I have no feedback issues with my turntable setup when playing at relatively loud volumes, excess of 80db .. There is some (very slight ..its not a CD afterall
) groove noise between tracks but even in the quietest parts of a music track, I don't hear it.
[QUOTE="sterling shoote] My Sony PS-4750 Turntable, a direct-drive manual model, was purchased about 40 years ago for about three hundred dollars. The latest cartridge for it, a Shure V15V-MR, was purchased about 20 years ago for about four hundred dollars. In an attempt to understand what's out there today, something that might perform as good as my current set-up, my research led me to a Rega PS6 and Ortofon Black MM cartridge, an outfit which would cost me about two thousand dollars. I assume there are some LP playback solutions for a lot less than that, which could provide a satisfying experience with some material, maybe not. I think it would largely depend on the mind-set of the buyer. That's to say, it would depend on what the buyer perceives he is getting for his money, as well as the reality of the listening experience. Before I got my Sony/Shure combination I was dissatisfied with record players from BSR, Duel, and B&0. None of those units and cartridges could track very well and I perceived I was not getting all that was in the groove to get. I know I get everything from my records with my current set-up. There's detail and sound stage as heard from CD, Yet, it's the additional stuff from LPs that distracts me from greater enjoyment, like pops, groove noise, inconvenience, record maintenance, storage, and more. Still, perhaps like you may think, there's something quite compelling about turntables and LPs, I just can figure out why I am drawn to it, like a moth drawn to the light.