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That's part of the Rub, Michael...as I'm sure you know. I found out quickly..when I got deep into video design work..that the same 'groups' of biases that occur in audio..also occur in video.
In video, for some folks, color fidelity takes precedent over anything else. For some...contrast takes precedent over anything else. For some, edge distortion. For others... contrast RANGE. Others.....framing jitter. And so on.
We suffer from the same in audio..sometimes the flutter drives folks nuts..but they they think that CD sounds GREAT! No flutter! Or..no pops and ticks!
Too bad they lost the music..and all they gained is a loss of flutter. A poor trade if there ever was one.
Oh well. I'd like it if other folks were capable of taking in the 'whole picture' as a set piece, like I and others try to do, but sadly, it is an uncommon thing.
It's interesting that many high end turntable manufacturers, Rega, Project, etc. are now including speed controllers (for better stability on piano notes),and I wonder how much the controller improved the overall sound of the table (especially when it gets on in age!). I feel that warp and wow in a platter (acrylic especially- older VPI tables) really affects piano(sustained)notes quality.
Obvbiously, that would depend on several factors. What type of motor is used and what qualities did the designer seek out for the motor of choice. Like everything else in audio not only do we all tend to hear different priorities but each pritority we hear brings with it its own subset of tradeoffs.
TT motors are unusual devices that like most things "turntable" require opposing needs and solutions. The basic desire for a motor that starts a platter spinning at the correct speed within a single revolution is contrasted against the desire for a motor that has low torque but good speed consistency at full rotational speed. The isolating benefits of a belt drive system also contribute to the failings of speed instability due to stylus drag or bearing wobble.
To your speicifc question, it is not a matter of how the table ages - assuming the owner performs regular maintenance on the table. An AC synchronous motor will only vary when the cycles of the incoming voltage deviate. A DC motor performs equally well on day one as the day before day zero. If everything is operating according to plan, the motor should do as it is told, nothing more and nothing less. What it is "told" is the problem here.
Yes, motor controllers do their job admirably well. Though as with any other "tweak" in audio whether you hear their specific benefits will depend on your own personal priorites. I would certainly tell you to listen for obvious speed problems on signals such as sustained piano chords but the real benefits of a tt speed controller are mostly of a more subtle variety than what that test would reveal.
Considering that IMO the largest failing of any turntable system is its ability to generate random noise within the cartridge's motor assembly, anything that minimizes that issue is worth the money paid - within reason of course.