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Hey Psychoanimal,For someone who professes to be so open minded, you sure seem to get a great deal of joy from taking shots at someone whose gear you have never heard. I assume you never heard AVA gear because if you did you would probably own it.
Hi, Per the advice of Neil, his friend Neil, Chris (the dAck guy), some other audiogeek (not as geeky as me!) friends, I moved my system to the long wall. The purpose of the move was to allow me to place my speaker further apart and closer to the listening position. The results were far better than anything I could have imagined. Soundstage was wider than ever (a problem with my old setup), still pretty deep, imaging was greatly improved and bass .
Hi DVV,I don't doubt power conditioning is important. Maybe I can check out some BPT products when I visit Roop's place in NYC. He's a dealer for BPT and I would really like to get some stuff from someone like Roop who I trust completely. In this case, there was no popping before I made the switch (new outlet). This outlet has lots of stuff on it and it's doing strange things to my stuff. Sound is still very good, but that popping is irritating. I appreciate the feedback and got a real chuckle out of your beer comment. My wife would also agree!Jack
The problem w/ VA is that he blends his beliefs with his gear and that affects their ultimate performance. It was sooo pathetic watching him hold lamp cord and 99 cent Walgreens interconnects in his hands! I am switching all the ICs in my main system to Midnight Silver Edition by Ridge Street Audio (some say they're better than Valhalla's--definitely better than Pure Note Epsilon's). It is cool VA can demo his DAC with an old Harman Kardon CDP as transport and claim it does not make a difference, but I own a McCormack SST-1 and a CEC built Parasound belt drive transport--both top loaders. I also own a Forté 4 (50W class A) amp for my Modwright Swans M1 and two Marantz Ma-5 monoblocks run in class B mode for my subs (120W each). My power delivery/noise control rig is a story on to itself--starting with a 30 ampere, 220V dedicated line, two massive 220V/110V isolation transformers and two 48 lb Clear Image T4 quad isolation transformer/filter arrays (they have copper plated chassis and screws). Some of us know better...
As far as room treatment for "between" the speakers, I am not a fan of diffusers, unless they are huge and high quality....
Jackman,The switched outlet means there is a break (the switch) in the hot side and possibly a pigtail (often needed to make these hook-ups) in the wiring.It sounds like there might be a "weak" connection in the switch circuit. I mean a connection that is not gas tight and has some resistance that the power has to jump over at turn on.The places to look... first the switch--did the electrician simply strip and push the wires in the stupid quick connect holes or did he wrap the wire around the sc ...
Hey Psychicaniman, What to know what's pathetic? A guy who seems to care more about the snake oil BS that is in his gear than the sound. I'm not a ribbon guy, but I'd put my Ellis/AVA system (wimpy power cables and all) up against your Swan/Forte 4 any day with all the filter arrays on the planet. You seem to have a real agenda and it's not helping people understand audio or correct their problems. If you have a bone to pick with any manufacturers, I'd appreciate it if you didn't do it on my thread. J ...
Knock it off, both of you. This is a problem solving thread, not a AVA
Posted: Tue Sep 09, 2003 11:12 pm Post subject: Worn out power switch? -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I suspect that if you dissected the AC power switch on that circuit you would find contacts that looked like the points for a 48 Ford ignition system with 100000 miles on them. Likely, what is happening is that the AC switch is making a very poor contact and that the turn on surge from the power amp is pulling an arc across those switch contacts, which can propagate a very nasty thump back into the system and speakers. The less load you have on the line, the less likely the switch is to arc. The Fet Valve amplifiers have 80 amp surge rating switches, protected by a high quality line transient absorber ahead of the switch and a suppression capacitor across the switch, so the amp power switch will not cause a thump in and of itself. If however, the AC wall switch is marginal, then the surge the amp demands at turn on can cause the arc to occur there, and since the amp is already on by the time the transients gets back to the amp, there is no more protection built in against that. The solution of course is use an unswitched AC outlet (preferably a separate one for the amp) for your audio equipment. Frank Van Alstine
I wonder how many people here have actually seen snake oil. I have. My friend who introduced me to Wilfredo Rivera was an Olympic wrestler and always had that stuff around. He had several kind and his favorite was from Peru--a really bright yellow oil and extremely expensive ($250 for a little jar?). He said it was fantastic for joint pains and that timbaleros were very fond of that particular type, as it quicly penetrated and loosened their wrists. From what I understand, the oil is "milked" from live ...
... There is a lesson to be learned here ...