They had a naked motor available for admiration, and so I picked it up,
put it next to my ear, and I could hear the sleeve bearings when I
twisted the spindle.
Once the motor is prepped for operation it might not do that. I pulled the motor out of my Technics as I am taking it to a machinist so I can run a longer spindle. Its really quiet!
The problem is that next to something like a SOTA Cosmos with any decent
arm on it those Technics tables sound like finger nails on a chalk
board
A friend of mine (Warren Ghel, currently at ARC) developed the platter pad used on the Cosmos. SOTA got an exclusive contract to use it. I ran a Cosmos for quite some time- and then discovered that a mildly modified Empire 208 equipped with the same arm (at the time, an SME5) as the Cosmos sounded better. With more mods to the Empire (a plinth machined of solid aluminum and damping the platter) the Cosmos simply had to leave. Since then I've gone to using the Triplanar and I've working on a number of Technics SL1200Gs and GAEs; IMO they are a better turntable than our model 208 (the production version of the modified Empire). Based on this I have trouble taking the statement in your quote seriously! The Technics machine is excellent; equipped with the right arm and platter pad its a formidable machine; I don't see how a Cosmos would compare.