Dear Timeltel, You wrote, "the 71 lacks the reverse eddy current braking both the 81 and 101 implement in regulating overshoot incurred when correcting for speed". According to everything I have read and observed, that is not correct at least for the TT101. The TT101 is unique among 71, 81, 101, in that it has a reverse servo mechanism to correct for overshoot. Nowhere have I ever seen this described as eddy current based. I have no insight on whether or how the TT81 can slow down its platter. I do know that one sign that my TT101 is running as intended is that when I press the "stop" button, the platter comes to a dead halt. When I was having problems, the platter would stop but then rotate backwards for about half a turn before lazily stopping. This indicated to me that the reverse servo was not working properly.
Someone else suggested that Exclusive P3 and P3a did NOT have a coreless motor. My information says they both DID. (They were not really two different turntables; the way I hear it, there was a change in the way rumble was measured and Pioneer re-named the table from P3 to P3a so they could claim the new re-calculated lower number for rumble was associated with something they actually did to the table to improve it.)
Also, Denon tt's were said to have an "induction motor". That would be hard to do with a servo-controlled DD turntable; so far as I know the Denon DP80 has a 3-phase synchronous motor.
Someone else suggested that Exclusive P3 and P3a did NOT have a coreless motor. My information says they both DID. (They were not really two different turntables; the way I hear it, there was a change in the way rumble was measured and Pioneer re-named the table from P3 to P3a so they could claim the new re-calculated lower number for rumble was associated with something they actually did to the table to improve it.)
Also, Denon tt's were said to have an "induction motor". That would be hard to do with a servo-controlled DD turntable; so far as I know the Denon DP80 has a 3-phase synchronous motor.