The Rega Naia Turntable. Add Lightness.
Stereophile|January 2025
To watch as Rega very slowly expands its turntable offerings upmarket requires the patience of a Thomas Pynchon addict waiting for each new tome from the notoriously slow-working and reclusive author.
The Rega Naia Turntable. Add Lightness.

Starting out 51 years ago with just one turntable model, Rega now offers turntables at seven different price levels, plus a few minor variations in between. During the "lost years" of waning turntable and vinyl sales in the 1990s and early 2000s, Rega boss Roy Gandy' candidly admits that the company put little effort into advancing its turntable designs, as sales at the time didn't really justify the investment. Rega had shifted its focus to digital source components, amplifiers, and loudspeakers, and even introduced a tube CD player.

That momentum finally started to reverse about 15 years ago, as the vinyl revival started to kick in and turntable sales began to pick up again. By this point, Rega was a much larger company and was able to leverage its growing reputation to engage with cutting-edge high-tech manufacturing subcontractors. Through these new relationships, they created a test bed turntable called the Naiad that would extend their design philosophies as far as was feasibly possible. I wrote about Rega's early years and guiding principles back in Spin Doctor #6,² but in 2009, with 35 years of success behind them, they had reached a point where they had the resources to explore what was ultimately possible, and not just what they could sell to their customers.

This story is from the January 2025 edition of Stereophile.

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This story is from the January 2025 edition of Stereophile.

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