If one is getting started out and isn't quite sure, then the 'low-end' route may be the only practical option for some. Often times, used units will need some varying degrees of 'tune-up' (and occasionally, they can't be fixed, but can be quite rewarding when a good working one is found 'on the cheap'). On the used end, it can be a variety of turntables in the lower price range, with varying levels of quality (from an inexpensive Aiwa as mentioned at the start of this thread, to a well built classic such as an Elac Miracord or any belt drive Japanese turntable from the 70s or 80s). Your payment of 15 goes to an industrywide fund that ensures batteries from Cannondale e-bikes are recycled at end of life and do not end up in. That being the case, I'd have to guess the 'minimum acceptable' low end is a turntable that can at least play the records without serious mistracking/skipping, play reasonably at the correct speed and not sound horrible (no excess 'wow' or 'flutter', as I've heard in some of those 'all in one' retro setups). Along with 20+ other leading bike companies, Cannondale is proud to be a part of the e-bike battery recycling program organized by PeopleForBikes and administrated by the not-for-profit Call2Recycle. I was thinking this thread was perhaps about the minimum acceptable for 'low end', either 'as new' or 'used price range'.
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