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From the Amar Bose obituary published at the MIT News Office (newsoffice.mit.edu)"Dr. Bose received his bachelor’s degree, master’s degree and doctorate from MIT, all in electrical engineering. He was asked to join the faculty in 1956, and he accepted with the intention of teaching for no more than two years. He continued as a member of the MIT faculty until 2001."Steve
A doctorate IS a PhD. Or is there some finesse to the usual definition that you know about and are not telling?
Not sure about the degree but he does know his stuff. He is kind to send me his customers that need new tubes. He respects my testing methods and I have supplied him with tubes in the past.
Yes I do believe Ken has an EE degree. Not positive but we spoke about it once. But case in point. The other day I flipped on my RM 10 MK II and after about 10 secs I heard a "pop" in the left channel speaker. Music came on but the left channel was dead. Now I have heard this happen before, many times over the years, with my Convergent Audio JL-1's. And I dread it! I have to wrestle a 200 pound amp out into the room, flip it over, remove 20 or so hex screws, take the bottom off. Find the burnt resistors, replace them, then check every resistor under each of the 8 tubes, put it all back together, replace the tube that caused the short, pray the new tube matches up close enough to balance the amp, drag back into position, hook up and play music again. But with the little RM-10 MK II I just replaced the little fuse next to the left channel EL 84's, reseated the tubes, fired it up and sat back and enjoyed the music. That is why I am such a believer in your circuit designs. And of course your amps sound wonderful too. Ken
Thanks, I do try to make things user friendly. Having started out at a radio/TV repair guy at age 16 I have seen a wide variety in the way products are put together. Fixing something should be easy and the most likely problems should be the easiest to repair. Thus the fuses are on top and there are no resistors to get burned up when a tube fails or blows off a little steam. Tubes are prone to lint shorts and other short lived phenomenon that draw high current briefly. If the fuse is adequate it will blow, the tube will recover and may not cause another problem for a long time. If a tube keeps blowing the same fuse just replace it when you have had enough of it. In my amps you can do this. in some amps you risk the very type of repair Ken describes on his CAT amp.
I don't want to waste my time fixing someone else's mistakes. ....I [bought] a used Maserati Bi-Turbo.
Perhaps primed by your writing "automobile", the instant I read the first quoted sentence I imagined Ferrari. When I reached the latter, I thought same difference. As you're demoing a plasma speaker today, I'd like to take the opportunity to ask how it compares with electrostatic speakers? Fascinated by/Fantasize about plasmas since first learning of Dr. Hill's plasmatronics way back in high school; have a pair of electrostatics.
Before boutique "High End" (damn the day that term replaced the perfectly acceptable High Performance, because it references the price of a piece of gear, above and before all else. And it reeks of snobbery.) stores, Hi-Fi shops had an owner, if not an entire staff, who were technicians as well as sales persons. They came into the Hi-Fi business from the larger world of general electronics (many having learned the trade in WWII or Korea). When my ARC SP3 made a funny sound (and then no more sound) upon it's initial turn-on surge (why is did so is a topic for another day), the dealer I bought it from new took the pre-amp back to his work bench, found the problem, and replaced a blown resistor, all in about 5 minutes. If I were to buy a new piece of tube gear today, I would absolutely not do so from a store that would have to send a pre-amp or power amp back to the manufacturer to replace a resistor. That would be like sending a car back to the factory to replace a burned out light bulb because the dealer had no service department. Absolutely ridiculous!