MoFi Ultradeck or Technics 1200GR


I’m rather new to vinyl but long time audiophile with good system. 
Looking to purchase a good turntable (within reason), best bang for the buck and have narrowed to these 2 choices. 
Hoping the analog community can give me some direction or advice on new Ultradeck or new 1200GR or something better if I’m missing the boat. 
I’d prob get a Master Tracker cartridge for the Ultra or a _______cartridge for the Technics (or in other words I don’t have a clue) . 
Thanks,
Bill
mr_bill
Either table will sound very good.

MoFi:
Wow & Flutter 0.017% – 0.025%
Rumble 74 dB
Belt Drive
Cartridges not easily changed.

Technics:
Wow & Flutter 0.025%
Rumble 78 dB
Direct Drive
Cartridges easily changed (this is part of the fun to me).

Specs are a toss up.

I have a 1200GR, love it. If you decide to get one, three cartridges I recommend, owning and enjoying all, are Ortofon Black, Grado Sonata and Nagaoka MP200 (or higher).
If you’re new to analog and willing to get an amazing quality cartridge (which is the most important in reproduction of vinyl media) then you have to be very careful, because for the price of the new cartridges you can get much better transducer from the golder age of analog. When vinyl was the main media and records and turntables were in every home the cartridge manufacturers were much more serious about the quality, they could sell more cartridges than today and for this reason invested in developing some exceptional phono pickups to be the best over the others. It was during the 70s era, i think the best phono pickups were made in the early 80s, then Digital floaded the market and it was bad time for vinyl media. What we have today in our digital era is just a little bit of what it was before in agalog era. So if you want the best bang for the bucks then look for vintage MM cartridges such as Grace, Stanton, Victor, Audio-Technica, Sony, Pioneer ... All specific models have been mentioned many times on this forum. Some of them are hard to find, but well worth the effort if you’re looking for high fidelity that none of the modern MM will give you.
I'm willing to bet the 1200 will keep its resale value much longer too if what the vintage Technics tables seem to sell for these days