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Tech

Dutch family business Miniot launches light-powered Wheel 3 turntable

This high-end Wheel 3 turntable uses light to track grooves, promising exceptional clarity and pitch perfect playback.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Aug 18, 2025, 3:32 AM EDT
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Miniot Wheel 3 vertical turntable
Image: Miniot
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There’s a particular kind of gadget that makes you stop, stare, and ask whether it belongs in a living room or a gallery. Miniot’s Wheel has always been one of those objects: at once a functioning turntable and a sculpture. The company — a small, family-run outfit in Schagen, the Netherlands — first introduced the Wheel on Kickstarter in 2017. Backers waited. The design was iterated. Now the Wheel has returned in its third incarnation, and this time the tweaks are less about theatrics and more about the nuts-and-bolts of sound. Meet the Wheel 3: a slimmer, hand-built vertical turntable that reads vinyl not with traditional magnetic pickups but with light.

If you followed the Wheel from the beginning, you’ll know its origin story reads like a micro-case study in modern crowdfunding — brilliant idea, gorgeous renderings, manufacturing headaches and long waits. Miniot launched the original Wheel on Kickstarter in early 2017; the concept was immediate and memorable: hide the tonearm under the platter, turn the record over and make the whole assembly sit upright so the disc looks like it’s floating. Production took far longer than planned, but the company kept refining the idea, shipping updated models and eventually a Black Edition aimed at more serious listeners. That patient, iterative approach is exactly why the Wheel 3 matters: it’s the fruit of years of tinkering and a lot of hand-building.

At first glance, the Wheel 3 is a study in restraint. The front is milled from a single billet of aluminum and polished; the rear is a composite block, with a promised special edition sporting a wooden back for those who prefer warmth to chrome. Control elements — a dimmable display and touch sliders — live in the rim at the top of the circular face, keeping the silhouette clean and minimal. But the real story is inside: Miniot has swapped to an optically controlled direct-drive motor and replaced the conventional magnetic cartridge with an optical stylus that detects position using light. That combination is what Miniot says elevates the Wheel 3 from eye candy to genuine, high-end playback.

Miniot built a very flat direct-drive rotor that sits inside the Wheel 3. It uses 24 neodymium magnets and five optical sensors, and is governed by a next-generation control system the company says can “look ahead” — identifying unbalanced, off-centre or warped records and compensating before playback is affected. That’s not marketing fluff: optically monitored motors and anticipatory control systems are real engineering techniques that aim to keep rotational stability and pitch accuracy as perfect as possible. In Miniot’s telling, the motor actively compares stylus and arm positions in real time so that pitch is “perfect from the first note.”.

  • Miniot Wheel 3 vertical turntable
  • Miniot Wheel 3 vertical turntable
  • Miniot Wheel 3 vertical turntable
  • Miniot Wheel 3 vertical turntable
  • Miniot Wheel 3 vertical turntable
  • Miniot Wheel 3 vertical turntable
  • Miniot Wheel 3 vertical turntable
  • Miniot Wheel 3 vertical turntable

Most turntables translate stylus motion into electrical signals with coils and magnets; those magnetic cartridges measure acceleration and depend on the mechanical coupling between stylus and cartridge. Miniot’s optical pickup, by contrast, measures position — it shines light at a tiny plate near the stylus and senses minute variations in the shadow. Those variations are converted into electrical signals and routed into a bespoke preamp that the company pairs with the Wheel 3. The result, Miniot claims, is fidelity that reaches down to 0Hz and a different way of resolving groove detail — a claim that reads like a provocation to audiophiles and will be a key point reviewers and listeners test in real rooms.

That optical pickup has a practical upside beyond any sonic claims: because it doesn’t rely on magnetic coils, it’s immune to stray magnetic fields from the motor. That lets Miniot pack more magnets into the rotor for torque and flatness without the compromise that would plague conventional cartridges. The tonearm itself has been redesigned as a rigid linear tracker that rises from the chassis and travels vertically into a slot, where the mini-platter waits. The Wheel 3 can sit upright on an anodized aluminum stand, lie flat on a table, or be hung on the wall — Miniot even designed a recessed rear slot to hang the unit on a single screw, keeping installation simple and dramatic.

Miniot is not aiming for mass-market disruption. The Wheel 3 is a hand-built, niche object priced accordingly: Miniot lists the Wheel 3 at $3,463, with preorders and shipping timelines published on the company’s site. The company’s own timeline and updates indicate a phased rollout from preorders to deliveries; because units are built by hand in the Netherlands, lead times can fluctuate. If you’re considering one, factor in the premium for craftsmanship and the model’s clear emphasis on aesthetics as much as audio performance.

There’s a gulf between clever engineering and how a piece of audio equipment actually performs in a living room. Optical pickups have been experimented with before — they offer intriguing advantages, particularly in reduced wear and immune-to-magnet operation — but they also place different demands on preamps and the rest of the signal chain. Miniot supplies a bespoke preamp, which suggests the company is trying to control variables that could otherwise blunt the payoff of the optical measurement. The most revealing critiques will come from extended, head-to-head listening against excellent conventional turntables and cartridges; early impressions in reviews have been positive on build and novelty, but full sonic verdicts are the next chapter.

If you prize design as much as sound — and you want your turntable to act as a piece of art on the wall — the Wheel 3 is pitched squarely at you. It’s also interesting to enthusiasts who want something genuinely different: a direct-drive, linear-tracking, optical-pickup turntable is not the status quo, and that novel signal path will draw the attention of analog obsessives and tech-curious listeners alike. If you want the best conventional analog cartridge money can buy or you’re on a tighter budget, the Wheel 3 is likely overkill; if you want something hand-built, conversation-starting, and engineered in an unconventional way, it’s one of the few products on the market that truly fits that brief.

Miniot’s Wheel 3 is not trying to be a bargain or a mass-market pivot — it’s an object lesson in what happens when industrial design and small-batch engineering meet a stubborn belief that records can still surprise us. Whether that surprise is sonic or purely aesthetic depends on your ears; either way, the Wheel 3 keeps the dialogue between old-school vinyl and new-school thinking very much alive.


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Topic:Turntable
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