Micro RX 5000 Renaissance?


It may be just a coincidence, but looking through the various reports of the recent Munich high end event I've noticed no fewer than four (!) different turntables that all look suspiciously like the Micro RX-5000.

TW Acoustic and Kuzma launched new models visually 'inspired' by the RX-5000 design, Acoustical Systems showed a table that looks like an exact copy and DB Systems (www.micro.nl) also showed an exact copy, leaving no doubt of its objective by simply calling it 'The Tribute'. And then of course there already was the TechDas AirForce 5.

Does anyone know more about these newbies and what's under their bonnets? It would be interesting to compare their performance vis à vis the original and hear how much technology has moved forward. Or not.

While I'm a happy owner of the RX-1500G, the RX-5000 has been on my radar for quite some time. So with this Micro Renaissance going on, should I wait for a mint original to cross my path or should I go for one of these new tables? It seems Micro enthousiasts are now spoiled for choice........

edgewear
Dear @ferrari275: """ famed RX 5000 belt drive remains relevant even today from both a playback perspective and engineering point of view.  
Solid design. Ultra high analog playback capability. """

IMHO no one of those characteristics in your statement are really true but the other way around.

The RX 5000 is way way different design to the SX models and there is no comparison in between on each one quality performance levels.

R.
I do find it hilarious when people in Europe and America deride the Chinese, or any other non Anglo - European civilisations for efforts after having plundered the culture and civilisations from those very countries... Yet china manufactures most of the worlds household electronics and batteries that are used in houses all over the world - why not bring some of the economies of scale to the majority or at least a wider audience. I think that Amari make a very good Seiki lookalike that @syntax uses. 
My Melody integrated amp was made in China. A very fine tube integrated. Beautiful, and a bargain at $2500. Australia based company designed it. Made in China in a factory where the workers live upstairs, because between the hours they work and the money they aren't paid that's all they can afford. I knew some of this at the time but the rest I only learned much later.

Its hilarious you mention plunder, because that is exactly what China, or the CCP anyway, is all about. There is no rule of law. Instead there is only the rule of the CCP. No labor laws, no environmental laws, nothing at all really which is how they are able to plunder intellectual and trade secrets, not to mention things like a whole pharmaceuticals industry manufacturing narcotics shipped all over the world. 

China provides the best organ transplants in the world. Right now in China anyone arrested is tissue-typed and ultra-sounded and logged into a database. So then when your match comes up they arrest you again, only this time you get strapped down and your organs removed, without anesthetic. A gruesome death for you to be sure but beautiful fresh organs for someone with money. Talk about plunder.

Myself, I found a lot of this hard to believe at first. Right now though I'm living with a Chinese national who works internationally, has family there, returns frequently. There is no longer any doubt. This ain't the half of it either.

But its enough to want to slap down hard on anyone with such foolish notions of what it means to buy goods made in China.


When I spoke of plundering I meant in the sense of stealing ideas culture art etc. If u want to go political then that is a never ending list for starters:

australians vs aborigines 
Irish v native Americans
Sinhalese v Tamils
east. V west pakistan

the wealth of Britain and the west was built upon workhouse exploitation of the poor - we may be enlightened now - so let’s preach to the Chinese. Don’t automatically assume that the person making the micro is in a poorhouse - he may be making good money from it and if it’s a copy then so what - it won’t diminish the value of the real thing - ideas are often borrowed - that’s life nobody lives in a bubble
millercarbon, Your story about organ transplantation in China is certainly horrifying.  Why haven't we read about this practice in the free American press?  Even Chinese political dissidents who have successfully escaped from China have not described the practice of stealing organs from live people that you outline.  Just wondering.