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Home Reviews

Lenco LS-410

by New Edge Times Report
May 25, 2022
in Reviews
Lenco LS-410
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You can’t fault Lenco’s ambition with the LS-410 – but the reality is all too easy with which to find fault.

Pros

  • Great feature set
  • A quite good-looking item
  • Enjoyable, forthright sound when streaming

Cons

  • Can’t maintain a steady 33.3rpm
  • Turntable sound is underwhelming
  • Some components feel frail

  • 33.3 and 45rpmPlays records at 33.3 and 45 speeds

  • Audio-Technica cartridgeFeature cartridge from Audio Technica

Introduction

Lenco has plenty of experience when it comes to turning out audio products that outperform their invariably modest price.

The LS-410 – a turntable/Bluetooth streamer/amplifier-and-speakers all-in-one that’s extremely competitively priced – is just the brand’s latest attempt to serve up more than seems possible. But an impressive on-paper spec is only half the battle: does the LS-410 have it where it truly counts?

Availability

  • UKRRP: £219.99
  • USAunavailable
  • EuropeRRP: €219
  • Canadaunavailable
  • Australiaunavailable

The Lenco LS-410 is on sale now, and in the UK you can pick it up for around £219. US customers are looking at $259 or thereabouts – and should the LS-410 make it to Australia, we expect it to be on sale for AU$379.

Of course, there are record players available for this sort of money, and Bluetooth speakers as well. You can also buy an amplifier for less than £219 without too much difficulty. But all of those in one box? Good luck finding a worthwhile like-for-like comparison to this Lenco at anything like the asking price.

Design

  • Nicely constructed and finished cabinet
  • Tonearm and associated elements feel rather frail
  • Hinged dust-cover

Imagine a record player on stilts. Or a turntable with a cellar. In the above image, the Lenco LS-410 looks exactly like a record player – but view it from dead-ahead and it’s quite a lot taller than is usual.

Lenco LS-410 rear connections

This is because of its extensive functionality. And it hasn’t stopped Lenco building and finishing the cabinet pretty impressively; there’s nothing luxurious about the way the LS-410 feels, but it looks the part and it’s constructed well. The combination of metal, wood and plastic sits together in harmonious fashion. It stands on four semi-circular rubber feet, all the better for rejecting vibrations that might otherwise make their way into the cabinet.

Lenco LS-410 tonearm

The LS-410 isn’t quite so impressive when you examine some of the components, though. The straight, metal tonearm feels insubstantial, and both the lift that raises and lowers it, plus the clip that holds it in its cradle, feels even less sturdy. When you consider how robust the cabinet and the plinth on which the tonearm stands appear, that’s a real pity.

Features

  • Bluetooth 5.0
  • 33.3 and 45rpm
  • 50 watts, four speaker drivers

The Lenco LS-410 is most obviously a record player, the aluminium platter with felt slip-mat give the game away somewhat. However, that isn’t where it ends; the Lenco LS-410 has quite a few other tricks up its sleeve.

First of all, it’s fitted with 50 watts of amplification. This powers a four-strong speaker array – they’re lined up, firing-squad style, behind the metal mesh grille at the front of the cabinet. It has Bluetooth connectivity, too, using Bluetooth 5.0 to wirelessly stream from your smartphone or other device.

Lenco LS-410 connections close up

If you want to hook up the LS-410 to an external system, there are stereo RCA outputs on a little panel at its rear – and there’s a switchable phono stage on board, too, in case the external system in question doesn’t have the necessary power.

The turntable element of the LS-410 is, not surprisingly, belt-driven. The motor and the tonearm assembly sit on a sprung portion of the plinth, in an effort to keep them as isolated as possible. Beneath the tonearm (which is pre-fitted with a very acceptable Audio-Technica cartridge), you’ll find a little control panel.

Lenco LS-410 with lid on

There are some rather wobbly buttons that look after speed selection (33.3 or 45rpm), “play/pause” (which, rather excitingly, works with vinyl as well as wireless streaming), and “power on/off/input selection” (in addition to vinyl and Bluetooth compatibility, the LS-410 has a 3.5mm analogue input on the rear of the cabinet). There’s also a dial for dealing with volume control.

Sound Quality

  • Very listenable Bluetooth sound
  • Vinyl performance sounds neutered and unnatural
  • Speed stability is lacking

If ever there was a game of two halves, the Lenco LS-410 is playing it. The difference between the way it performs when working as a wireless speaker and when on turntable duty is quite marked.

It isn’t a bad Bluetooth speaker at all – although given that it’s mains-powered and has a full-sized record player on top, it’s hardly the last word in convenience. Bluetooth 5.0 is able to stream hi-res Tidal Masters files without difficulty, and with a full-fat file of It Doesn’t Matter by The Chemical Brothers playing, there’s plenty to like about the work the Lenco does.

The top of the frequency range is rolled off quite significantly, so treble sounds don’t quite have the bite they should, but below this the news is all pretty good. The mid-range is open and quite articulate, heavy with detail and organised enough to let each competing element of the recording function with autonomy.

Lenco LS-410 audio technica cartridge

The bottom-end sees nicely judged presence, appreciable weight, and a degree of control that’s essential if bass isn’t going to swamp the mid-range. Detail levels remain high, and the momentum that pretty much every Chemical Brothers’ tune demands is apparent.

The LS-410 is a little inhibited in dynamic terms, but it’s nevertheless perfectly capable of explaining the difference between “loud” and “quiet”. It’s reasonably dextrous where rhythms are concerned, and offers a decent unity of performance, even when playing a laptop-and-headphones confection such as this.

Lenco LS-410 close of speaker grille

However, switch to vinyl as a source and much of the Lenco’s assurance deserts it. Low-frequency detail levels take a hit, as does the robust solidity that’s so apparent when listening to a wireless stream. There’s a faint-but-undeniable sensation of phasing to the mid-range, a lack of tonal consistency that makes music sound rather unnatural. This tonal uncertainty infects the top of the frequency range, too – but here, at least, the top-end’s rather truncated nature mitigates this a little.

Most unsettling of all, though, is the Lenco’s apparent inability to keep a 33.3rpm disc spinning at a consistent 33.3rpm. Glaring errors in rotational stability aren’t necessary to make a record sound weird – and when spinning a copy of Roots Manuva’s Brand New Second Hand, the errors are minor but apparent all the same. It serves to undermine a big aspect of what the LS-410 is meant to be all about.

Latest deals

Should you buy it?

Streaming is as important as vinyl The LS-410 is quite a lot more enjoyable when used as a wireless speaker.

You want to discover the reason that vinyl is popular The Lenco doesn’t exactly showcase the format’s strengths.

Final Thoughts

There’s almost certainly a proper product in the LS-410 somewhere. Perhaps if it cost £399 then the LS-410 would present proper speed control, more robust components and a more convincing vinyl reproduction. But it seems Lenco’s determination to deliver at as eye-catching a price as possible has resulted in too many compromises.

How we test

We test every turntable we review thoroughly over an extended period of time. We use industry standard tests to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever, accept money to review a product.

Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy.

Tested with a range of vinyl records

FAQs

Does the Lenco LS-410 have an integrated phono stage?

No it does not, but it arguably doesn’t need one with its built-in speakers

‹

UK RRP

USA RRP

EU RRP

CA RRP

AUD RRP

Manufacturer

Size (Dimensions)

Weight

Release Date

Model Number

Turntable Type

Speeds (rpm)

Ports

Cartridge

Connectivity

Colours

Lenco LS-410

£219.99

Unavailable

€219

Unavailable

Unavailable

Lenco

440 x 36 x 192 MM

6 KG

2022

LS-410WA

Belt Drive

33.3, 45

3.5mm analogue, RCA output

Moving Magnet

Bluetooth 5.0

Wood

›

Jargon buster

Bluetooth

Bluetooth – named after 10th-century Danish king Harald Bluetooth who united Denmark’s tribes into a single kingdom – is a method of wireless transmission that allows for the exchange of data between devices over short distances.

You can’t fault Lenco’s ambition with the LS-410 – but the reality is all too easy with which to find fault.

Pros

  • Great feature set
  • A quite good-looking item
  • Enjoyable, forthright sound when streaming

Cons

  • Can’t maintain a steady 33.3rpm
  • Turntable sound is underwhelming
  • Some components feel frail

  • 33.3 and 45rpmPlays records at 33.3 and 45 speeds

  • Audio-Technica cartridgeFeature cartridge from Audio Technica

Introduction

Lenco has plenty of experience when it comes to turning out audio products that outperform their invariably modest price.

The LS-410 – a turntable/Bluetooth streamer/amplifier-and-speakers all-in-one that’s extremely competitively priced – is just the brand’s latest attempt to serve up more than seems possible. But an impressive on-paper spec is only half the battle: does the LS-410 have it where it truly counts?

Availability

  • UKRRP: £219.99
  • USAunavailable
  • EuropeRRP: €219
  • Canadaunavailable
  • Australiaunavailable

The Lenco LS-410 is on sale now, and in the UK you can pick it up for around £219. US customers are looking at $259 or thereabouts – and should the LS-410 make it to Australia, we expect it to be on sale for AU$379.

Of course, there are record players available for this sort of money, and Bluetooth speakers as well. You can also buy an amplifier for less than £219 without too much difficulty. But all of those in one box? Good luck finding a worthwhile like-for-like comparison to this Lenco at anything like the asking price.

Design

  • Nicely constructed and finished cabinet
  • Tonearm and associated elements feel rather frail
  • Hinged dust-cover

Imagine a record player on stilts. Or a turntable with a cellar. In the above image, the Lenco LS-410 looks exactly like a record player – but view it from dead-ahead and it’s quite a lot taller than is usual.

Lenco LS-410 rear connections

This is because of its extensive functionality. And it hasn’t stopped Lenco building and finishing the cabinet pretty impressively; there’s nothing luxurious about the way the LS-410 feels, but it looks the part and it’s constructed well. The combination of metal, wood and plastic sits together in harmonious fashion. It stands on four semi-circular rubber feet, all the better for rejecting vibrations that might otherwise make their way into the cabinet.

Lenco LS-410 tonearm

The LS-410 isn’t quite so impressive when you examine some of the components, though. The straight, metal tonearm feels insubstantial, and both the lift that raises and lowers it, plus the clip that holds it in its cradle, feels even less sturdy. When you consider how robust the cabinet and the plinth on which the tonearm stands appear, that’s a real pity.

Features

  • Bluetooth 5.0
  • 33.3 and 45rpm
  • 50 watts, four speaker drivers

The Lenco LS-410 is most obviously a record player, the aluminium platter with felt slip-mat give the game away somewhat. However, that isn’t where it ends; the Lenco LS-410 has quite a few other tricks up its sleeve.

First of all, it’s fitted with 50 watts of amplification. This powers a four-strong speaker array – they’re lined up, firing-squad style, behind the metal mesh grille at the front of the cabinet. It has Bluetooth connectivity, too, using Bluetooth 5.0 to wirelessly stream from your smartphone or other device.

Lenco LS-410 connections close up

If you want to hook up the LS-410 to an external system, there are stereo RCA outputs on a little panel at its rear – and there’s a switchable phono stage on board, too, in case the external system in question doesn’t have the necessary power.

The turntable element of the LS-410 is, not surprisingly, belt-driven. The motor and the tonearm assembly sit on a sprung portion of the plinth, in an effort to keep them as isolated as possible. Beneath the tonearm (which is pre-fitted with a very acceptable Audio-Technica cartridge), you’ll find a little control panel.

Lenco LS-410 with lid on

There are some rather wobbly buttons that look after speed selection (33.3 or 45rpm), “play/pause” (which, rather excitingly, works with vinyl as well as wireless streaming), and “power on/off/input selection” (in addition to vinyl and Bluetooth compatibility, the LS-410 has a 3.5mm analogue input on the rear of the cabinet). There’s also a dial for dealing with volume control.

Sound Quality

  • Very listenable Bluetooth sound
  • Vinyl performance sounds neutered and unnatural
  • Speed stability is lacking

If ever there was a game of two halves, the Lenco LS-410 is playing it. The difference between the way it performs when working as a wireless speaker and when on turntable duty is quite marked.

It isn’t a bad Bluetooth speaker at all – although given that it’s mains-powered and has a full-sized record player on top, it’s hardly the last word in convenience. Bluetooth 5.0 is able to stream hi-res Tidal Masters files without difficulty, and with a full-fat file of It Doesn’t Matter by The Chemical Brothers playing, there’s plenty to like about the work the Lenco does.

The top of the frequency range is rolled off quite significantly, so treble sounds don’t quite have the bite they should, but below this the news is all pretty good. The mid-range is open and quite articulate, heavy with detail and organised enough to let each competing element of the recording function with autonomy.

Lenco LS-410 audio technica cartridge

The bottom-end sees nicely judged presence, appreciable weight, and a degree of control that’s essential if bass isn’t going to swamp the mid-range. Detail levels remain high, and the momentum that pretty much every Chemical Brothers’ tune demands is apparent.

The LS-410 is a little inhibited in dynamic terms, but it’s nevertheless perfectly capable of explaining the difference between “loud” and “quiet”. It’s reasonably dextrous where rhythms are concerned, and offers a decent unity of performance, even when playing a laptop-and-headphones confection such as this.

Lenco LS-410 close of speaker grille

However, switch to vinyl as a source and much of the Lenco’s assurance deserts it. Low-frequency detail levels take a hit, as does the robust solidity that’s so apparent when listening to a wireless stream. There’s a faint-but-undeniable sensation of phasing to the mid-range, a lack of tonal consistency that makes music sound rather unnatural. This tonal uncertainty infects the top of the frequency range, too – but here, at least, the top-end’s rather truncated nature mitigates this a little.

Most unsettling of all, though, is the Lenco’s apparent inability to keep a 33.3rpm disc spinning at a consistent 33.3rpm. Glaring errors in rotational stability aren’t necessary to make a record sound weird – and when spinning a copy of Roots Manuva’s Brand New Second Hand, the errors are minor but apparent all the same. It serves to undermine a big aspect of what the LS-410 is meant to be all about.

Latest deals

Should you buy it?

Streaming is as important as vinyl The LS-410 is quite a lot more enjoyable when used as a wireless speaker.

You want to discover the reason that vinyl is popular The Lenco doesn’t exactly showcase the format’s strengths.

Final Thoughts

There’s almost certainly a proper product in the LS-410 somewhere. Perhaps if it cost £399 then the LS-410 would present proper speed control, more robust components and a more convincing vinyl reproduction. But it seems Lenco’s determination to deliver at as eye-catching a price as possible has resulted in too many compromises.

How we test

We test every turntable we review thoroughly over an extended period of time. We use industry standard tests to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever, accept money to review a product.

Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy.

Tested with a range of vinyl records

FAQs

Does the Lenco LS-410 have an integrated phono stage?

No it does not, but it arguably doesn’t need one with its built-in speakers

‹

UK RRP

USA RRP

EU RRP

CA RRP

AUD RRP

Manufacturer

Size (Dimensions)

Weight

Release Date

Model Number

Turntable Type

Speeds (rpm)

Ports

Cartridge

Connectivity

Colours

Lenco LS-410

£219.99

Unavailable

€219

Unavailable

Unavailable

Lenco

440 x 36 x 192 MM

6 KG

2022

LS-410WA

Belt Drive

33.3, 45

3.5mm analogue, RCA output

Moving Magnet

Bluetooth 5.0

Wood

›

Jargon buster

Bluetooth

Bluetooth – named after 10th-century Danish king Harald Bluetooth who united Denmark’s tribes into a single kingdom – is a method of wireless transmission that allows for the exchange of data between devices over short distances.

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