Calling all Sota fans.


Mark Dohmann made a comment that if he was to buy a turntable for $20000 he said it would be a Sota, so is this table a great buy and is he right on his comment? There are so many tables out there, direct drive, belt drive ect, that sound great to many so why is the Sota in the same ball park as Techdas, Technics, Kuzma, TW Acustic and others, is it really as good as the other big guns with the right arm?
Thanks.
128x128garkat62
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I have a Sota Sapphire from 1984 that I regularly updated until about the turn of the century. I had a certain amount of troubles with it in the early days, but after a couple shaming letters to Sota in Berkeley (this was before email), they sent me a box to ship it back to Berkeley (or was it Oakland?). They completely rebuilt and updated the now groaning-at-every-revolution platter. They did not assign blame for the problem (which I repeatedly denied and am still certain I was not responsible for).  Later(?), they sent me a new drive belt to replace the one that was lending a bit of seasick-inducing wow. No problems since, and I have no zeal to replace it. Of course it didn't hurt when I replaced the Sumiko(?) arm with an Alphason.  
One thing worth mentioning is that many of the experiences posted above are based on the vintage tables originally produced in the 1980s and 90s, which are not representative of the current generation of tables. Over the years SOTA has undergone a steady change, and the current tables have a different designer who has brought a meaningful set of updates to the product line. 

The sapphire bearing has been replaced by a magnetic one, which moves a great bearing assembly forward to a world class one. The platter has been reformulated to have en less of an acoustic presence and the newer SOTA are more balanced tonally, the sub chassis are stiffer and more inert than previous designs, the vacuum module has a better control and monitoring system, the motor is DC with the Phoenix Engineering control system being integrated into the package, and the overall build internally is more precise and of higher quality. 

While the current SOTA models share similar if not the same names to the vintage tables, and have an appearance that looks to be the same, the tables have evolved into a world class product and the vintage tables while nice products are not really representative of the current generation offerings. 
Yes, the latest SOTA series Nova VI / Cosmos V / Millenia Eclipse have upgraded a LOT on the tech and materials. And of course, the vintage SOTA tables were built to be incredibly reliable and sound awesome for the money - plus there are a LOT out there on the market. Great way to start out in this hobby, which is what I did. 

I have an old Series III Sapphire (my first table) I later upgraded to Nova V. Wish I had waited until the current Series VI though - with eclipse package, magnetic bearing, and much more rigid sub-chassis. My Nova is in beautiful Koa wood (SOTA offers choices in exotic woods, which I highly recommend over standard finishes) - that's one thing to note about SOTA, they make a more "traditional" looking a table, complete with dustcover, and do it beautifully. If you're in the high end looking for a table that doesn't look like a spaceship or a science project, then it's going to hard to ignore SOTA Cosmos as probably your best option. 

The ability to completely hold down records with either a ring weight or vacuum hold (which SOTA and TechDas do) is a requirement for me in a high-end table; I don't understand high-end table owners who are OK without one of these. Beyond that and its new Phoenix based speed controller - no, the SOTAs can't compete on paper with all the whiz-bang gimmicks & exotic materials/build (and mass) of the $30K plus super-tables (up well over $100K now). But I also have a Clearaudio Innovation Master (my main table), and it's a bit "cleaner" and more detailed sounding but needs a LOT of isolation care compared to SOTA (in my case a CMS Maxxum Rack). Put a top notch arm & cartridge and phono stage on the little SOTA and...it's pretty darn close! If it was easier to move these around I'd probably swap back and forth. It's kind of fun seeing the old-world SOTA sitting on the high-tech rack!
I talked to Sota yesterday and they have alot of things in the works for their tables in the future. It looks like the company is moving in the right direction and will challenge the top designs available today for sound quality. It is great to see an American company challanging the best tables in the world.