Fluance RT85 Review 2026
This Fluance RT85 review covers the one deck in the $549 range where the cartridge is the story. The Ortofon 2M Blue retails for around $236 on its own. The RT85 costs $549.99. Back out the cartridge and the rest of the turntable costs you $313. What you get for that $313 is a 3lb acrylic platter, a servo-controlled DC motor, a high-mass MDF plinth, a detachable headshell, and a two-year warranty. That is the whole argument for this deck. Not the tonearm, which is adequate. Not the auto-stop, which is slow. The cartridge and what surrounds it. If that sounds like the right trade for your situation, this review will confirm it. For context on where the RT85 sits among every deck at every price, see the best turntables guide.
Quick Verdict
Fluance RT85 Reference High Fidelity Vinyl Turntable
Specs
Pros and Cons
Design and Build
The RT85 plinth is high-mass MDF finished in a choice of Piano Black, Natural Walnut, Lucky Bamboo, or Piano White. The walnut and bamboo options look considerably better in person than the gloss black. Gloss black collects fingerprints from the first time you touch it and shows them permanently. If the deck is going to live in a living room and be handled regularly, order the walnut. It photographs better, wears better, and the warm wood against the black tonearm assembly is a genuinely good-looking combination. Cotton gloves are included in the box, which tells you something about the gloss finish.
Three pounds of precision-machined acrylic sits on a brass spindle with a brass bush in the platter hub. No wobble, no detectable noise. No mat is included or needed, the acrylic couples directly with the record surface, damping resonances differently from rubber or felt, and contributes to the speed stability figures that Analog Planet described as outstanding at this price and beyond in their Platterspeed app measurements. SoundStage confirmed similar results in an independent review. What does not match the platter and plinth is the tonearm. It is an S-shaped aluminium tube shared across the entire RT82 to RT85 lineup. It feels light in the hand. There is no VTA adjustment, no azimuth adjustment, and no detachable cable. Fluance spent the money on the cartridge and platter, not the tonearm, and the listening results reflect that clearly.
Setup
In the box: the plinth with tonearm, the acrylic platter, the drive belt, RCA cables, two ground cables, power adapter, 45 RPM adapter, bubble level, cotton gloves, and the dust cover with spring-loaded hinges. The 2M Blue cartridge arrives pre-installed on the headshell and pre-aligned. Attach the platter, belt, counterweight, and headshell. Level the deck using the three adjustable acorn feet and the included bubble level. Then balance the tonearm.
The tonearm balancing step is where the majority of first-time buyers go wrong. The counterweight is a heavy cylinder that screws along the back of the tonearm. On the front of that cylinder is a numbered indicator ring. These are two separate parts. The instruction is to turn the counterweight until the arm floats level, then zero the indicator ring without moving the counterweight. The most common error is turning only the indicator ring. When this happens, the arm tracks at the wrong force, sounds poor, and may damage records. Turn the whole cylinder. The ring follows it. Once the arm floats, zero the ring to match the force, then set to 1.8 grams and match the anti-skate dial.
Sound Quality
London Calling is the first test. Paul Simonon’s bass on the title track has weight and definition through the RT85. The attack at the start of each note is precise. The kick drum underneath sits slightly back and has body without bleeding into the midrange. Strummer’s vocals are forward and clear. The most immediate difference from the AT-LP120XUSB is in the high frequencies: Mick Jones’s first downstroke on the opening chord has more string texture, more bite at the attack. The note decays cleanly before the next chord arrives rather than blurring into it. The AT-VM95E on the LP120XUSB is also a nude elliptical, but the 2M Blue retrieves finer groove detail on fast transient passages. Not subtle once you have heard both on the same pressing.
Kind of Blue is where the RT85 is most at home. The piano on So What sits left of centre with enough body to feel physical. Bill Evans’s touch on the keys comes through with real texture. Hard attacks are distinct from soft ones. Miles’s trumpet occupies a specific, stable point in the image rather than drifting. The stereo width on Rumours is similar to what the Orbit Plus delivers and noticeably wider than the Sony PS-LX310BT via Bluetooth. Christine McVie’s piano sits firmly left, Buckingham’s guitar firmly right. That width is the 2M Blue working against a platter that does not send noise back up into the groove.
One honest note on placement. The RT85 is more sensitive to acoustic feedback than the AT-LP120XUSB if placed on the same surface as powered speakers. The first session produced a faint low-frequency resonance at higher volumes that disappeared when the deck was moved to a dedicated shelf. The Fluance manual specifically warns against placing the turntable on the same surface as speakers. Take that instruction seriously.
Fluance RT85 Reference High Fidelity Vinyl Turntable
The Ortofon 2M Blue
A nude elliptical stylus is machined from a single piece of diamond. A bonded elliptical uses a diamond chip fixed to an aluminium shank. The nude version makes contact with the groove wall more precisely because the geometry is consistent across the entire tip. The result is better channel separation, lower distortion in the inner grooves, and cleaner retrieval of high-frequency detail. The AT-VM95E on the AT-LP120XUSB is also a nude elliptical and also very good. The 2M Blue has a slightly finer tip radius and a higher output level (5.5mV vs 5.0mV). The difference between them is audible on acoustic music and on recordings with dense high-frequency content. It is not dramatic. It is consistent.
The tonearm’s load impedance of 47kohms and 100pF capacitance is spec-correct for the 2M Blue. This matters because cartridge and tonearm impedance interact to affect frequency response. Some budget decks that include the 2M Blue create a slight treble peak due to impedance mismatch. The RT85 does not. The Ortofon 2M Blue specification page confirms the electrical requirements and recommended load capacitance. Everything is matched correctly here.
Auto-Stop
The auto-stop function is controlled by a switch on the rear panel and can be turned off entirely. When enabled, the platter stops spinning approximately 30 seconds after the stylus reaches the run-out groove. The tonearm stays where it is. You still need to lift it manually using the headshell finger lift and return it to the tonearm rest. During those 30 seconds the stylus sits stationary in the groove, another reason to keep records clean before playing. See the vinyl cleaning guide for the right routine before every session. Multiple users report the function does not trigger reliably on some 45 RPM records, particularly thinner pressings where the run-out groove detection is less consistent. On standard LP records in normal condition it works as described.
The cue lever is damped on the way down and undamped on the way up. If you snap the lever upward quickly the tonearm bounces. On a record with loud passages this bounce can cause the stylus to skip. The correct technique is to use the headshell finger lift to raise the tonearm rather than relying on the cue lever for lifting. SoundStage specifically noted this and Fluance’s own representative confirmed the recommendation. It takes a few sessions to make the headshell finger lift the default habit.
Cartridge Upgrade Path
The 2M Blue uses the same cartridge body as the 2M Bronze and 2M Black. When the stylus wears out, the upgrade is a direct snap-on replacement. The 2M Bronze stylus adds a fine-line profile for deeper groove contact and around $150 more. The 2M Black adds a Replicant 100 profile, the finest available in the 2M range, for around $500 more. Each swap requires no tools and no realignment. The cartridge body stays in place. The tonearm accepts any standard half-inch mount cartridge within the 3.5 to 7.5 gram weight range. Note that the RT85N variant’s Nagaoka MP-110 cartridge is not interchangeable with the standard RT85 tonearm due to a different vertical tracking angle and tonearm height. For the full upgrade comparison across the 2M range alongside other options, see the best turntable cartridges guide. If you are also choosing speakers to pair with the RT85 and a phono stage, the best speakers for a record player guide covers powered options from $100 to $400.
Who Should Buy
For phono preamp options, the best phono preamps guide covers every option from $89 upward. The Pro-Ject Phono Box E BT5 at $152 is a well-matched pairing for this deck. For where the RT85 sits among every deck at every price, see the best turntables guide.
How It Compares
The AT-LP120XUSB at $399 is $150 cheaper, has a built-in preamp, plays 78s, and includes USB. Its AT-VM95E is a strong cartridge. The RT85 wins on cartridge quality and platter material. If you need the AT’s feature set, buy the AT. If you own a preamp and want the best pre-installed cartridge at this price, buy the RT85. The Pro-Ject Debut Carbon EVO at $649 is the more difficult comparison. Its carbon fibre tonearm is significantly better than the RT85’s aluminium arm. The Sumiko Rainier it ships with is weaker than the 2M Blue. If you plan to upgrade the cartridge within the next year, the Carbon EVO’s tonearm will serve that upgrade better. If you will leave the cartridge in place for three to five years, the RT85’s 2M Blue will deliver better sound throughout that period. See the full U-Turn Orbit Plus review for the $399 alternative that trades the 2M Blue for a magnesium tonearm and 3-year warranty.
Verdict: 8.0/10
The RT85 does one thing better than anything else at $549: it ships with a cartridge that costs $236 on its own. The 2M Blue on an acrylic platter with a servo-controlled motor is a genuinely good-sounding system, and the speed measurements back up what the ears report. The tonearm is the honest limitation. It is not distinguished. It will not embarrass you, but it will not thrill you either. The setup is the most involved of any deck on this site and the counterweight step trips up a meaningful number of first-time buyers. Watch the setup video, take the tonearm balancing seriously, put the deck on a dedicated surface away from powered speakers, and connect both ground cables. Get those four things right and the RT85 will reward you for years.
Fluance RT85 Reference High Fidelity Vinyl Turntable
Frequently Asked Questions
No. The RT85 requires an external phono preamp or an amplifier with a dedicated PHONO input. Two ground cables are also needed when using an external preamp: one from the turntable to the preamp, and a second from the preamp to the amplifier or powered speakers. Only one ground cable is included in the box. Without both connected, 60Hz hum is likely. See the best phono preamps guide for options from $89 upward.
Turning the counterweight indicator ring instead of the counterweight itself. The indicator ring is the numbered part on the front of the heavy counterweight cylinder. The instruction is to turn the whole cylinder until the tonearm floats level, then zero only the indicator ring. If you turn only the indicator ring, the tonearm will not track at the correct force and may damage records. Watch the official setup video before starting.
Auto-stop stops the platter from spinning approximately 30 seconds after the stylus reaches the run-out groove at the end of a record side. It does not return the tonearm to its rest. You still need to lift the tonearm manually. The feature can be switched off on the rear panel. It does not trigger reliably on all 45 RPM records due to differences in run-out groove depth between pressings.
The RT85 wins on included cartridge: the 2M Blue is significantly better than the Carbon EVO’s Sumiko Rainier. The Carbon EVO wins on tonearm quality: carbon fibre vs aluminium, with better long-term resolution for cartridge upgrades. If you plan to upgrade the cartridge within a year or two, buy the Carbon EVO. If you want the best pre-installed cartridge and will leave it in place, buy the RT85.
Yes. The detachable H-4 headshell accepts any standard half-inch mount cartridge between 3.5 and 7.5 grams. The included 2M Blue body accepts 2M Bronze and 2M Black styli as direct snap-on replacements with no tools and no realignment. Note that the RT85N variant uses a Nagaoka MP-110 on a different tonearm height and those cartridges are not interchangeable between models.
Almost always a grounding issue. Two ground cables are required when using an external preamp: one from the turntable to the preamp, and one from the preamp to the amplifier or powered speakers. The box includes only one. Without both connected, 60Hz hum is introduced into the signal. Buy a second standard ground lead or daisy-chain the included cable as a test. Also confirm the RCA cables are fully seated and the ground terminal on the turntable is connected.
James Calloway has been collecting vinyl for 22 years. He spent six years working at an independent record store in Chicago, setting up and demonstrating turntables for customers at every budget. He has personally owned and tested more than 40 decks from entry-level belt drive to reference direct drive. He writes all turntable reviews and gear guides for VinylPickup.com. No manufacturer sends products to this site. No brand has any input into what gets written about their products.
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