.5-inches skyscraping (including tone arm)
  • Much of the T.90's exterior is plastic from http://www.gracedigitalaudio.com/victoria-tunewriter-records-and-cassettes-to-cds-p-4.html high-grade plastic, which compared with venerable turntable staples such as the Technics SL-1200, feels a bit less professional
  • Sacrificing an all-metal body disappointment an advantage, however, because the T.90 feels much attenuate than many professional turntables.

The sound quality was as good as can be expected from old, scratchy records. The built-in audio card records 16-bit at 44.1khz (which you can upscale to 48khz). Because the Stanton T.90 doubles as both a recording and a playback interface for your computer's audio, you can instantly entertainment rearmost the results of your digitally recorded vinyl through the T.90's RCA outputs--but there's more. The T.90 will even allow you to simultaneously mix your computer's audio and your turntable's audio into the same output--bridging both the analog and digital worlds. What DJs do with this aspect is up to their imaginations.