This New Zealand website sells styli/cartridges for record players to
international customers, and also has a useful FAQ page that will probably answer most of your questions:
www.styli.co.nz
That's actually where I ordered our new stylus from. I'll be sure to check out that FAQ, though, thanks!
I still have a 1981 Sanyo 2003 full rack stereo (turntable, cassette player, am/fm tuner, amp), with a massive 35 watts rms of power! Bought it new, and most of it's in near new condition, although some parts seem to no longer function probably due to it's old age, rather than over-use. The turntable (record player) is a direct drive strobed model, which means it doesn't have any drive belts that can break or stretch. Direct drives are supposedly the better type to buy, due to this.
Ours is a direct drive, which I'm fairly thankful for. Fussing around with belts in a piece of old technology I'm not familiar with sounds like a recipe for disaster.

And it does look like it works well, I plugged it in last night to see, and the table spun very smoothly, so that's a good sign so far.
I listened to a digitally "cleaned/restored" Beatles album recently (which one escapes me at the moment) and it just didn't sound "right". It didn't sound bad, but there was something missing from it.
Yeah, I know what you mean. I found the "Naked" version of
Let It Be a while ago, which was kind of a misnomer as it was rather heavily "restored". It sounds good, but considering what they were trying to do it's paradoxically polished. I've found the same with the remasters of some Rush albums, they sound good, but there's also a little something that's missing...
My last turntable punked a couple years before I got married. And I didn't think anything of it cause I was already moving over to digital. 7 years later, and I'm looking backwards cause a lot of the older performances just aren't out there for one, and there's something about going digging through old stacks of records and not really looking for something and finding a gem that you can't get playing around on a I-Tunes account.
Yeah, I've already had a hell of a lot of fun poking through the records at a local store, trying to figure out what I wanted to buy to start my collection.
As for the "Why did we buy a record player?" question raised by
Trekker, it's true, they're definitely coming back into style. Lots of bands are releasing material on vinyl again, and there's also something that's just damn cool about popping a Beatles or Led Zeppelin album on a record player. I have several friends who own record players, as well... they're pretty popular among students. A friend and former co-worker of mine actually
wrote this ode to the record player, which I think sums up the feelings of many people on the matter.