Audio Technica AT-LP60XBT Review « 7Review
Audio Technica AT-LP60XBT Review
Audio Technica AT-LP60XBT Review
This capable turntable flies the Bluetooth flag, but doesn’t quite reach the standard of many previous Audio Technicas. Read our Audio Technica AT-LP60XBT Review.
This isn’t the first Bluetooth turntable we’ve tested, nor will it be the last, but there was still a moment when walking round the What Hi-Fi? listening room with our wireless headphones on, that it struck us: this is all we need now for a fully fledged vinyl system – and there aren’t even any wires.
Of course, the technology being available and it being worthy of our investment are two entirely different things, but that simplicity and greater accessibility to vinyl can only work in this Audio-Technica deck’s favour.
Attractive pricing
It is undoubtedly cheap. The AT-LP60XBT gives you a built-in, switchable phono stage as well as its wireless connectivity, and it does pretty much everything at the press of a button.
In fact, it’s almost like using a CD player. With the size and rotation speed of the record set, all you need do is place it on the platter and press the start button. The Audio-Technica takes care of
the rest – including returning the tonearm to its original position at the end. It spins at 33/3 or 45rpm, but this deck doesn’t like 10-inch discs, regardless of speed, so playing those can be a struggle.
Built to a price
But if the AT-LP60XBT plays like a ‘my first turntable’ – and we mean that as a compliment to its ease of use – it also feels like one. While its price tag dictates we shouldn’t expect high-end build, we’re struggling to think of another product around this price that feels so cheap.
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The near-total use of thin plastic makes the deck ridiculously light. It isn’t that it is poorly built, only that the choice of material doesn’t make this a nice product to use, and leaves us feeling shortchanged in terms of value for money. Even the counterweight is just plastic moulded to the end of the tonearm.
It’s fuss-free, yes, but we’d like more, substance – sonically and physically
But forget this is Audio-Technica, which we know is capable of making some incredible-sounding, feature- packed budget turntables, and it is actually quite a shock to hear how capable the AT-LP60XBT is musically.
Having put the platter in place – the only thing Audio-Technica asks you to do for yourself – you’re presented with an entirely coherent presentation, where the music hangs together as well as you might expect at this price, even without those costly bonus features.
Timing, while not entirely spot on, is good, and there is enough dynamic range
“It’s almost like using a CD player. With the size and rotation speed | of the record set, all you need do is place it on the platter and press the start button. The Audio-Technica takes care of the rest”
to offer a reasonably entertaining rendition of the records we spin. Given the number of hi-fi components of all stripes we hear struggling to master such aspects, that’s no mean feat. Here, the AT-LP60XBT proves again its manufacturer’s talent for getting it right.
Balance, too, is fine. It doesn’t dig exceptionally far into bass frequencies, but it is far from lacking, and there is no coarseness to the treble, as is often the way with budget components. That temptation to sound overly warm is nicely eschewed too.
Overlooking the detail
The most limiting aspect of the AT-LP60XBT’s presentation, though, is its level of detail. It isn’t particularly insightful when playing more intimate acoustic tracks or sparse ambient productions, but has real trouble when arrangements are decidedly denser.
It is as if there is finite space in which a piece can work and, as more elements are squashed in, the Audio Technica’s output becomes more a block of sound than something where lines are audibly picked out. Often the percussion gets lost towards the back of a mix, a shortcoming which also leads to a loss of drive and rhythmic intensity.
A weak link
The built-in phono stage might shoulder a fair amount of the blame – it seems less of an issue when we use our Bluetooth headphones or a wireless speaker – but that is one of this deck’s main selling points. Value for money deteriorates further if it requires a separate component to get it working at a more respectable standard.
Three stars may appear harsh for a budget product offering so much in the way of functionality. If you were buying it based on price and features alone, it would be good value for money, but the AT-LP60XBT just falls short of our being able to recommend it to those semiserious about their vinyl.
This is by no means the worst entry-level turntable we’ve heard but, sadly, it doesn’t quite reach the standard achieved by many previous Audio- Technica attempts.
Verdict
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