Yanko Design

Arduino-powered crane record player brings industrial influence and hands-on controls

Whether it’s built for serious music enthusiasts, I can’t say. But it has a strikingly inventive design, which deserves a home. This is the crane vinyl record player, which breaks away from conventional streaming and recorded music players, and gives music tactile and engaging controls with industrial aesthetics.

Inspired by construction sites, the vinyl record player is envisioned by Love Hultén, artist-designer renowned for reimaging vintage technology, and features a scaled-down version of a crane in place of a traditional tonearm. The towering, bright red crane, looming over the platter, gives the record player an interesting machine-like appearance, which has a different way of playing the vinyl records.

Designer: Love Hultén

Love Hultén reimagines the record player with an industrial intention and a control system that uplifts the analog music scene with tactile performance. He uses a functional crane system for a tonearm, intensifying the record player’s appearance for a home with industrial aesthetics. The player requires the user to manually manipulate the crane. The user physically navigates the vinyl surface, making it an unusual but exciting way to play the records.

The deliberate tactile control is carried out by a physical control panel on the record player, allowing the user to operate the crane in construction mode, like on a construction site. The crane vinyl player commissioned by Rebin Shah requires the crane tonearm to be controlled manually, where the user guides the stylus left, right, up, and down, turning each listening session into an unexperienced experience.

By taking away the convenience of effortless audio playback and adding the fun of participation into the musical act, the crane vinyl player invites the user to learn how movement translates into sound. The crane’s precise movement is driven by Arduino-powered motors and sensors. The record player itself features a slanted aluminum control panel with color-coded buttons and rotary dials that again remind one of the retro music systems.

The interesting red crane display resides on a contrasting white monolithic speaker base featuring a 2.1 stereo system with Bluetooth, while a ferrofluid visualizer animates the sound in real time. The glass dome and exposed wiring on the record player, conceived by Hultén, display the artist’s internal interest in visual engineering and the art of turning retro for modern adaptation.

This record player that “moves like a machine” and explores the tactile relationship between machines and humans arrives at almost the right time. Vinyl sales are rising and the recorded music of yesteryears is making a resounding comeback. In such an environment, amid the contemporary turntables, this retro-modern option appears as a shining light!

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