March 12, 200917 yr How about instead of establishing a numerical system, because the pins aren't asymmetric like on a 4 pin XLR, naming them by what they are? B, R-, R+. L-, L+? ...you and your fancy ways...
March 12, 200917 yr Since there is no established numerical system for the Stax jack, what is pin 1? obviously you didn't get the memo: HeadWize - Project: All-Triode Direct-Drive Amps for Electrostatic and Electret Headphones by Kevin Gilmore
March 12, 200917 yr Obviously not. I just measured the male WPI connector. It varies by 5%, in that the pins are 5% closer to the center. Interestingly enough, each pin is 0.2" away from it's closest neighbor, center-to-center. Now to decode Spritzer's results.
March 12, 200917 yr How about instead of establishing a numerical system, because the pins aren't asymmetric like on a 4 pin XLR, naming them by what they are? B, R-, R+. L-, L+? nah, then we wouldn't have the joy of answering upteen PMs about this if it was in concise form somewhere.
March 12, 200917 yr I just measured the male WPI connector. It varies by 5%, in that the pins are 5% closer to the center. Interestingly enough, each pin is 0.2" away from it's closest neighbor, center-to-center. Now to decode Spritzer's results. Not surprising as the WPI stuff is a tight fit. nah, then we wouldn't have the joy of answering upteen PMs about this if it was in concise form somewhere. Sad but true. We really wouldn't feel this wanted without all those emails...
March 12, 200917 yr Since there is no established numerical system for the Stax jack, what is pin 1? 1 2 5 3 4 Edit. Can't get the code to function correctly so this will have to do. Like this or something different? Anyway, using the above system then each pin is 2.35mm wide and the distance (measured outer edge to outer edge) of pin 1 to pins 2 and 5 is between 10 and 10.05mm. Pin 2 to pin 5 is roughly 13.23-13.25mm. Pin 2 to 3 and pin 5 to pin 4 is roughly 7.77-7.80mm. Pin 3-4 gives me 7.81-7.84mm. The only 6 pin connector I have is on the SR-1 and while it fits alright, the odds are it has been bent a bit in the last 40+ years. yeah, your numbers vary a bit from mine. I'm surprised you see any variance from pin3-4 and pin2-3 and pin5-4, I do see a little, but I think that's just variance in the plug construction. The trick is that the line that passes through the two pins under measurements must be perpendicular to the calipers, or you're measurement will be off a bit. How about 7.86mm for this measurement (pin3-4,pin2-3,pin5-4), how does that look? Also, I get 2.39mm for the pin width, so this could just be calibration error between our calipers.
March 12, 200917 yr I just measured two plugs (both Wide PC-OCC type) and I never see numbers that high. The highest I saw was 7.82mm and down to 7.72 so there is either something off with the calipers or some variation in the molding process.
March 12, 200917 yr I just measured two plugs (both Wide PC-OCC type) and I never see numbers that high. The highest I saw was 7.82mm and down to 7.72 so there is either something off with the calipers or some variation in the molding process. looks like our calipers are ~0.06mm off from each other. Thanks, this was very helpful! oh one more thing, do you happen to have a 3.5mm diameter drill bit? perhaps you could measure the diameter of that for me as well Edited March 12, 200917 yr by luvdunhill
March 12, 200917 yr Most of my drill bits are probably 60 years old (inherited from my grandfather who was an iron smith) but the 3.5mm ones are 3.48mm.
March 12, 200917 yr Is there a difference between an iron smith and a blacksmith or is it just terminological?
March 12, 200917 yr I wish my grandfather looked like that. All that lightning behind him probably influenced you preference for electrostatics.
March 12, 200917 yr Is the KGSS really that different/Special?Yes, it really is. If you're going to eschew tubes, then this is the best you can do.
March 13, 200917 yr man, I had no idea how big this custom R-core would be......puny Ebay model shown for scale.
March 13, 200917 yr Does that mean you can put your psu back together, or, is it a fail? Jesus, and I thought the rSum was big...
March 13, 200917 yr Does that mean you can put your psu back together, or, is it a fail? Jesus, and I thought the rSum was big... dunno yet. crossing fingers though...
March 13, 200917 yr Dusty Chalk: thanks for the reply!! I know lots and lots of you prefer the KGSS to the standard Stax amps. I have heard of ES-1 and several other amps but I assume they are no longer available from new, right? Is HeadAmp the best place to get the KGSS from? I know NOTHING about DIY electronics so I need to buy rather than build. Does anyone else make them or are there any "special" versions out there than can be bought? Thanks, sorry if I seem a bit "out of it", the technical stuff is beyond me but if I'm going to spend the money I really do want the best I can get for the price
March 13, 200917 yr I have heard of ES-1 and several other amps but I assume they are no longer available from new, right? Lets go with "no" on that one. Thats probably easiest.
March 13, 200917 yr Lets go with "no" on that one. Thats probably easiest. LOL, thanks aardvark baguette. If anyone can let me know whether Headamp is the place to go to order the KGSS (or viable alternatives) I will be forever grateful !!!!
March 13, 200917 yr Lets go with "no" on that one. Thats probably easiest.Seconded.If anyone can let me know whether Headamp is the place to go to order the KGSS (or viable alternatives) I will be forever grateful !!!!Headamp is your best choice, if you know nothing about DIY and don't want to have to worry about quality control. I'm pretty sure there isn't any commercial alternative, although you could always commission someone to build it, but then you have to worry about quality control, hence the earlier statement. And: forever is a long time, I'll settle for a couple seconds.
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