You can see right through Audio-Technica’s new transparent turntable

Audio-Technica’s engineers are seemingly working overtime to elevate the design of the record player. Following the reveal of its floating, glowing Hotaru turntable last month, the company has announced its new AT-LPA2 featuring a chassis and platter made from transparent acrylic. With electronics like its power supply and playback controls packed into a separate unit […]

May 15, 2025 - 17:32
 0
You can see right through Audio-Technica’s new transparent turntable
The Audio-Technica transparent AT-LPA2 turntable against a white background.
You’ll want to make sure to regularly dust underneath Audio-Technica’s new transparent turntable, too. | Image: Audio-Technica

Audio-Technica’s engineers are seemingly working overtime to elevate the design of the record player. Following the reveal of its floating, glowing Hotaru turntable last month, the company has announced its new AT-LPA2 featuring a chassis and platter made from transparent acrylic. With electronics like its power supply and playback controls packed into a separate unit that can be kept out of sight, the turntable is a reminder that transparent tech can still look modern and sleek.

The AT-LPA2 features a similar design to the Audio-Technica AT-LP2022 turntable that was released in January 2023 to help commemorate the company’s 60th anniversary. The previous version was limited to just 3,000 units made available worldwide and sold for $1,200. The new AT-LPA2 is available starting today, and while its rollout won’t be as limited, it now costs $2,000. Audio-Technica’s transparent turntable on a wooden stand in front of a shelf full of record sleeves.

The base of the turntable is made from a 30mm thick slab of high-density transparent acrylic, while the spinning platter atop is made from the same material that’s 20mm thick. It not only makes for a striking design, but acrylic is also an effective material for dampening vibrations which improves playback performance and helps keep the turntable operating quietly.

Direct drive turntables, in which the spinning platter is part of the electric motor, offer superior performance over those that use a separate motor connected with a belt. But in this case, a belt drive actually serves to enhance the aesthetics of the AT-LPA2. To ensure accurate playback, Audio-Technica includes an optical sensor that monitors the platter’s rotation so it maintains a constant speed of either 33 1/3 or 45rpm. A close-up of the cartridge and tone arm of Audio-Technica’s new transparent turntable.

The company redesigned the tone arm included with the limited edition model, but it’s still made from carbon fiber to help reduce its weight and includes interchangeable counterweights that can be added and removed to help keep the arm balanced with different cartridges. A close-up of the turntable’s separate control unit.

To help keep the turntable’s chassis as transparent as possible, playback controls and other buttons are included on a separate unit that also houses the power supply. That approach not only lets you position the control unit out of sight since it’s not transparent and doesn’t match the AT-LPA2’s aesthetic, Audio-Technica says it also isolates the turntable’s audio components from power supply noise “resulting in a cleaner, more accurate sound.”