Yes, and it was Chris Brady and his Teres project that got me going and really learning about turntables. Turntables are strange things. On the one hand everything is out in the open. Very little hidden in a box, you can pretty much see how they’re made. On the other hand though its all black magic. Completely different designs, each one supposedly better than the next. Nothing in life is like that! Teres gave me the opportunity to actually check and compare and learn what each individual part is doing.
Can the motor really make a difference? How much? And what kind?
For starters I tried replacing the stock power cord on my Basis motor with a known good power cord. Big improvement! Better, more solid and well defined bass, better overall rhythmic drive, better dynamics, right across the board!
One less black magic trick. I saw the motor. Stock motor you could look up on and buy on the internet. I was happy with my Basis, especially being able to sell it after a dozen years for more than I paid new. But if it is anything to go by then turntables are vastly overpriced for what you get! Not so Teres. Their level of parts quality, if VPI or ClearAudio, would be low 6 figures.
Anyway, that experience encouraged me enough to try the Teres motor pod, the one like you have now. Simply taping the strobe sheet onto my Basis platter (and drilling a small hole in the plinth) enabled me to run the Basis with the Tires motor. Big improvement!
By now I was learning and comparing and while the Basis bearing looked pretty good it clearly was nowhere near the level of the Tires design. I mean, Chris has his full design and specs right there on the web. Basis does not. But once you understand the design principles its clear the Basis bearing cannot be as good. And sorry to say, same goes for the vast majority of turntable manufacturers out there. I even took my bearing around to some very good machinists. How good? One of them, just from looking at it and handling it made a damn impressive estimate of tolerance and finish spec. I mean he darn near nailed it. We talked a bit about production runs. No way he could get anywhere near what Chris sells them for. You have a Teres, you have one of the all time great audiophile bargains. If you did a good job building yours then you probably already know nobody can touch what you got for under 10 grand. If not you should. Because they can’t.
Can the motor really make a difference? How much? And what kind?
For starters I tried replacing the stock power cord on my Basis motor with a known good power cord. Big improvement! Better, more solid and well defined bass, better overall rhythmic drive, better dynamics, right across the board!
One less black magic trick. I saw the motor. Stock motor you could look up on and buy on the internet. I was happy with my Basis, especially being able to sell it after a dozen years for more than I paid new. But if it is anything to go by then turntables are vastly overpriced for what you get! Not so Teres. Their level of parts quality, if VPI or ClearAudio, would be low 6 figures.
Anyway, that experience encouraged me enough to try the Teres motor pod, the one like you have now. Simply taping the strobe sheet onto my Basis platter (and drilling a small hole in the plinth) enabled me to run the Basis with the Tires motor. Big improvement!
By now I was learning and comparing and while the Basis bearing looked pretty good it clearly was nowhere near the level of the Tires design. I mean, Chris has his full design and specs right there on the web. Basis does not. But once you understand the design principles its clear the Basis bearing cannot be as good. And sorry to say, same goes for the vast majority of turntable manufacturers out there. I even took my bearing around to some very good machinists. How good? One of them, just from looking at it and handling it made a damn impressive estimate of tolerance and finish spec. I mean he darn near nailed it. We talked a bit about production runs. No way he could get anywhere near what Chris sells them for. You have a Teres, you have one of the all time great audiophile bargains. If you did a good job building yours then you probably already know nobody can touch what you got for under 10 grand. If not you should. Because they can’t.