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Everything posted by Craig Sawyers
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RIP Greg Lake, the second of ELP to bite the dust. Age 69 from cancer. Bugger. I'm beyond words about 2016.
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We loved Istanbul - have a great audio career there! The area you're going to looks great - massive park to run in, open air theatre, museums. What is not to like?
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Cat and mouse. This is daughter's cat Cheese, that we have adopted (1) while she was on tour and (2) now she's gone to Aus
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Jeeze - 42. RIP JK.
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Have a great birthday Todd!
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Have a great one - happy birthday.
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in all honesty it cannot have been that long - it just seemed like a long time. Anyhow, complete and stable hearing is back, with no problems in popping my ears.
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FWIW I've been through a number of issues with my hearing over the last 6 months, all (thank heavens) sorted out now. Stated with losing bass from my right ear - sounded like a tinny 1960's transistor radio. Doc said fluid behind the eardrum, and it would clear. In the interim it went into low frequency tinnitus - sounded like a perpetual low frequency hum, 24/7. That progressively cleared up (months), at which point (two or three weeks ago) my left ear suddenly went really pretty deaf. That lasted for a week, and then that has cleared too. So I have for the first time in 6 months got total hearing back. The doc reckoned it was the after effects of a head cold back in the Spring. Fun it has not been.
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French to Ottoman! Wow - I had no idea that Ottoman was a language. Could have been worse. In the late 1800's a genius called Pedro Carolino produced a phrase book for Portugese tourists visiting Britain. He did not know any English or French, but he did have a Portugese-French and a French-English dictionary. So he generated a phrasebook of originality and beauty, hauling Portugese into English through two languages unknown to him. Who can guess at what "To Craunch a Mormoset" could possibly mean. English as She is Spoke http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/30411
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Oh bugger. What a mark they all left on only 12 episodes. Other bad news regarding Fawlty Towers, Prunella Scales is pretty far down the road with Alzheimers.
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That is truly awful.
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Just thought of another - being as sick as a parrot.
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Good heavens.
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Dreadful, yes. Rare, but dreadful. This has happened before, when Manchester United were in a plane crash that wiped out most of their team in 1958 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Munich_air_disaster . They recovered pretty well in due course (currently 3rd in the Premier League), even through they nearly financially folded in the aftermath of the crash.
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I have a metrum Octave, their first DAC product. It reviewed pretty well (in fact excellent). And it does sound pretty good. But it is single-ended, and I've actually now gone balanced and use the DAC in my Logitech Transporter streamer. I feed the optical input from TV, and a network connection to the router (to NAS drive and Tidal HiFi). But you know the thing that irritates me most about Metrum? They grind the part numbers off every bit of silicon in there. I'm pretty much certain they do the same in the Adagio, along with the branded modules. That shows a certain paranoia about potential plagiarisation that simply grinds my gears. The only other company that I know of that does this is Audio Research, and they replace the ground off discrete part number with a three colour dot code. In a sense I can understand that, particularly with FET's which might be coded to be band matched for Idss and Vp.
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You'd have to be quackers to do that
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The +/- 400V looks a little close to the mounting holes, Kevin. As does the output connection.
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This isn't April 1st, right? Holy carp, the things I built when I was 16 were orders of magnitude neater than that. What a disgraceful pig's breakfast.
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Which one is she?
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Back in the day, we got involved in building high field resistive magnets. The idea was that you would discharge a very large number of capacitors through a thyristor bank into a magnet. This was shrink fit into a thick stainless steel tyre to stop it from exploding as a result of hoop stress. Now that was a beast you did not want to share a room with; testing them was a bit of a game so as not to incinerate the test engineer 600V? Chicken feed. Here's a shot in a concrete bunker that this kit was installed. The blue things heading off into the distance were the capacitors.
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A few years ago I managed to persuade my lady wife to accompany me to a high end audio show. This particular one was to showcase British Hi-Fi, and was in a hotel near Heathrow. We walked into one room, and a track that we knew particularly well by Marc Cohn was playing. Carole actually burst out laughing. I hustled her out with a hissed "Bear in mind that these guys have tried really really hard to design something that sounds that awful". Effort in designing a product is absolutely no guarantee that it will sound decent, and may actually sound acutely awful. One of the reasons that the infant (and not so infant) mortality rates in audio start-ups is to high.
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No animal I know sleeps with such sheer abandon as a cat
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39 of them. And two transistors (both germanium). I have two (don't ask) one with the hernia inducing 175 high current unit (internal wiring is welding cable). First time I used it I stuck a random TO220 on it, and without much effort at all blew a red hot heatsink tab across the room in a hail storm of hot epoxy shards. I've just resurrected a 576 - a much more useful all transistor tracer. Tek went through a brain dead period when they stopped wax potting their HV transformers and went over to epoxy potting. Alas in the late 60's epoxies were not too well developed, and degrade. Transformer overheats and then crowbars the LT supply feeding the oscillator. Tek woke up to this issue pretty quick, and soon turned over to silicone potting, which worked much better. So I rewound it. Bit of a faff, particularly the 1400T of 40AWG wire on the 2.7kV secondary. I wax potted it, and the 576 now works perfectly - needs a re-cal though. Sawyers re-wind in place. Left over ptfe sleeved wire lurking around from my T2 build
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Have a truly great one!
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There are ways around that problem, and also the tendency for distortion to increase significantly as you go down in frequency. Lundahl don't tend to mention this too loudly, but distortion of 0.1% at 50Hz and >0.5% distortion at 20Hz are not uncommon at higher drive levels (~5dBu). The way around this is to use the technique that Audio Precision do with their galvanically isolated inputs. This uses a very carefully designed transformer with auxiliary windings driven by an active circuit with negative output impedance. Patent is here http://www.google.co.uk/patents/US4614914 . It needs very careful design, because if anything is out of kilter it can of course make a very nice oscillator.