The Article
Lenco L-3808 Turntable: Direct Drive on a Budget
24th May 2017
Want to go direct drive but are afraid of the expense? Lenco might have a surprise for you. Paul Rigby reviews the Lenco L-3808 (and provides a money off deal: see the end of the review)
Right, take a quick look at the price point below and then take a gander at the images and you just know that Made In China or similar is hidden somewhere within the chassis of this Lenco design. At this point the analogue snobs will lift their nose and leave the room. Still here? I’m glad, because this little turntable has a few surprises in store.
But what about that strobe light and pop-up light (for DJ use) that will immediately warn you that this might be a sad little Technics 1200 rip off? In this case, first impressions are very wrong indeed (although the turntable is recommended as an effective budget DJ tool, that’s true).
The construction is relatively solid for this price point with an all up weight of 5.4kg (the competing Dual MTR-75 weighs in at 4kg, for example).
The unit arrives with a dust cover but I would recommend removing it during play to avoid noise from its rather shaky mounting. By all means put it back, in place, when your listening session in over to protect from the dust.
The S-shaped arm looks and feels flimsy and small but it is secured well with an arm lock to prevent accidents. At the end of the arm is a removable headshell containing a standard (for this price) Audio Technica AT-3600 cartridge which Lenco asks you to run at a tracking force of 2g. Interesting because Dual, via its MTR-75 turntable, requests that you run exactly the same cartridge at around 3.25g! I know which one I’d rather place in my vinyl grooves! If you do buy yourself this deck, upgrade to a better cartridge ASAP. Something non-conical too which will enhance detail retrieval and the sonics immeasurably.
A manual turntable, beginners will be happy to see an arm lift which worked easily and well. An included moving magnet phono stage (which appears to be similar to that featured in the Dual MTR-75) is fitted within the chassis to save costs and to enable you to connect the deck to an amplifier’s line input or powered speakers. It can be switched to accept an external phono amplifier too, something that I would highly recommend as soon as you can afford one to further increase sound quality. A USB digital output is also present that can be used with the included Audacity music editing software to enable digital recording of your analogue discs. A mains cable is pre-fitted to the turntable.
IN USE
I found that, playing the turntable at 33.33, I did have to move the pitch adjustment just a tad from the default ‘0’ postion, to correct a slight speed drop.
OK, there’s no quartz control connected to the direct drive motor here, so you can’t expect nailed on speed control but it ain’t too bad once you get to grips with the pitch adjustment. The 8-pole, 2-phase design does a decent job considering the price.
Apart from that, the Lenco sprang into life without any issues.
SOUND QUALITY
I began the sound tests playing a selection of the 80s minimalist synth outfit, Bizarre Unit, combining vocals, sparse early synths with organic instruments
One of the principle failings of the budget turntable – even more so the sub-budget table – is how very much out of control it is in terms of assembling and presenting diverse frequencies to your ear. Just about everything that can go wrong normally will: blooming bass, smearing midrange and faltering stereo image with a flat soundstage and no character to any of the instruments. The Lenco addresses many of these failings from the core of one single feature: it’s direct drive motor. This single, yet essential, feature gives the turntable that one essential weapon in its sonic armoury, control. Because of the direct drive motor, there is far more focus and precision in terms of overall presentation than you would normally expect at the low, low price point.
Apart from the stereo image being rock solid and central, the bass was noticeably heavier than normal with a heft and weight that added significant presence to the entire track. Drums were meaningful and full of character, giving a foundation to the music that moved it forward at a steady pace while the midrange was, for the price, so accurate it actually created air and space in the soundstage, allowing more vocal reverb to be ‘visible’. This accuracy also infused the electric guitar with a sense of extra speed, as the transient performance improved immeasurably. The bass guitar also had more form and character. The vocals – both male and female – exuded emotion but also the delivery provided new details and nuance while the synths stopped spewing their smearing frequencies over everywhere and kept themselves to themselves. They no longer tried to mask subtle details, giving the music a richer flavour.
I then moved to the jazz vocal of Gogi Grant and the track By Myself, from the 1960 LP, Granted It’s Gogi on Living Stereo.
Grant’s wide ranging and dynamic vocal needs space and air to expand into and the Lenco, considering it’s low price point, certainly offered that. Grant fairly sparkled into a stereo image that pushed backwards as a 3D effect, allowing her big band orchestra to play around her. The focus upon her vocal allowed the ear to follow each element of her delivery with some ease.
The brass offered no brightness or stridency but, instead, had a texture through the vibrational effects of the performance giving an admirably brassy tone to this section of the backing band while keeping a measure of reverb to add energy to its effect.
Bass, from this direct drive, bounced and responded splendidly. The double bass having a notable sense of power and control on the early parts of this track. Percussion was particularly successful off this track. Partly, because the precise treble performance allowed the cymbals to offer both delicacy but also accuracy.
CONCLUSION
It’s not perfect – how can it be at £200? This is a sub-budget design so the myriad of tiny design quirks can and should be forgiven. The sound quality, meanwhile, is absolutely superb. A real shocker because it really shouldn’t be at this low, low, price. The Lenco is a solid (in plastic terms, at any rate), great sounding and easy to use turntable. A top class budget performer and a brilliant choice for anyone wanting to enter the vinyl fray.
LENCO L-3808 TURNTABLE Price: £200 Tel: 0333 1234 603 Website: www.lencouk.com TO BUY CLICK BELOW: UK - https://amzn.to/35TNWIA EUROPE - https://amzn.to/35ZtSV4
GOOD: precision, focus, ease of use, bass, price, direct drive
BAD: slight initial speed adjustment required
RATING: 9
REFERENCE
Dual MTR-75 turntable
Trichord Dino phono amplifier
Rega Brio-R amplifier
Spendor S3/5R speakers
Tellurium Q cabling
Harmonic Resolution Systems Noise Reduction Components
All vinyl was cleaned using an Audio Desk’s Ultrasonic Pro Vinyl Cleaner
funny question! it happened after the end of the record.the volume was half the level up
and suddenly after the pink floyd session, the prodigy emerged (that was at the moment
on the spotify playlist) but in very low volume. it took a while to realize whats going on.
i assume it has do with the amp circuit?
Sounds like an isolation issue re. the amp but if you close one source down before you listen to the other then you should be fine.
Hola Paul! Tengo una duda, realmente esta tornamesa es la misma que la L-400bk? Acabo de comprar la L400 en bestbuy y tu reseña me ha ilusionado mucho, otra cosa, como se solucionaria el problema de que la tornamesa no cuenta con tornilmo para conectar un cable tierra cuando se utilice la salida phono? Gracias y saludos!
Hola Gerard: creo que el ‘BK’ se refiere al color negro del chasis. No te preocupes por la tierra Si el Lenco requer√≠a conexi√≥n a tierra externa, entonces habr√≠a un cable de conexi√≥n a tierra proveniente de los cables phono. Deber√≠as estar bien. Perd√≥n por mi pobre espa√±ol.
Hola Gerard perdona la intromisión, yo también tengo el L-400BK(lo acabo de comprar) y tengo problemas con el ajuste de contrapeso del brazo y el anti-skating, ya que haciendo el ajuste solo consigo que el brazo quede detenido cuando lo pongo en el 1,en posición de 2, 2,5 o más hace skating, es raro ya que es el valor recomendado. Además lo raro es que probándolo en estos valores incluso 3 o 3,5 el movimiento del brazo se produce hacía el eje y no hacía afuera, que creo sería lo normal.
En fin perdona la parrafada solo quería saber si te había pasado algo parecido. Lo estoy comentando con Paul a ver si se soluciona, aunque no se si al final lo cambiaré por otro.
Disculpa y un saludo!
hello again paul.greetings from the hot greece.hope to visit our country for a few (or better for a lot!) days
in the summer. so any solulotion for the ultimate problem: what can you do for the “noise”
in phone mode since the turntable has not grounding cable for the amp.would a good rca cable
help? or would be better to have in line mode so that to have quite sessions?
Hi Ioannis – the solution is simple, to use an external phono amplifier. This will lower veiling noise and improve sound quality. You will need to use decent interconnect cables to link one with the other of course.
ok,i use already an external phone since my amp has a phone option and also a
grounding , but the record player doesn t have.so what can i do here?
What phono amp are you using? Are you hearing a loud humming noise?
the onkyo a9030.yes its annoying in the quiet parts of the record.
Hi Ioannis – so you’re using the phono amp included within the Onkyo?
OK – if you’re using the Onkyo’s phono amp then that is classed as an ‘internal’ phono amp, not external. An external amp is a stand-alone unit, with it’s own chassis. The noise you’re hearing is probably coming from the Onkyo. This is the downside of having a phono amp share the same space as your main amp. I’d recommend an external model. If you want to go in that direction, give me a budget and I’ll do my best to help.
negative paul.i have zero budget right.something else that could posibly help?
if you have an external pre-amp then you connect with to the line socket of your amp?
With an external phono amp, yes you just connect it like you would connect a CD player, for example. Rega has one for around £90, Project sell them for around £60 and you can pick up second hand examples from eBay for less. Cambridge have some nice discontinued examples. the 551P is one.
https://technosound.gr/dynavox-tc-750-black-phono-mm/ could something cheap like that help somehow?
bingo! i found the source of the “noise”.it s the air conditioner! i suppose there is nothing
i can do about it…
Good stuff – can you turn it off when listening to music? Is it in the listening room?
yes paul,its in the living/listening room.impossible to turn it off when it s 35 degree (and its june yet!)
i suppose even an external pre-amp could not help in this case…
Isolation and separating components will help but I would probably target the mains supply into your hi-fi system first. As this is an invasive noise you’re receiving then a power conditioner is what you should look at. Here is one example just to show you what I mean. They do arrive in different price points, of course and, as you might expect, the more expensive they are, the better they perform: https://theaudiophileman.com/psm-156/ and here is a quick demo: https://theaudiophileman.com/sound-vision-2018-puritan-audio/ There are cheaper units available, out there.
https://www.soundimage.gr/product/dynavox-x-6000-filtro-reymatos did i understand right,
are we talking about the same thing?
Yes, that’s the sort of thing. Although I have not tried and tested that model.