Vinyl Fans Are Using Smartphone Apps to Expose $5,000 Turntables — And the Results Are Brutal
High-end turntables have long been seen as the pinnacle of vinyl playback. But thanks to smartphones and a few clever tools, everyday vinyl fans are proving that some of these pricey machines aren’t living up to the hype — and vintage decks are stepping in to steal the spotlight.
Smartphones vs. $5,000 Turntables: The New Audio Showdown
It all started with a simple question: Are those expensive turntables really worth it?
Vinyl enthusiasts like Luca Sorrentino decided to find out for themselves — not with a lab full of equipment, but with accessible tools and a DIY spirit. Using a Bluetooth force and acceleration sensor, Sorrentino collected over 300,000 data points in five minutes, detecting tiny variations in rotation speed that traditional methods often miss.
“I was able to make the most precise measurement of wow and flutter that I happened to be able to do and see,” he said, posting his results on the Audio Science Review forum.
Others took a simpler route — like Balle Clorin, who placed an iPhone directly on a spinning record and fired up the Wow Flutter app by developer Philip Broder. This app uses the phone’s internal gyroscope and accelerometer to detect speed stability and RPM drift.
“The app shows similar wow and flutter variations to a test record,” Clorin noted. “And anyone with a smartphone can try it.”
Surprising Results: Vintage Machines Outperform Luxury Decks
Sorrentino tested four turntables — from classic to contemporary — and the numbers tell a compelling story:
Turntable | Wow & Flutter (RMS) | Peak Wow | Peak Flutter |
---|---|---|---|
Lenco L75 | 0.045% | ±0.15% | ±0.08% |
Sansui XP-99 | 0.05% | ±0.13% | ±0.07% |
Sony PS-X555ES | 0.08% | ±0.18% | ±0.09% |
Revox B790 | 0.12% | ±0.22% | ±0.12% |
- Lenco L75 (Vintage Idler Drive): A sleeper hit. With a bit of maintenance, it delivered incredibly low wow and flutter — plus a dynamic range of 110 dB.
- Sansui XP-99 (Direct Drive): Smooth and symmetrical performance. Decades old, yet still rock-solid.
- Sony PS-X555ES (Unserviced): Showed signs of motor jitter, but Sorrentino believes a proper tune-up could make it shine.
- Revox B790 (Serviced, Quartz Locked): Despite its high-end status, it showed cogging and inconsistencies — likely from aging circuits and limited adjustability.
And it’s not just Sorrentino’s tests. One user compared a Michell Gyro SE to a Technics SL-1500 — turntables from vastly different price ranges. Surprisingly, both showed nearly identical speed variation: around 0.05–0.06%, despite the Michell costing significantly more.
What’s clear is this: price alone doesn’t guarantee performance.
A $5,000 deck that hasn’t seen maintenance in years can easily fall short next to a lovingly restored $300 vintage model. And thanks to these new measurement tools, the data backs that up.
For vinyl lovers, this is a wake-up call. The myth that “expensive means better” is being challenged — not by opinion, but by hard numbers.
The audiophile world is changing. Tools like smartphone apps and Bluetooth sensors are democratizing turntable testing — giving regular users the power to dig into wow, flutter, and speed drift with impressive precision.
While some purists still prefer to trust their ears and avoid “ruining the magic,” the rise of data is shifting the conversation.
And the message is clear: even the best gear needs care.
- Testing turntables is easier than ever. You don’t need a lab — just a phone and a few minutes.
- Vintage turntables can outperform modern luxury models. Especially if they’re well-maintained.
- Specs and price tags don’t tell the whole story. Real performance can only be measured.
- Maintenance matters. More than most people realize.
Some modern high-end turntables still perform brilliantly — but they don’t get a free pass anymore. Thanks to these new tools, myths are being replaced by measurable reality.
Source: Headphonesty – Vinyl Fans Are Using Smartphone Apps to Shame $5,000 Turntables, and the Results Are Brutal