New Teres Direct Drive Motor Available as Option


Hi Folks:
It looks like Teres is now offering a direct drive motor as an option on their regualar tables. As a Teres 255 owner I'm contemplating the upgrade. Has anyone tried the new motor on there existing/old Teres, and does it seem like the upgrade is worth it? Here's a link to the new product:
http://www.teresaudio.com/verus-motor.html

Cheers,
John.
128x128outlier
Fred,

The motor continues to deliver the goods. I first had the motor sitting on a detached (from the Micro plinth)solid piece of maple 5" thick on brass footers, but when I switched to the motor sitting on the same plinth as the table the bottom end tightened up with greater slam. This is the current preferred set up. I also got a slightly better sound with a Shakti stone on top of the control box and use a Graniteaudio 555 power cord. A bit of audio voodoo with the Shakti, but it seems to add a bit of bite and clarity - but I need to validate this with extended listening. THe control box needs a small weight on the top to reduce ambient noise from a transformer buzz. I need to have some extended quality listening time this weekend and I full publish a full review. I have some nice pics and I will endeavour to put them up here as well. I have had my IO Sig phono stage out for a tune up at Aesthetix and that goes back in to the mix tomorrow to allow for a true comparison.

Stay tuned

Steve
Did you try a plain old brick or rock or piece of slate as a control for the benefits of the Shakti stone?

The Verus arrived here yesterday. Setup was straightforward and operation is simple. Spinup and spindown times are quite reasonable. I do need to retrain myself to not give the platter a push to get things going - caught my hand a couple times just before. :-)

Basically just checked that all was in order and operational. The primary issue for me was the size of the motor controller box and where to put it. The motor pod is sitting on the same 3" maple block as the turntable. Lightly holding the motor as it drives the platter I do feel the traversal of the wheel against the platter as not 100% smooth/continuous. I may need to fiddle with motor position a touch.

Listening at the end of a long evening, I'm gonna recheck my impressions tonight. TT is a Teres 320 which has a 37 pound platter. Ergo, my expectations are more oriented toward improvements coming from an improved motor than from increased rotational stability. Will report back.

Do folks have observations on the sonic character of different Verus torque settings?

Tim
Lew, yeah - and that reduces the noise below threshold, but I sensed the Shakti added something in addition to plain ol damping - but I'm not a big believer in audiovoodoo until I can do a control and the difference is significant, sustainable and definable. Of course different does not always mean better or preferable, and I think these things have to prove over a period time.

The best application of Shakti stones for me has always been on CDP's (cleaning up digital haze) and power amp transformers/poer supplies, but not so much if the amp has a seperate power supply and umbilical.

Steve
I think I remember that the Shakti stone does have the property of soaking up some of the stray fields radiated by transformers, over and above the fact that mass loading the tranny helps to reduce vibration. I also think I read that any old out of use transformer, if placed atop a functional transformer, will have some of the same positive effects, but I've never tried that, nor have I used Shakti stones. From the hayday of audiovoodoo, promoted often innocently by HP, the Shakti stone hangs around. I don't dispute that it may do some good, I just am interested in the why of it.