There actually IS the possibility to use laser to playback records (http://www.elpj.com), but I doubt the concept would work in a club/party environment, also, with prices starting at $15.000 it's quite unlikely to be interesting for a broader public.
I don't see a vinyl resurgence in DJing... For home consumers, maybe, but not for DJs.
But DJs like the ritual of using needles and tonearms. And how would you needle drop? While a scientific possibility, I'd say laser tracking vinyl turntables for DJs is a practical impossibility.
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Only on DJTT can a thread go from turntable to laser technology in 1 page.
If these turntables don't hover then Pioneer are doomed and will go under within 5 years.![]()
Pioneer making a turntable would be really cool considering what they've done with CDJs and blurring the lines between traditional DJing and controllerism, but it's definitely cost more than what Technics cost brand new that's for sure. I'm not sure how stoked people are gonna be about a $1000+ turntable, no matter how many cool features it has.
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I don't think there's much of a market for expensive turntables that aren't Technics. And if Technics couldn't make money why would Pioneer step in the ring. If they aren't reinventing the turntable they'll at the most release something like the Reloop RP-8000 for twice the price. Either way, they're not going out of business or creating the new industry standard.
As for needle dropping I imagined something like scrolling through a waveform or a simple touch strip the same way it's handled on controllers, CDJ's and DVS.
But this is useless speculation. I'm bored and wanted to talk about the possibility of fancy new tech on a site that used to like that kind of stuff.
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