Michell Engineering -
"The Mighty Orbe" Turntable with Dustcover but without Arm.
Orbe

The Michell Orbe Turntable takes the established concept of the GyroDec and adds to it an extra level of isolation, better structural damping, and an improved motor drive system.
The motor controller employs the revolutionary Never-Connected mains isolation circuit.

Double chassis, suspended pendulum sub-chassis.
Damped sub-chassis.
60 mm thick massive acrylic/vinyl platter of high inertia.
Screw-down record clamp, compatible with standard and 180g audiophile pressings.
Inverted oil-pumping bearing.
Custom arm boards available for most tonearms.
High-quality standalone DC motor with tacho feedback speed control.
Orbe Controller NC motor power supply with Never-Connected circuit.
Finished in clear or black acrylic with black or aluminium metal parts.

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Our Price $12,999

Weight 19 kg
Dimensions 53 (w) x 41 (d) 21 (h) cms
With lid fully opened 53 (w) x 49 (d) 59 (h) cms.

What HIFI Review.

OUR VERDICT:
The Orbe is more than a decade old and remains a brilliant buy.
Don’t buy anything else without hearing this deck first.

FOR:
Brilliant Bass.
Sonic authority.
Detail resolution and organisation.
Well engineered feel.

AGAINST:
A lid costs £195 more.
Michell's Orbe has been in production for well over a decade. When it first appeared back in 1996 it was considered a massively expensive deck, priced as it was at just a fiver less than two grand.

Today, the Orbe SE does away with the large acrylic plinth and lid of the original, and retails for around 10 per cent more.
Compare that to the doubling (or more) in price that most rivals of the time have gone through and it's astonishing just what value this turntable represents today.
Performance hasn't stood still either.
Through the years the turntable has been steadily developed with improvements to the motor, arm mounting and power supply.
Our review sample came equipped with Michell's TecnoArm A ... a highly modified Rega arm and a rather nice Benz Micro L2 Wood moving coil cartridge.
The Benz Micro costs £670 and is well worth tracking down.
Set-up is simple enough; if you're the least bit mechanically minded, the Orbe is easy to set up.
The assembly instructions could be clearer and some pictures would be nice, but we reckon most people will have the deck up and running within an hour.
Of course, if you're a bit nervous about building it up, we're sure the supplying dealer would be happy to do the job.
The nice thing about doing it yourself is that you can see just how well engineered the deck is.
Everything is machined beautifully and fits just so: there aren't many rivals that better the Orbe's precision engineered feel.

Speakers, keep your distance:
Like all turntables, this fully suspended deck responds well to careful siting.
Keep it as far away from the speakers as you can.
Even if you can't hear the sonic feedback, vibrations caused by the speakers will impair the sound quality massively.
Also, make sure you place the deck on a light and rigid platform.
This will give it a good foundation to work from.
Take the required care and this Michell will pay you back with a brilliantly accomplished performance.
Authority is the first word that comes to mind.
This turntable produces an astonishingly weighty sound with rock solid low frequencies.
Impressive bass performance.
The Bassline from Bob Marley's "Stir It Up" is as powerful as we've heard, and delves exceptionally deep with breathtaking confidence.
Perhaps most impressive is the way low frequencies stay precise and articulate.
It's very easy for powerful Bass to be heavy-handed and lack agility, but the Orbe marries an impressive Bass performance with a beautifully layered Mid-range and a delicate Treble.
It treads a fine line, combining muscularity with delicacy better than any other similarly priced deck we've heard.
Bearing noise and other structural resonances are kept at an astonishingly low level, leaving the deck to produce vivid dynamics and a mass of well-organised detail.
Timing is particularly natural with the Orbe, conveying the drive and sheer emotion of Nirvana's "Nevermind" set with immense skill.

The TecnoArm is a worthy addition
Part of this performance comes down to just how good the TecnoArm is, too.
It's possible to partner the Orbe with far pricier alternatives and we have no doubt you would get a better sound.
However, when it comes to performance per pound, we struggle to think of an alternative we would prefer.
The TecnoArm may just be a modified Rega, but the changes, which include a drilled arm tube, better wiring and revised counter weight, have made an already great arm appreciably better.
The Orbe was a great deck ten years ago and it's an even better buy today.
There's nothing to criticise here.
If you want a top-class turntable and don't want to spend more than three grand on a deck and arm combo, audition this one.
You won't regret it.

What Hi-Fi? December 16, 2008 Review.