Measuring turntable speed


Happy Holidays everyone!  This has probably been discussed before but I'm of the age that makes me a bit of a Luddite.  I have a VPI Scout and SDS.  I use "The Ultimate Analogue Test LP" to play the test tone and (at least I used to) the app Dr. Fridrekson(??) had other there.  It mysteriously disappeared from my iPad and I can't find it anywhere.  What are you using?  Thanks!
scarlson
big_greg, great find! for $16 does the same thing a Timeline does for $400. I ordered one and will report back.
@mijostyn I'd be curious to see how accurate it is compared to something more expensive.  I paid full price for mine, all of $25 I think.  I had a problem with mine a while after I bought it and they sent me another one immediately, no questions asked.  Great service.  I also like their cartridge mounting kits a lot.  
I have an industrial rpm/ fpm etc etc strobe that I use for work.
It has two modes, contact with various size wheels and strobe non contact very similar to the one Greg linked to.
It is EXTREMELY accurate.
But for a test I also just ordered one of them at $15 so I can compare to my industrial unit.
Will report back.
Phoenix engineering roadrunner.  Great little unit that measures accurately in thousandths after the decimal .xxx
Sota is now selling them singular and in kits with motor and power supply. 

I have a very lightweight paper strobe disc I put atop a spinning record.  I also sometimes find a record that I'm certain possesses a 440 hz A somewhere within it (any recording of a non-period instrument orchestral recording will have one) and then match the pitch on the record to my Seiko metronome's 440 tuning tone.  BTW, it's absolutely shocking how inaccurate my SOTA Sapphire's fine speed adjustment wheels have gotten over the centuries.