
A low-cost turntable with high-end features and fantastic sound quality.
+ PLUS
– MINUS
Carbon fiber is included in all sorts of products, sometimes for absurd and cynical reasons. My Philips Arcitec electric razor, for example, has carbon fiber trim on its sides. The carbon fiber doesn’t lighten or stiffen the razor, much less improve my shave. It merely adds cachet. Call me unromantic, but I don’t need my razor to evoke images of F1 cars and high-tech jets.
So why should you care that Pro-Ject dolled up its new Debut Carbon turntable with a carbon fiber tonearm?
A quick trip to the golf section of your local sporting goods store can tell you. Tap on the side of a metal golf club shaft and you’ll hear it ring. Tap on the side of a carbon fiber golf club shaft and you’ll hear nothing but a soft click. With this simple test, you can understand the advantages of the Debut Carbon over Pro-Ject’s less expensive Debut III.
The slightly tapered carbon fiber tube that forms the Debut Carbon’s tonearm is almost entirely non-resonant, so it doesn’t substantially affect the turntable’s sound. But the straight aluminum tube used on the Debut III’s tonearm has some resonance, which can add its own sonic signature. The “deadness” of the Carbon’s tonearm also damps vibration.
Pro-Ject didn’t just splice a piece of carbon fiber tubing into the Debut III’s tonearm. The designers really outdid themselves — the tube’s woven fiber is pressed flat to form the cartridge mount, with a slim finger lift molded from the same piece of carbon fiber.
The Debut Carbon includes more upgrades from the Debut III. Most significant is an Ortofon 2M Red moving-magnet cartridge, which costs $99 when purchased separately. That’s a step up from the Debut III’s stock $59 Ortofon OM-5e cartridge. The Carbon also has a platter that’s 20mm larger in diameter (and significantly heavier) than the Debut III’s.
Plus, the Carbon has two RCA output jacks and a ground terminal on the rear, while the Debut III’s cables are hard-wired into the plinth. Those who are into swapping cables in pursuit of better sound will rejoice. The rest of us will have the comfort of knowing we can easily change the cables if they malfunction.
The Debut Carbon is just $399, while the Debut III now sells for $329. Even the most parsimonious audiophile would cough up the extra $70 for all those upgrades, but still, I wondered what affect said upgrades might have on the sound.
Setup of any turntable is relatively complicated, but Pro-Ject makes it as easy as possible by shipping the Debut Carbon with the Ortofon 2M Red cartridge preinstalled. I checked the cartridge’s azimuth (left-right tilt around the tonearm’s axis) and alignment, and found that both were adjusted well enough that I didn’t need to mess with them. Vertical tracking angle (VTA) — the angle at which the tonearm sits when it’s resting on a record — isn’t adjustable, which some could consider a downside. But VTA isn’t adjustable on the Rega RP6 I tested for the June/July/August issue, and the RP6 sounds awesome.
You do have to install the drive belt, the platter, and the felt mat, but those tasks are no tougher than snapping a jazzy new case onto your iPhone. You also have to install the counterweight at the end of the tonearm, then set the vertical tracking force (VTF). That’s more complicated, but the manual deftly guides you through the steps. Using my Shure SFG-2 gauge, I set VTF at the required 17.5 millinewtons (1.75 grams). I then installed the anti-skate weight and was ready to spin.
I used the Debut Carbon in a stereo system with a Krell S-300i integrated amp and Krell Resolution One tower speakers, and also auditioned it in a headphone rig with HiFiMan’s HE-6 headphones and EF-6 headphone amp. I used an NAD PP-3 phono preamp. I didn’t have a Debut III on hand for comparison, but I did have the next best thing: my Pro-Ject RM-1.3 turntable, which at $499 is a modest step up from the Debut Carbon. In my review of the RM-1.3 on soundandvisionmag.com, I found it sounded much better than my OM-5e-equipped Pro- Ject One, the Debut III’s barely different forebear.










Copyright © 2013 Bonnier Corp. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.


I would be curious to know if the RM 1.3 with the 2M Red would be the best setup of the two, since you are crediting the Ortofon for the"midrange and treble" magic but giving the bass nod to the 1.3. I realize that you would now be comparing a $599 setup but in the analog world, that's a small price to pay.
I don't know, man...can someone explain to me how one turntable can have better BASS than another independent of what cartridge is installed?
Also, really? -- it's bad for the stylus to spend time in an LP's runout groove (Q Up Tonearm Lifter -- page 11 of your latest print issue -- you describe it as "crashing into the label"). I owned an AR XA turntable for about 15 years and occasionally fell asleep while a record was playing -- my Shure M91E seemed none the worse for wear!
@dolsey01: That would be an interesting comparison, but the Debut Carbon has gone back to Sumiko. One thing for sure is that I do like the Debut Carbon's arm better. The RM-1.3's arm is kind of rinky-dink. I would really love to have a carbon-fiber arm on the RM-1.3.
@abr88: Bass is surprisingly variable from turntable to turntable. It's not subtle. You'd have to consult a turntable manufacturer to explain why, but I've noticed it seems to have a lot to do with mass and damping. The MDF platter on the RM-1.3 is heavier and much better damped than the platters on the Debut models, which are relatively thin metal and not very well damped. I also noticed this when I was up at Innovative Audio last year and we did a blind shootout of a pretty massive old Technics vs. a less massive old Yamaha and a much less massive, relatively modern turntable (Rega, I think).