| The Origin Live Aurora Mark II
Turntable |
Premiere US Review of Mark Baker’s New
Breakthrough Affordable Turntable |
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July 2008 |

One of the most satisfying experiences of
reviewing audio gear is discovering new
companies whose products truly get the music
right. The UK’s Origin Live, headed by Mark
Baker, has been one of my happiest finds of
the last eight years. I have more or less
systematically attempted to review all their
products – tonearm modifications, tonearms,
turntables, DC motor kits, and connecting
cables. Origin Live’s products have proven
so spectacular musically and sonically that
I’ve actually bought ten of them. I have
used their Aurora Gold turntable and
Conqueror tonearm as my reference LP sources
with a level of satisfaction that usually
only accompanies successful Grail Quests.
The Gold/Conqueror combination, augmented by
the Townshend 3-D Seismic Sink and the
Ringmat LP Support System, running The
Cartridge Man MusicMaker Classic cartridge
into the Graham Slee Reflex phono stage, has
maintained its position as the most
musically communicative LP playback I’ve
ever heard.
Origin Live’s designer Mark Baker is THE
vanguard of turntable/tonearm design today.
Indeed, sometimes he is so far ahead of the
pack that he makes the competition seem like
amateurs. For, despite the continuing
emergence of new analog gear, far too many
products are either obscenely over-priced,
unbalanced and incomplete in design and
execution, or amateurishly obsessed on
single design factors (such as high mass, or
futilely trying to meld the LP to the
platter.) Part of the reason for Baker’s
pre-eminence is the amount, sophistication,
and intellectual depth of his engineering,
research and development. These are allied
to a truly holistic practical understanding
of all the factors that make a
turntable/tonearm work, and a uniquely clear
understanding of the demands of music. This
last attribute is all-important; while the
Origin Live products excel in sonics and in
all the audiophile sound-staging tricks,
these are subsumed to the clear and direct
portrayal of the music.
Particularly notable is the speed of the
development of OL’s products. Mark Baker has
been on an inspired rush of creativity and
design insight in recent years. Many of his
products now bear Mark III status. I have
been completely satisfied with the
performance of my Aurora Gold/Conqueror
set-up, so much so that the announcement of
the Aurora MKII, even though it is half the
price of my Gold version of the Aurora, did
not exactly have me salivating. After all,
how good could it sound?

Visually comparing the new Aurora MKII to my
obsolete Aurora Gold (replaced by Origin Live’s new
Calypso) showed a family resemblance: Drive is by
belt from an outboard DC-motored ‘pod,’ the two
tables both show a small tripod footprint, and both
do away with extraneous mass, revealing a clear and
functional form. The changes in the Aurora MKII from
the Aurora Gold seem like subtleties, but loom large
in terms of performance and price-saving. The most
obvious visually is the change in the drive belt,
which is now clear and of round section and drives
the outer rim of the one-piece platter and
spindle/bearing. Gone is the flat belt driving the
sub-platter, and separate platter of the old Aurora
Gold. The motor pod is squatter and larger in
diameter, with a larger footprint, its footing more
stable. Electronics for motor control are now
incorporated into the motor pod, offering 2 speeds,
fine screw-driver adjustment for each speed, and
input for 2 different power supplies, an included
wall-wart type and an optional upgraded, outboard
transformer type. The chassis and arm-mounting
platform of the MKII are thicker and constructed of
a different combination of materials. The VTA
adjustor (dedicated to OL arms and single-pillar
style Rega arms) is new and now incorporates cork
de-coupling of the arm from the turntable. The new
and thinner platter is whiter in color and looks to
be of a different material from the old acrylic
type. Overall the new Aurora MKII is more visually
integrated and less top-heavy than the departed Gold
version. Oh, yes! It also sells for half the price.
Initial set-up is straightforward and quick, greatly
eased by an excellent owner’s manual. Set-up is
lengthened only by the necessary burn-in time of the
electronics, belt, and platter bearing. One
positions the subchassis, levels it (the feet are
adjustable), fills the bearing cup with the supplied
oil and inserts the platter bearing spindle. Next
place the motor pod into the chassis’ cut-out,
measure the distance between the motor pulley’s
center and the center of the LP spindle, and install
the belt. Install the arm, taking care not to
tighten the nut too tight on the arm pillar so as to
compress the cork de-coupling of the threaded VTA
adjustor (and thereby defeating it.) Dress the arm
cable through the P-clip that attaches to the arm
mount platform, and the table is up and running. Now
comes the critical part of the table’s performance –
burn-in and fine tuning – essential to extracting
the magic potential of the Aurora MKII.
A simple approach is to set the table up initially
as well as possible, listen to it for a few days or
so (leaving the platter spinning overnight). Once
broken-in, one can then fine tune by re-setting
platter speed and doing a final tonearm adjustment.
Origin Live supplies a strobe disc to set the speed,
so it’s just a matter of setting the fine speed
potentiometers in the motor pod base. The moveable
outboard motor pod allows variation in the distance
between the motor pulley and the spindle center, and
depending on this distance, the speed setting can
slightly change. I preferred a longer distance
between the pulley and spindle rather than a shorter
one (OL gives a range of acceptable distances) to
get the magic of music happening. It is essential to
settle on a given distance of the motor pod from the
chassis before finally fine-tuning the speed. Origin
Live’s DC motor speed adjustability is exceptionally
precise. Once burned-in and set, the speed
consistency remained spot on and required no further
adjustment. The Origin Live DC motor drive makes all
AC synchronous motors sound crude and wobbly by
comparison. For an additional $291 one can add OL’s
Upgrade Transformer to drive the DC motor, and get
even steadier and more rock solid speed.
The tightness of the tonearm locknut is crucial too.
Just finger tight is right. While the fine-tuning of
the platter speed and the tonearm mount might appear
finicky and tweaky, they are essential to the
performance of the Aurora MKII. Be cavalier with
them and the results will have you remarking on the
sonics – the deep bass, clear highs and transparent
midrange - and swooning over the sound-staging and
precise imaging with typical audiophile naivete.
Take the effort to set them exactly right and you’ll
be raving about the music.
The Aurora MKII’s feet look matter of fact but are
part of a remarkable achievement – the Aurora is so
effectively isolated from the physical environment
and so immune to the pernicious effects of internal
vibrations that no further isolation systems are
really needed. This is a true breakthrough. Most
turntable feet are useless for isolating subsonic
frequencies and appear almost as afterthoughts.
Since turntables are extremely susceptible to
non-musically related vibrations of all kinds, I
have used isolation products with them now for 12
years as a standard essential set-up procedure. I
played the Aurora MKII on 3 different,
state-of-the-art isolation systems and found no
significant musical improvement with them. (Concrete
basement floor, turntable placed on small
furniture-type table.) Since isolation can run from
$300 up to the thousands of dollars, the designed-in
isolation of the Aurora MKII is a terrific boon.
Congratulations to Mark Baker for dealing
successfully with this all-important issue!
The Aurora MKII’s platter, while looking innocent
and non-descript enough, is uniquely successful in
not exacerbating the resonances generated into the
vinyl LP by the tracking of the stylus. Despite the
variety of platter materials, weights, clamps,
special mats, and vacuum systems that have appeared
over the years, none of them have proven completely
successful. While they can change the sound, most
offer no improvement to the communication of the
music, especially those that attempted to somehow
meld the LP to a high mass platter. The exception
has been the Ringmat, which isolates the LP from the
platter and damps the resonances within the LP with
a low-tech looking combination of parchment and cork
rings. The complete Ringmat LP Support System, which
adds platter damping, shims to adjust LP height to
accurately set VTA/SRA of the stylus, anti-static
mats, and an LP-top mat to the Ringmat, has been my
default tool for LP playback. I was pleasantly
surprised to find that the Aurora MK II played neat,
with the LP resting directly on the table’s white
platter (and, of course, no record clamp or weight)
sounded so similar to a full-monty Ringmat set-up
that I was hard pressed to favor one over the other.
Since a full Ringmat LP Support System will cost
close to $400, the sophistication of the Aurora’s
platter is another significant boon. Add the savings
gained from not having to buy an aftermarket
isolation system to this saving and the Aurora
MKII’s already extremely reasonable US$1300 price
becomes even more of a bargain.
I listened to the Aurora MKII with the Origin Live
Conqueror MKII, Silver MKII, and with their modified
version of the Rega RB250 tonearm. Results were
commensurate with the ultimate abilities of the
tonearms: I was deeply impressed at how well the
Aurora worked with my reference Conqueror arm. Here
was a $1300 table armed with a $4400 arm and it was
clear that the Aurora MKII was not out of its
league. In fact its performance rivaled the almost
three times as expensive reference system I am used
to. This is astounding performance for such an
affordable turntable.
All of Origin Live’s products excel at revealing
LP’s music-making strengths: believable and
true-to-life timbre, coherent recreation of
low-level detail, accurate tracking of subtle volume
and dynamic shifts, and a sense of swing, rhythm,
and timing that makes perfect sense and is
infectiously involving. Above all is the
communication of the artistic intent of the music.
As you move up the OL product line each LP strength
improves, yet each product is deeply satisfying at
its own price and position in the OL hierarchy.
Origin Live’s product line is one of the most
rational in the industry. You get improvements in
degree, not in kind, as you ascend the product line,
maintaining the trademark OL balance of sonic
coherence and the essentials of music-making.
Furthermore, I’ve always found Mark Baker’s claims
and recommendations to be utterly reliable, even
when they went against my own preconceptions.
Though Origin Live’s entry-level table, the Aurora
MKII is a truly significant product. No other
turntable near its price is even close to its sonic
and music-making abilities, and all will demand
after-market ancillaries to even begin to be able to
work as they should. The saving of the price of
these isolation and record interface ancillaries
pays for an arm upgrade or for the phono cartridge.
The Aurora’s ability to handle even an ultra arm
like the Conqueror expands its range of application.
I would say that the symmetrical price of the $1691
Origin Live Encounter arm would yield a truly
balanced system, allowing choice of just about any
cartridge on the market.
Analogue playback is necessarily expensive to fully
exploit the LP’s true potential, and unlike much of
the screw-the-rich pricing rampant in ‘The High
End’, OL offers a direct and musical payback for its
higher price. Considering that there are turntables
on the market that demand a mortgage to buy, the
Aurora MKII’s $1309 ($1600 with the Upgrade
Transformer) price is unusually rational. Mark Baker
has done it again: the Aurora MKII sets the musical
and sonic standard for its price range. It is
capable of communicating the intent of all kinds of
music and of triggering the deepest and most exalted
musical ecstasy. My wholehearted recommendation.


Specifications:
Belt-drive DC motor turntable.
Price: -
$1309.05. Upgrade Transformer - $291.02
Address:
Origin Live
Unit 5 362B Spring Road
Sholing, Southampton
UK SO19 2PB
tel/fax: +44(0)2380 578877
E-mail:
originlive@originlive.com
Website:
http://www.originlive.com

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