I will consider both the Denon and AT as far as carts, thank you; right now I'm toying with the idea of going towards something less expensive than the Technics SL-1200 (perhaps their "consumer" level SL-BD20) and which comes with a cart already installed.
The SL-1200 is a "consumer" level TT. The others are just cheap.
I understand if you can't spring for the better TT at the moment, but if you MUST buy a cheap one, AT LEAST get one of the cartridges WmAx or myself recommended. I'm sorry, but you really can't get away with skimping in this area, it's a difference between night and day.
If you buy a headshell and the AT-440mla cartridge from Turntableneedles.com, they will install it in the headshell for you, provided you have a TT with a removable headshell (ala Technics SL-1200). It may not be perfect, but it will be close. You could always use more than one headshell anyway.
Also, You seem to be not taking to heart some sound advise regarding this matter. I'd rather go without a TT than to waste a couple of hundred on some brand new cheap thing. Trust me, I've been there and done that.
You can get by with a cheap amp and CD player. You can even get by with cheaply priced speakers (ala Behringer), but you can't get by with a lousy TT/cartridge.
There are no "best kept secrets" or miracle workers today in the area of TT analog playback at a dirt cheap price... unless your willing to go with the used market.
Wait and save your money for a better TT and cartridge or get a nicer vintage one from a reliable seller.
Thanks for the tip! I was considering going with a much more significant "step up" boutique brand like Sumiko, Rega or Pro-Ject for a table, but I always somehow come back to Technics in this regard.
Regarding the Technics, you really can't come back to what you never had in the first place. Also, if you can spring for the Rega/Project, you might as well wait a little while longer for something better (not necessarily a SL-1200). Even their base model TT's are ridiculously expensive considering what you get, and some of the cartridges that come with them are rather lousy (once again... been there, done that).
The brand new Rega P2 I bought a few years back was missing the little rubber piece on the tone arm rest right out of the box! The motor also made a strange noise occasionally and the dealer told me that this was normal. Ridiculous!
To be fair, Project/Music Hall makes some quality TT's at the upper levels, but it looks like you're not prepared to spend that kind of money anyway.
But that's interesting about Sumiko's Oyster and the Regas...indeed, you wouldn't think analog perfectionists would let QC slide even on a cart. It reminds me of the Sony Blu-ray players, which were plagued with issues from the format's launch even though Sony was and still is one of the major proponents behind the BD Association...most of their machines didn't even support the new surround codecs until generations later, if I recall correctly, and they still don't get top marks from reviewers or magazines. In that way, you would think the major force behind the high definition format winner would get their **** together, right?

And that's why it reminded me of what you're saying about those TT manufacturers.
Not surprising from Sony. They've fumbled up in some way just about every great thing they pioneered save for the Compact Disc.