Strayx The Record Portable [work]
| Feature | Strayx The Record Portable | Numark PT01 | Sony PS-LX310BT (Desktop) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | 2.8 lbs | 4.5 lbs | 11 lbs | | Battery Life | 8 hrs (swappable) | 4 hrs (internal) | AC only | | Tonearm | Adjustable counterweight | Ceramic spring-loaded | Fixed counterweight | | Portability | Backpack-ready | Suitcase handle | Requires desk | | Bluetooth | aptX HD (Out) | Yes (Out) | Yes (In/Out) | | Price | $299 | $159 | $249 |
For the collector who also climbs mountains, the DJ who also flies economy, the listener who wants to escape the cloud and hold their music— is not just a gadget. It is a manifesto. Pack your records. Hit the road. Drop the needle. Keywords integrated: Strayx the record portable, portable vinyl player, battery-powered turntable, analog travel, record player for nomads. strayx the record portable
Prices start at $299 for the Core edition (black, 8hr battery) and go up to $449 for the Nomad edition (powder-coated orange, 12hr battery, carrying harness, and spare stylus). In five years, we may look back at the Strayx the record portable as the moment vinyl finally untethered from the wall outlet. It is not the absolute best-sounding turntable on Earth. That was never the point. The point is that music has always been a traveling companion—from the wandering troubadour to the walkman to the iPod. Strayx simply asks: Why shouldn't a record be part of that journey? | Feature | Strayx The Record Portable |
The midrange is where the magic happens. Because the plastic resonance of cheap portables is eliminated by the metal chassis, vocals on records like Joni Mitchell’s Blue are intimate and present. The high treble rolls off gently at 16kHz, which is a feature, not a bug—it eliminates the digital harshness of Bluetooth headphones. Hit the road