I must confess that I belong in the special category called (lovingly, even if it sounds bad) "vinyl junkies". Even though I started buying music when the CD was just introduced to the public (my first original cassette tape was Europe's The final countdown in 1987), I really loved vinyl and never stopped buying the vinyl edition of new releases. I only bought CDs when I couldn't get the vinyl edition, or if it was too expensive, or if there wasn't one!
It is true that each of the analogue/digital media has its merits, pros and cons, but since the vinyl has much less compression than the CD, you really have more depth, even if the source is a digital recording. (After all the CD can contain less frequencies than vinyl. Even SACD has less. But Fletch you should try the 25th anniversary BiA edition, it sounds much better. Still I prefer the LP sound very much, for the reasons you state and we have talked about in another thread some time ago) Of course, usually other problems arise from such a transfer, usually the lack of a specialist to take care of the special production -transfer needed for a vinyl edition. (They have to inflate the sound somehow) The second problem is that if you get such a specialist, the end vinyl product is extremely expensive (see for example the vinyl edition of "All the roadrunning").
I must have changed 2 turntables, but I really can't say much about their quality, since I don't listen to music in the traditional way. (sitting in the luxury of my sofa with the speakers in the exact perfect position) My first was a belt driven Technics, the second a belt driven Sanyo and now I use a Technics MK2 (SL1200MK2).
http://shop.panasonic.com/shop/model/SL-1200MK2?t=specs&support#tabsIt is a heavy duty machine, but since my collection of vinyl consists in 2/3 of used records, I prefer the not-so-detailed sound that it produces to avoid the extra noise that a highly sensitive system would reveal. (dust and crackling) But it is not really bad, since my speakers are equally medium Philips and my amp a Denon PMA-880R, good but old. What I lose from the speakers, I gain from a set of good headphones (which have become obligatory after the birth of my daughters).
Back to the topic, I believe that the best reason to start buying vinyl again, is because you can find many great recordings of the past, easily, cheaply and pretty much in the way they were meant to be heard. The first and sometimes only transfers to the digital medium were bad. But really, it is more a question of habit, and I do understand the people that prefer CDs. MP3s on the other hand is way beyond me. The lossy sound is a tragedy. You lose so much information, so much beauty, that if you are given a chance to listen to the recording from a CD or vinyl and through a decent sound system, you can exclaim:" Now I hear"