The Audio-Technica AT-LP70X is $20 off as a Black Friday deal at Best Buy, making it $179.
Also: The best Black Friday deals live now
ZDNET’s key takeaways:
The Audio-Technica AT-LP70X retails for $199 and comes in stylish colors like black and silver, black and bronze, and white and silver.
This entry-level turntable has an impressive sound thanks to its stylus, with excellent vibration isolation.
However, it doesn’t have an adjustable counterweight or adjustable anti-skate.
When I first started my vinyl journey in 2013, all I had was a pink suitcase turntable that would eventually take its toll on some of my records. Over the years, I’ve upgraded my setup significantly, testing out dozens of turntables, and I’ve consistently been impressed with Audio-Technica.
Audio-Technica has been making high-quality audio equipment since 1962, and it just debuted a new turntable aimed at budding vinylphiles. The Audio-Technica AT-LP70X<!–> sits in between the infamous LP60X–> and the LP120X<!–>—both excellent turntables in their own right. However, I recently went hands-on with the LP70 and was utterly impressed.
The Audio-Technica AT-LP70X comes in either standard or Bluetooth models – I tested the standard model. It has a built-in phono preamp so you can directly connect it to speakers if you want, a belt-drive design, a sturdy J-shaped tonearm, and the AT-VM95C phono cartridge, which Audio-Technica says can be switched out with other VM95 series styli (such as the AT-VMN95E and the AT-VM).
This conical stylus is good – almost too good for how cheap it is ($39). Conical means it has a spherical tip, and these styli are usually the most inexpensive and entry-level type of styli for turntables. Still, the AT-VM95C sounds just as good as the stylus I have on my personal turntable.
It produced a clear, room-filling sound with that signature subtle vinyl crackle, even with the oldest of my records, an original 1969 “Abbey Road”. For one of my newer records, Taylor Swift’s “The Tortured Poets Department”, the AT-LP70X perfectly isolated the layered vocals on one of my favorite songs, “So Long, London”.