| The Rega P3-24 Turntable |
| Premiere US Review! |
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January 2008 |

Apropos of nothing, I recently noticed how
aged some of the hi-fi components scattered
around my house are. The tubed EICO preamp and
amplifier to which I still listen with musical
and sonic pleasure are now 47 years old. Had I
been a budding Hi-Fi Nut at age 10 in 1960
(instead of yearning to be a pirate, or an
outfielder for the Chicago Cubs,) I could have
acquired them new and thus avoided my whole
ensuing audio amplifier odyssey. As it happens
I’ve only owned the EICO pieces for a dozen
years or so, a seeming eternity for the more
flighty contemporary audiophile who replaces
components or systems monthly. Now I hold no
reverence for things antique, nor am I an
anachrophile. I have never audibly intoned the
phrase “They don’t build ‘em like they used
to.” The fact that some of my ancillary
components are now chronologically
long-in-the-tooth reflects their staying power
as musical devices rather than any conscious
aim on my part to acquire permanent gear.
Their longevity is quite accidental.
Longevity of ownership can bear useful fruit -
the acquisition of an intimate knowledge of a
component’s true sound and performance. The
long-owned component’s sonic signature sears
into consciousness, creating an indelible
memory. Of all the audio components I’ve ever
owned however, the Rega Planar 3 turntable had
the longest continuous residence. One of its
permutations had been in one of my systems for
25 years. Its musical virtues were ear-opening
in 1979 when I acquired my first one; its
sound is permanently ingrained in my memory.
For many the world of high performance audio
focuses on the experiencing of ultimate
components - products that attempt to reach
perfection without regard to cost. Equally
important, I found in my 25 years of plying
the audio retail trade and dealing with the
so-called ‘real world’, was finding
‘threshold’ components – gear below which’s
price and performance one could not go without
compromising the music and the sound. The Rega
Planar 3 held that ‘minimum threshold’
position for more than two decades. Indeed, in
that antediluvian UK time of simplified
turntable cosmology, one bought a Planar 3 as
one’s “serious” table until one could afford a
Linn Sondek LP12. Today’s turntable world is
far more complex: analogue LP playback has
entered its third “Golden Age” since the
appearance of the CD. The best current gear
makes the products of even 10 years ago sound
somewhat quaint and rustic.
The basics of the Planar design were simple
and effective, and so long-running as to flirt
with being classic: black MDF plinth supported
by three rubber feet, glass platter (covered
with a felt mat) riding on a sub-platter, high
quality oil-bearing, and manual speed change
from its AC synchronous motor. There were only
two major changes to the Planar 3 during its
long product life: the move to the famous Rega
RB300 tonearm in the 80’s and, more recently,
to a new AC synchronous motor, whose low
vibration permitted eliminating the old Planar
motor’s rubber-belt suspension mounting.
Rega has been going through an immense period
of creativity and growth in recent years,
launching new products and expanding their
product range. The breakthrough performance of
their reasonably priced CD players – the
Apollo and Saturn - has been matched by a
superb line of loudspeakers and an expansion
of their turntable line, which now includes
seven turntables. The new P3-24 lies in the
middle of the current Rega range, above their
entry-level P1 and their
“always-a-bride’s-maid-never-a-bride” P2. The
new P3-24 sells for $895. It can be purchased
with a pre-mounted Rega Elys2 moving magnet
phono cartridge for $1095; an optional power
supply for the table’s motor costs $345.
Glanced at superficially, the P3-24 looks like
every other Planar 3 from the past. The
changes in the new table are quite significant
sonically though they might escape notice from
superficial visual inspection. The “24” in the
P3-24’s name refers to the 24-pole AC
synchronous motor, the same motor used in
Rega’s P5 and P7 tables. A ‘wall-wart’ power
supply connects to the table to drive the
motor. This motor is tuned for very low
vibration, allowing direct mounting to the
table. The optional TT PSU power supply
connects to a dedicated socket on the table’s
plinth and offers crystal-controlled
synthesized AC to drive the motor. The TT PSU
allows electronic speed switching from 33 to
45 RPM, which is done manually on the stock
motor/power supply.
The P3-24’s plinth is now constructed of
phenolic resin laminates. Gone is the old
Planar’s MDF plinth, along with its
colorations. The P3-25 retains the old classic
glass platter, covered by the same felt mat.
Big, big news is the change of the classic
RB300 arm. Dubbed the RB301, the new arm
offers an improved vertical bearing housing
and a new 3-point mounting attachment to the
table. The new arm’s anti-skate and external
tonearm cable come from the Rega RB700 arm.
The RB301 retains the RB300’s spring-loaded
tracking force arrangement. The new arm
mounting requires new and different arm
spacers for those needing to change arm height
to set correct VTA/SRA. The standard tonearm
height is set for Rega’s own cartridges (which
are less tall than many other pick-ups.)
Longevity has two faces. Familiarity,
famously, breeds contempt, but it is just as
likely to breed forgiveness, as long-term
listeners to the old Planar 3 are likely to
attest. While the classic Planar was excellent
in its musical expressiveness, it possessed
some sonic foibles that most listeners simply
ignored. Among these was occasionally
temperamental speed consistency due to the
aging of the rubber belt that suspended the
motor. While the table and RB300 arm’s
midrange and lower treble were exceptionally
neutral and coherent, the bass could sound
somewhat thick and slurred (I suppose ‘wooden’
might describe the effect) in part of its
range, especially when hit with loud and fast
bass transients. Timing, dynamic nuance, and
musical flow in the mid-range were better than
that of the bass. A slight tizziness could be
heard in the upper octaves, though the Planar
3 didn’t sound bright. This was the classic
sound of the old Planar 3 that was seared into
my memory over the long years I owned one.
The significant achievement of the new P3-24
is how well it has addressed the failings of
the table’s predecessors while maintaining the
ability to extract the music. The new
directly-mounted motor does away with the old
Planar’s speed variation, leading to a more
accurate way with the starts and stops of
notes, and with the tempi and rhythms of the
music. But it is the combination of the
changes to the RB300 arm, its arm-mounting
method, and the plinth’s material that forever
alters that ingrained memory of the older
table’s sonic signature. Gone is that slightly
thick and slightly slurred way with bass
notes. Bass is now articulate, forceful, and
controlled, and very clearly portrayed.
Fluidity of bass rhythms approaches that of
the best aftermarket modifications of the old
RB300 arm, banishing forever the ‘hula dancer
with a slight back-ache’ impression that the
older table evoked. The slight tizziness in
the treble, held by some to be the result of
resonance in the RB300’s spring-loaded VTF
method, fades to the threshold of perception
with most cartridges when the device is
by-passed. Simply set the tracking force dial
on the arm to “3” (no tracking force pressure
from the internal spring) and apply the
tracking force purely with the counterweight.
The P-24’s new-found clarity and accuracy
across the sonic bandwidth demands tearing out
and forgetting that old ingrained sonic memory
of the old Planar. Yes, the new P3-24 is
considerably and significantly better.
Like almost every turntable on the market the
P3-24 benefits enormously from additional
isolation. The table’s tripod rubber feet,
like most rubber or elastomer compounds, offer
isolation at frequencies roughly from 30 Hz
and above only. The primary contaminants of
structure-borne environmental vibration lie in
the low-bass and sub-bass areas, and require
more effective isolation to keep from entering
and clouding the performance of the P-24. I
found the Townshend 3-D Seismic Sink air
platform (now sadly discontinued) or the
Stillpoints Universal Resonance Dampers to
achieve the best results. Effective isolation
yields an enormous increase in the amount and
coherency of low-level detail, along with an
increased overall clarity throughout the audio
bandwidth. The P-24’s bass quality in
particular became superb when the table was
isolated. Consider purchase of an effective
isolation device as a first priority; it makes
a bigger difference than, say, buying a $1500
cartridge.
The Rega’s felt platter mat has always been
rudimentary and I replaced it with the Ringmat,
which not only isolates the record from the
platter’s material but also damps the record’s
internal resonances while it is being played.
The Ringmat produced clearer and more accurate
tracking than the felt mat: hard and fast
simultaneous high frequency transients were
tracked clearly and without smear, allowing
the identity of each of the instruments during
these sonic events to be clearly and
individually perceived.
I thus base my comments on the P3-24 mounted
on the 3-D Seismic Sink and with the Ringmat
replacing the stock felt mat. Rega offers the
P3-24 pre-mounted with the Rega Elys2 moving
magnet cartridge, a real boon for those unable
to mount a cartridge themselves, or too far
away from a willing (and competent) dealer to
do it for them. The Elys2 slots in under
Rega’s top moving-magnet cartridge – the Exact
– lacking that cartridge’s line-contact
stylus. The Elys2 uses Rega’s 3-bolt headshell
mounting system, and arrives precisely torqued
into the RB301 arm. All the user has to do is
screw on the counterweight and apply tracking
force and anti-skate, both idiot-proof
operations.
The Elys2 proved a very musical match to the
P3-24. Like all of Rega’s moving magnet
cartridges, the Elys2 sounds big, bold, vivid,
and dynamic, with a rich sonority that sounds
neither fat nor lean. The Elys2 portrays the
full harmonic structure of the instrument. Its
sound is well balanced from top to bottom with
particularly forceful and controlled bass.
Above all, it is musical - allowing one to
concentrate on the music rather than being
distracted by the sound. I was very taken by
its performance in the P3-24, and not really
bothered by its slight lack of ultimate
refinement and a slight crudity, which I
assumed to be the limits of its design. I then
switched to the optional TT PSU motor power
supply.
Wrong, Assumption Boy! The cartridge improved
to an almost unbelievable degree, becoming
fully fluid, refined, and supple, its slight
crudity completely gone. I have spent many a
long hour in my 35-year audio career listening
to the difference between various power
supplies to AC motors (I do, after all, own
two Linn Sondeks,) comparing AC to DC motors,
repeating the tedium by doing the same power
supply testing with DC motors, and even
factoring in an occasional battery power
supply. Someone has to do it. So I’m no
stranger to the differences power supplies can
make, both to the sound and musical
organization of the sound. Still, I was
astonished by the sonic and musical
improvement the TT PSU made. I used it for the
rest of my cartridge tests.
Rega has long catered to music lovers who are
not interested in becoming audiophile
hobbyists forever tweaking their gear.
Consequently Rega has traditionally designed
their tonearms’ height to work optimally with
their own cartridges, thus eliminating one of
the more fiddly and excruciating tonearm
adjustments, that of setting the correct SRA/VTA.
The Rega cartridges are unusually short top to
bottom, making arm height adjustment essential
to correctly set VTA/SRA for most non-Rega
cartridges. Rega offers new dedicated spacers
for the new RB301 arm. Changing arm height by
adding spacers is, to be blunt, a pain in the
ass, but not completely insufferable unless
you’re constantly changing cartridges … like I
was.
I ran through a bevy of cartridges, both
moving magnet and moving coil, ranging in
price from the $50 budget champ Audio Technica
AT 95E on up to the $1750 Cartridge Man
Musicmaker Classic. The P3-24 handled most of
them with aplomb, only running into problems
with the hottest-sounding moving coils, whose
rising top-end frequency responses were fully
exposed. Since there are a great number of
more neutral-sounding and intensely musical
moving magnets on the market, I don’t consider
this to be a major limitation on the Rega’s
part; truly it is a flaw of the cartridge.
Not unexpectedly, the P3-24 does have its
limits. Given the inherent impossibility of
the job a turntable is required to do (you
try removing a mote from the eye of a flea
during a hurricane from ten miles away,) the
P3-24’s ultimate limits are understandable and
forgivable, especially considering the P3-24’s
$895 price. Specifically, the P3-24 lacks the
clarity and transparency of the next-level-up
in turntables, like the $1595 Funk Vector, or
the Origin Live Aurora MK. II at $1300 (both
without arm, and both, incidentally, equipped
with DC motors) sounding diffuse and cloudy by
comparison. It also lags behind them in sheer
rhythmic brio (OK, “Boogie Factor”,) timing,
and in unraveling complex rhythmic patterns.
Make no mistake, though. Those factors are
mostly there with the P3-24, they’re
just not as clear to the perception.
Those entering the turntable market for the
first time are faced with a great variety of
choices. By the very nature of the impossible
job it has to do, the LP front end is
necessarily expensive, as it is first and
foremost a mechanical device, demanding
precision, quality of parts and materials, and
scrupulous fashioning. The biggest mistake
budget-oriented (read: cheap) buyers make is
to buy too inexpensive a turntable, just to
“see what all this LP hub-bub is about.” The
LP is capable of supreme musical and sonic
performance - timing, rhythmic sophistication,
dynamic shading, accuracy of timbre, and
intensity of musical expression – but it
requires a far more expensive minimum
threshold in order to render it. While an
increasing number of manufacturers are
producing cheaper turntables – even the deadly
and dreadful Japanese Direct-Drive tables have
come back from the dead – buying an inadequate
turntable will fatally distort the LP’s
considerable music merits.
The older Planar 3 long ruled the roost of the
‘minimum threshold’ turntable. The continuing
overall progress in the analogue world has
raised the bar considerably in the past few
years. While long-time LP enthusiasts with
sophisticated analogue rigs might not blanch
at spending $900 for, say, a high-performance
tonearm cable, those entering the LP world
might turn very pale indeed at $900 for an
entry-level turntable. By entry-level I mean a
device that does what it’s supposed to do
without any glaring faults. Given the quality
of the vanguard of contemporary LP playback,
the older Planar would fall far short. The
improved sonics and musical coherence of the
new P3-24 re-establishes its long-held
position: for most listeners, it is the least
expensive turntable worth buying today if you
want to get LP right.
From a monetary view, the rising hierarchy of
sonic improvements to the P3-24 would run as
follows: first, the P3-24 mated with an Audio
Technical AT95E or AT95s/a cartridge. Less
than $950. Then a state-of-the art isolation
system. Say a set of Stillpoints under a shelf
of hardwood. $400. Then a Ringmat. Roughly
$125. Then the Rega TT PSU power supply. $345.
Only then would buying a better cartridge
logically enter the picture. The Rega Elys2
and the Exact2 would be the obvious first
choices, topped only, perhaps, by the more
expensive Cartridge Man MusicMaker III.
Whether the new P3-24 attains the same
longevity as its classic predecessor is
difficult to predict, though its physical
reliability looks akin to that of a stone axe.
Certainly it is a more accurate and neutral
product than the old Planars were. Most
importantly it achieves its new level of sonic
accuracy without compromising the music
encoded in those sonics. The P3-24 is
musically convincing, sonically neutral, and
very easy to live with long-term. Only
compared to far more expensive turntables and
arms does its slight lack of ultimate clarity
and resolution impinge. Whether it matches
one’s own internal minimum threshold demands,
of course, personal audition. But a lot of
music lovers are going to love this table. And
maybe even keep it long enough that they will
put it in their wills.

####
Specifications:
2-speed belt-drive turntable.
24-pole AC synchronous motor.
Glass platter riding on sub-platter.
Felt platter mat.
Oil-bath bearing.
New RB301 tonearm.
Price: $895.
Optional TT PSU motor power supply: $345.
P3-24 with pre-mounted Rega Elys2
moving-magnet phono cartridge: $1095.
Address:
Rega Research Limited
119 Park Street
Westcliff-on-Sea
ESSEX
ENGLAND
SS0 7PD
Website:
http://www.rega.co.uk/index2.htm
US Distributor:
The Sound Organisation
159 Leslie Street
Dallas, Texas 75207
Ph: 972-234-0182 Fax: 972-234-0249
Website:
http://www.soundorg.com/
Email:
steve@soundorg.com

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