
If you bought a Technics SL-40CBT in the last nine months, you now have a colorway problem. The deck Technics launched at CEDIA 2025 for $899.99 is back as a Fritz Hansen special edition, finished in matte deep burgundy, and capped at 300 units worldwide. It ships in October 2026, alongside a 200-unit reissue of the Fritz Hansen KAISER idell Luxus 6631-T table lamp, the Bauhaus-era piece first published in a Kaiser & Co. catalogue in 1936. Both land in October through selected Fritz Hansen partner stores, with Technics’s own channels handling the deck in the US.
The collaboration was announced June 10, 2026 at 3 Days of Design in Copenhagen. It appears to be the first time Technics has shipped a color outside the standard black, terracotta brown, and gray on the SL-40CBT line. It’s also one of the more disciplined premium collaborations we’ve seen from a hi-fi brand this year, in part because both products already exist, and the design team didn’t redesign either one to get there.
For buyers new to the SL-40CBT story, it’s worth noting how unusual the original launch was for a Technics turntable. The brand’s reputation still rides on the SL-1200 and SL-1500 lines that anchor its hi-fi catalogue, and the SL-40CBT arrived at $899.99 as a deliberate move into the lifestyle-and-Bluetooth tier. The standard deck has since picked up a Red Dot: Best of the Best in the 2026 Product Design awards, the top tier of that competition, which is useful context for why Fritz Hansen picked this platform to wrap. The Gadgeteer’s hi-fi brand guide covers how the SL-40CBT sits in the broader Technics lineup for anyone catching up.
What carries over from the stock SL-40CBT
The SL-40CBTFH keeps the standard deck’s internals intact. That’s the right call, and it’s also the limiting factor for anyone hoping this is a stealth performance upgrade. It runs a coreless direct-drive motor with a 300mm aluminum die-cast platter (1.26 kg with mat) at 33 1/3 and 45 rpm, with 0.025% W.R.M.S. wow and flutter. The tonearm ships with the AT-VM95C cartridge and a built-in moving-magnet phono stage. aptX Adaptive Bluetooth is still on board for wireless headphone and speaker pairing.
The chassis is still medium-density fiberboard, the same material that drew some raised eyebrows when the stock SL-40CBT landed in late 2025. MDF tends to damp resonance better than stamped steel at this price tier, in our experience, but it is still MDF. If you were waiting for the Fritz Hansen edition to fix that, it isn’t fixed here.
For context, this is the same platform that lives in the standard black, terracotta brown, and gray SL-40CBT you can still buy today at $899.99. The mechanics didn’t change for the special edition. The finish did, and so did the branding on the deck — the Fritz Hansen mark is visible on the platter mat in the launch imagery.
Why a turntable company is shipping a Bauhaus lamp
The lamp is the part of this story that actually does the design work. Fritz Hansen’s 6631-T first appeared in a Kaiser & Co. catalogue in 1936, designed by Christian Dell, a German silversmith who ran the metal workshop at the Bauhaus in Weimar from 1922 to 1925 and became one of the most recognized names in pre-war German lamp design. Fritz Hansen produces the lamp today as part of its current catalogue, in standard black, matte black, and white finishes. Putting it in matte deep burgundy to match the SL-40CBTFH is a limited-color edition of a current product, and the kind of move that earns shelf space in a design store, not just an audio store.
The framing from both brands is “light and sound.” That’s a marketing line, but it’s also a real positioning decision. The pair is meant to live in the same room, on the same surface, and to read as one object from across a living space. For a buyer who already owns a 6631-T in another finish, the lamp half of this collaboration is irrelevant. For a buyer starting from zero, it’s the better half of the bundle.
It also tells you something about the price tier both brands are signaling. The standard 6631-T Luxus retails around $1,200 in its base finishes. Limited-color editions from Fritz Hansen typically carry a premium over the standard finish, so expect the burgundy lamp to price above the base model when the number lands.
How the SL-40CBTFH compares to the $899.99 standard deck
The honest read is simple. Same deck, new color.
| Spec | Standard SL-40CBT | SL-40CBTFH |
|---|---|---|
| Motor | Coreless direct drive | Coreless direct drive |
| Platter | 300mm aluminum die-cast, 1.26 kg | 300mm aluminum die-cast, 1.26 kg |
| Speeds | 33 1/3, 45 rpm | 33 1/3, 45 rpm |
| Wow and flutter | 0.025% W.R.M.S. | 0.025% W.R.M.S. |
| Cartridge | AT-VM95C | AT-VM95C |
| Phono stage | Built-in MM | Built-in MM |
| Bluetooth | aptX Adaptive | aptX Adaptive |
| Chassis | MDF | MDF |
| Finish | Black, terracotta brown, gray | Matte deep burgundy |
| MSRP (US) | $899.99 | TBD |
| Production run | Open | 300 units |
If Technics and Fritz Hansen price the special edition close to the standard deck, this becomes an easy collector call. If they price it well over, the math changes. We’re watching for that number when it lands in October.
Availability, pricing, and where to find one
The 300 SL-40CBTFH units ship globally in October 2026, and Technics has confirmed US availability for the turntable. The 200 lamps split between Fritz Hansen stores in Europe and Asia, with no separate US allocation announced for the lamp at time of writing. The deck will be sold through selected Fritz Hansen partner stores and Technics’s own channels rather than the brand’s standard hi-fi dealer network, so plan on tracking the order through Technics or a Fritz Hansen partner rather than waiting for it to land at your local audio shop.
Pricing on the special edition has not been announced. The standard SL-40CBT sits at $899.99 in the US. Expect the special edition to carry a premium for the limited run and the burgundy finish, but the actual number is still a gap.
Who should buy, and who should skip
Buy the SL-40CBTFH if you collect limited-run audio gear, if you already own a 6631-T lamp and want a matching deck, or if a matte burgundy turntable is a piece of furniture you actually want to look at twice a day. The run is small enough that secondary-market demand is worth watching once the deck ships.
Skip it if you just want a great direct-drive deck for under $900. The standard SL-40CBT at $899.99 is the same hardware in a finish you can buy today, and you can put the difference toward a better cartridge or a phono preamp you’ll actually hear. The Fritz Hansen edition is a design object first and a turntable second. That’s not a knock. It’s just the right way to think about what you’re paying for.
The bottom line: Technics and Fritz Hansen didn’t hide a better turntable inside a prettier box. They shipped a real limited run of a real product, in a finish that finally has something to say. Three hundred buyers will get one. Most of us won’t, and the standard SL-40CBT is still the smart buy.
