Some loss of innocence is expected with both age and experience. Because I tick both boxes, and in spite of my best efforts to the contrary, I’m often a bit blasé in the face of new review samples. I wasn’t with this one.
A brief recap: At the 2018 High End show in Munich, UK-based SME announced that they had taken steps to reintroduce the classic Garrard 301, a transcription turntable that’s been out of production for more than half a century (footnote 1). At the time of its introductionproduction began in 1953success for the British-built 301 was instant. It was also enduring; it stayed in production through 1965. Its high-torque AC motor and idler-wheel drive ensured the fast startups required by broadcasters, and its timeless styling and obviously high-quality construction earned it a place of honor among the hi-fi perfectionists of its day.
But when belt-drive turntables, which are cheaper to build, came into vogue, idler-drive models lost their lusteralbeit not before Garrard sold an estimated 65,000 301s. (Its mechanically similar replacement, the 401, was even more popular.)
Then something happened: Audio enthusiasts with a taste for vintage gearthose willfully ignorant fools who prefer cleanly designed low-power tube amplifiers, built without a cylinder head’s worth of aluminum, and very efficient, low-distortion loudspeakersdiscovered that idler-drive turntables were virtually unique in their ability to reproduce music with its sense of drive and impact still intactsurely a product of those generally high-torque motorsand decided that the Garrard 301 was one of the best, if not the best, of the breed. Prices of old 301s began to poke through the cloud cover, and a cottage industry formed around the restoration of old 301s and the making of compatible plinths.
It was into this world that SME, in the person of Ajay Shirkea noted record collector who is also the chairman of the Cadence Group, which owns SME and other audio brandsdropped their 2018 bombshell. Some of us were excited. Others wondered how the 301’s reintroduction would affect those whose livelihoods depend, at present, on the demand for restoring and maintaining existing samples. Still others reacted with the sort of belligerence one sees in film clips from 1963, when reporters would go around Liverpool asking early fans of the Beatles how they felt about the spread of Beatlemania: They resented the fact that their group would now belong to the world.
Then, in time for my August 2019 Listening column, it was revealed that the first wave of new Garrard 301s wouldn’t be entirely new: Rather, they would be built with mostly refurbished used parts (chassis, platters, motor casings) and new-old-stock parts (various fittings and springs). Combined with these would be a relatively few newly manufactured parts.
The plan was for the company to gradually phase in a greater proportion of new parts as older stocks were depleted. As Shirke pointed out, SME, which in the day manufactured a number of parts for Garrard, is already in the process of tooling up to manufacture new platterswhich, like the originals, will be cast and then machine-finished, rather than machined from solid as with many aftermarket 301 platters. Indeed, in my email correspondence with him, Shirke stressed SME’s intention to manufacture new Garrard 301s precisely as they were made during their original run, without attempting to second-guess or “improve” so much as a single element of the original design (footnote 2). That is commendable.
Here it’s worth noting that, contrary to some reports, in 2018 the Cadence Group purchased all things Garrardits designs, its knowledge base, all of its logos, everythingfrom Gradiente Electronics of Manaus, Brazil, which had acquired them in 1979. At the same time and in a separate arrangement, Cadence purchased from Terry O’Sullivan the Loricraft company, which designed and manufactured under their own name a line of very fine record-cleaning machines, and whose licensing agreement with Gradiente had allowed them to service Garrard turntables and to manufacture a turntable called the Garrard 501. Cadence now continues to manufacture Loricraft record-cleaning machines, but has shut down Loricraft’s repair and restoration business, as well as their business of commissioning and supplying spare parts for the 301 and 401. According to Shirke, the Cadence Group will make spare 301 parts available to purchasers of new Garrard 301s, as needed.
A study in cream
My review loanerserial number G003arrived during the last week of August, shipped in a heavy-duty carton made specifically for the new 301 and its companion products: an SME M2-12R tonearm, the model number of which reflects its approximate effective length in inches (it’s actually 308.81mm, or 12.16″), and a plinth whose generous (25.5″) width was obviously meant to accommodate that transcription-length SME. The top surface of the plinth is fitted with a 4″-diameter round armboard, cut for and fitted with an effective-lengthadjustable metal arm mount of the sort that SME has used for decades. According to Shirke, the new Garrard 301 is available only as a part of this package. (Only the SME M2-12R tonearm can be purchased separately, for $3100.)
My sample of the 301 itself was, to the extent that I could tell, a detail- by-detail recreation of a post-1957 Garrard, with an oil (as opposed to grease) main bearing and a platter whose outer rim bore gear-cut speed-indicator marks for use with a strobe. I was told by Ajay Shirke that its motor pulley, idler and motor bearings, brake switch and supporting parts, rubber mat, name plates, and all springs were newly manufactured, as were the isolation grommets used between the motor unit’s chassis and the plinth. The platter, motor, main bearing and spindle, and idler wheel were all remachined and resurfaced to contemporary specs; the chassis was stripped and cleanedas were various other mechanical bitsand repainted. Given the crisper creases on my original, the finish on the new 301 seems very slightly thicker than the original. But they nailed the cream color.
And that being said, I’m not sure I can describe my feelings upon seeing, for the first time, an absolutely pristine sample of something I’ve only ever seen look weathered and worn and covered with a patina of God-knows-what. This was especially true when gazing at the mechanicals, with the platter out of the way (it’s packed separately for shipping): Where were the dirt, the scratches, the oil stains, the nicotine, the mold, the discolorations, the cracked rubber, and the stretched-out springs? It was all a bit trippy, but in a very nice way.
And it must be said that the new 301’s packagingsimilar, overall, to the packaging in which new SME turntables are containedis superb and has obviously been designed specifically for this motor unit and its new plinth, with the SME tonearm in situ. (The counterweights and other bits and bobs are packed separately.) SME has even devised a couple of plastic fittingsmolded in red, presumably to grab the attention of the new ownerintended to protect the motor’s pulley and eddy-brake disc during shipment, and two appliques alerting the owner to the need to loosen two transit bolts to free up the motor’s suspension. Such details suggest that SME is playing the long game.
Druthers in arms
Long game or not, as a hobbyist who has at one time or another disassembled every part of his own Garrard 301, I confess my nerdy anxiousness to take this one apart, too. So I didup to a point.
My pokings-around were enabled by the design of the new SME/Garrard plinth, built in such a way that the motor unit and tonearm mount are both fastened to a 1″-thick slab of hardwood, 15.75″ wide and 22.25″ deep. In turn, that slab rests within the plinth’s hardwood frame: Plastic pegs on the underside of the former fit into compliant, Sorbothane-like isolation pods fastened to the gussets of the latter. To remove the slab, one simply lifts it straight up, using the tonearm mount and the bearing access hole (footnote 3)exposed when the platter is removed from its bearing spindlefor purchase. The plinth incorporates cable links for both the motor’s 120V AC and the signal from the tonearm wiring, the latter made for SME by Crystal Cable; most enthusiasts will surely hail the former, while the latter may earn the disdain of those who believe that an unbroken signal path offers superior sound. (On that count I am something of an agnostic.)
Although the core of the plinth is not terraced in the manner of some contemporary designsa refinement that, among other things, minimizes the size and number of resonant cavities beneath the motor unitthe frame is built with a sturdy wooden “floor,” with strategically placed openings that enable the cooling of the motor. The height of the plinth’s four plastic feet is adjustable.
Footnote 1: Garrard Turntables UK Ltd., No.1 New Finches, Baydon Road, Baydon, Marlborough, Wiltshire SN8 2XA. UK. Tel: (44) 1223 653199 Web: garrardturntables.co.uk.
Footnote 2: There is a single exception to this: In the original 301, various under-chassis mechanical parts, particularly elements of the switching linkage, were plated with cadmium to resist corrosion. But EU restrictions now limit the use of cadmium, owing to its toxicity, so SME has chosen to plate those parts with zinc instead.
Footnote 3: On 301s made during the first four years of production, that opening allowed users to tighten the pressure fitting on the grease bearing occasionally, thus forcing more grease into the well; after the late-1957 phasing-in of oil bearings, that now-needless opening remained a feature of all chassis.
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