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Thread: The TRIO KENWOOD L-07D Turntable - Legendary Build with Legendary Sound

  1. #1
    Join Date: Sep 2009

    Location: Derbyshire

    Posts: 9,252
    I'm Josie.

    Default The TRIO KENWOOD L-07D Turntable - Legendary Build with Legendary Sound

    My previous turntable was Thorens TD-124 MKII which I was in position for nearly 10 years. It was fully refurbished by Schopper and the sound was sublime. Running with an SPU GT with an SME 3009 it really rocked. Well, things change and I decided I really wanted to finally get my hands on an L-07D.

    When one came on the market I snapped it up and after a full service, I'm really glad I did.

    The Trio/Kenwood L-07D turntable hs always sparked my interest. I first saw one in a magazine back in the mid 90' and I was always impressed with its design. Not only that but the fact that it was made around the late '70s, mid-'80s.


    There is a mystery about this outstanding turntable. Nobody knows for sure who designed it or how much profit Trio made on the production. But the general consensus is that Trio didn't make a penny back on these turntables, in fact, some say they were even in deficit. It was purely a loss leader, a 'Statement flagship'. Even Kenwood today don't know much about the people involved with the design. There are some who say Micro Seiki had major involvement in the design too.


    The model name is actually an abbreviation of several different identifications.

    1. L- = 'Laboratory series' which used the very best components.
    2. 07 = The design team of 7 engineers
    3. D = The identification of the production of turntables within Trio/Kenwood.

    The Construction



    The L-07D is a very heavy turntable, weighing in at 35kg fully assembled. It's high rigidity closed-loop construction uses a selection of specially manufactured laminated materials to eliminate vibration.

    The extremely high inertia direct motor drive is kept perfectly in time with a crystal-controlled frequency generator and stays perfect no matter what influence the input mains voltage may have. And any abnormal external breaking of the platter is corrected instantly. So, when the designers set out to build a turntable with a 'zero tolerance' for speed errors, they did exactly that.

    In fact, the team re-designed the idea of the turntable full stop.



    The Plinth is a monster, a three-part affair utilising a huge aluminium subframe through which is bolted both the motor (via with 6 massive hex bolts) and the huge tonearm base. This massive machined aluminium casting is cast together into the main plinth section which is made from a concrete resin called ARCB (Anti-Resonance Compression Base).
    The last section is a large section of mahogany, seated and integrated into the ARCB base by 34 screws.

    This ARCB section forms most of the plinth and weighs 10kgs, t
    he aluminum frame which is embedded in the ARCB section weighs 2 kg and the Mahogany sub-plinth weighs another 7 kg. The 4 large adjustable feet are constructed of a two-piece machined brass billet and weigh 1.4kgs each.


    The Tonearm


    The tonearm on this turntable is also astonishing. The base of the tonearm weighs 3kg. It's a machined and cast unit allowing you to adjust the VTA on-the-fly whilst listening with zero tracking errors. The tonearm tube itself is made from a unique mix of resonant cancelling materials, hard aluminum, boron fiber and carbon fiber.

    The construction of the tonearm tube has a different structure of these materials at the cartridge end than the weighted end with the materials being layered in such a way as to adapt to the greater vibrations from the cartridge. It's truly a wonder of how this was achieved and the whole assembly lives up to being a separate precision machine on its own and a thing of beauty in its own right.

    Incorporating ultra hardened roller bearings which have zero play ensures precise tracking.


    The highest quality Litz wiring is used internally and all pins are heavily gold plated. The tonearm cable is also Litz using 168 wires per conductor.

    The Anti-Skate mechanism is an unusual yet ingenious mechanism. Using two machined metal end caps with a hair-like thread (Ethicon 689G suture thread) connecting both together. The thread has to be exactly 82mm in length between each cap. Each end cap has a machined hole in one end. These anchor to the tonearm and the arm base via a small peg. The thread is then wound around a small pully and then around a pivoted adjustable weight arm. Just this mechanism by itself shows the amazing attention to detail the designers went through.

    The L-07D also has a space for a second tonearm to be fitted at the back left of the deck. The blanking plate the deck is supplied with shows the space holes and measurements.

    The additional plates came in three forms:

    TB-07-A - This fits SME 3009 R: 218.5mm
    TB-07-B - This has a drill hole diameter 23mm, 3 pc 3mm bolt R 19mm and 3pc 4mm bolt on R 25mm from center main drilling R: 235mm
    TB-07-E - This has only a single drill hole diameter 30.9mm R: 222mm use this for SAEC WE-308SX





    The Platter

    The Platter is also something of beauty. It's beautifully machined, no flaws. Constructed from a triple layer composite of anti-resonant materials such as Aluminium and Duralumin. Then the top platter mat is made from a 5mm machined slab of non-magnetic stainless steel.

    Including the rotor, the combined rotational weight is 6.8kg. For even more stability, Trio included an inner weight (the DS-21) and an outer periphery stabiliser ring (the DS-20) increasing the rotational weight to 8.7kg, and if you were to include the ceramic platter (the TS-10) the weight jumps up to 10kg.



    The Control Unit / Power Supply

    The external power supply/control unit is a hefty bit of kit. Its umbilical cable contains 20 smaller cables and it uses a JAE connector to connect to the turntable. All the settings are adjusted here. When the turntable is serviced this unit also needs to be re-calibrated.


    The Sound


    A little bit about my system first. My system comprises of a Croft Epoch Elite which is highly modified. The internal phono stage is MM and so I'm using a Lentek SUT which has a great synergy with the Trio. More information on my Croft can be found HERE!

    The main amplifier is the Tube Distinctions copper amplifier using KT-150's. Discover more information HERE!

    My main speakers are Lockwood Majors with 15" Tannoy monitor gold drivers. More information can be found HERE!

    The sound is astonishing. I could just stop there as it sums it all up. The pace and timing was the main aspect I noticed immediately. I had to reconfigure my ears I guess. The bass is voluptuously gratifying and the image is centre stage, rock-solid with everything fitting together perfectly.

    The L-07D is a rare wonder. Something that was on sale when I was only 7 years old. Yet it's something that performs and looks like it was made much more recently. It makes me think how much this deck would now cost to design and produce. Okay, there are plenty of advancements in materials and components these days and even the control unit could now be the size of a Raspberry Pi. Probably smaller.

    But I love old tech. I love the workmanship, the passion, and the over-engineering which used to go into development and the L-07D is an astonishing example of that.


    The L-07D is a truly remarkable piece of engineering. For a company to indulge itself for the sake of prowess on a limited run of units is now unheard of. But in around the 1970s, 1980s and lastly the 1990s, large Japanese companies like this felt it was totally necessary and justified to give the reigns to it's top design teams to create one-off pieces of engineering to simply say... 'look what we can do'.

    The price of this deck in 1979/1980 was £1,550, in todays money (2022) it would set you back £6,200. So, if you would like to buy one of these wonderful turntables, pricing one up today in great condition with all it's accessories be prepared to pay around £3500 - £4500 mark. Since I bought mine, prices have risen sharply and for very good reason.

    For the price, finding a turntable which has so much going on like the L-07D, you'd still struggle to find something on an equal and legendary footing.

    But, once you have one, you won't want to let it go. It's a true classic and becoming rarer to find.


    Last edited by The Black Adder; 06-12-2023 at 16:42.
    Ultrafide U500DC power amplifier - Croft Vitale )highly modified) - TRIO L-07D Turntable - Denon DL103C1 - Funk Firm Houdini - Lentek MC head amp - 15" Tannoy Monitor Gold Loudspeakers in Lockwood Major cabinets (From Trident Studios) - Tannoyista SPEC 3 Custom Crossovers - VanDamme Black Speaker Cable

    Tannoyista.com
    - Audio Equipment Reviews
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  2. #2
    Join Date: Apr 2012

    Location: N E Kent

    Posts: 51,625
    I'm Geoff.

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    Great piece Jo. Beautiful engineering!
    It is impossible for anything digital to sound analogue, because it isn't analogue!

  3. #3
    Join Date: Aug 2009

    Location: Staffordshire, England

    Posts: 37,882
    I'm Martin.

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    Outstanding turntable. Some pieces hi-fi are a pleasure to own just for the superb engineering and build quality, the L-07D has to be one of the best in that regard.
    Current Lash Up:

    TEAC VRDS 701T > Sony TAE1000ESD > Krell KSA50S > JM Labs Focal Electra 926.

  4. #4
    Join Date: May 2010

    Location: Weymouth

    Posts: 3,463
    I'm John.

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    Absolutely beautiful and thanks for the great feature write-up.
    Sent by me using an appendage



    SME Model 15/V tonearm, Lyra Dorian, EAR Phono Box.

    Luxman 509X amp.

    PMC 25 23i speakers.

    Innuos/Roon/Qobuz/I-Pad. Oppo UDP-205.

    Cables by Kimber, Yannis and Audioquest.

    Audioquest Niagara. Tube Distinctions Mains power filter. Project RCM. Zerostat.


  5. #5
    Join Date: Sep 2009

    Location: Derbyshire

    Posts: 9,252
    I'm Josie.

    Default

    Your very welcome guys... Glad you like
    Ultrafide U500DC power amplifier - Croft Vitale )highly modified) - TRIO L-07D Turntable - Denon DL103C1 - Funk Firm Houdini - Lentek MC head amp - 15" Tannoy Monitor Gold Loudspeakers in Lockwood Major cabinets (From Trident Studios) - Tannoyista SPEC 3 Custom Crossovers - VanDamme Black Speaker Cable

    Tannoyista.com
    - Audio Equipment Reviews
    Facebook

  6. #6
    Join Date: Oct 2015

    Location: KL, Malaysia

    Posts: 258
    I'm shahrin.

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    Stunning tt
    Nice descriptiom too.
    Gosh that arm is truly an engineering beauty .
    Congratulations.
    Thorens td124 mk2 / Bokrand AB309/ 103r
    SLAT L75 / Jelco 850S / AT VM740ML
    Marantz CD63 / Bluesound / Musical Paradise 701 II/ ESP 500Hz eXO / PL Prologue 4 and Nord 1UP amps / JK Wynn semiactive NS1000 upgrade
    /ESP 700 Hz eXO / JBL 4333 components

  7. #7
    Join Date: Feb 2020

    Location: Brighton, UK

    Posts: 536
    I'm Peter.

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    That's a fine deck, a beautiful bit of engineering, and a great read.!

    Sent using Tapatalk
    Pete

    Micro Seiki DD40/MA505/Denon DL304
    Musical Fidelity MX-VYNL
    Musical Fidelity X-A200R
    ATC scm11

  8. #8
    Join Date: Jan 2013

    Location: Birmingham

    Posts: 6,806
    I'm James.

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    Great write up Jo. Good to see you are still using the Croft preamp. Have you had any more work done on this or is it still as you have detailed on your link?
    Main system : VPI Scout 1.1 / JMW 9T / 2M Black / Croft 25R+ / Croft 7 / Heco Celan GT 702

    Second System : Goldring Lenco GL75 / AT95EX / Pioneer SX590 / Spendor SP2

  9. #9
    Join Date: Mar 2016

    Location: Brighton, UK.

    Posts: 3,096
    I'm Mike.

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    Now that's proper engineering, none of this British 'secondary school metal work project' crap!
    Current system 1210 GR. CDP - Meridian G08. Amp -Sugden A21I - Sig. Wharfedale Lintons.

  10. #10
    Join Date: Jul 2009

    Location: Hampshire, UK

    Posts: 3,663
    I'm Adam.

    Default

    Great write-up!

    I must admit an L-07D is still an itch I'd like to scratch one day.
    Engineers: fixing problems you didn't know you had in ways you don't understand.

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