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I finished the B1 kit from Jim's last night. It might be my eyes, but the color-coding of the resistor values was difficult to distinguish. Anyone else with this problem?
Yes. I think that the 6 holes on the jim's board marked S100 and S200 are the switch inputs? Is this correct?
Well, if you are asking me, I could only answer in the same way I assembled the kit... by guess and by God. I haven't powered it up yet, so you certainly would want a better opinion than mine. Some of the things placements can be deduced from the number of parts, but a few are just my guess. I was going to write "Jim" to tell him that pictures of a completed kit would help, but that wouldn't completely solve the Mystery of the Color-Coding.
On a related note, http://www.electronics2000.co.uk has a lot of good info and a very handy and very free electronics calculator. mike
Greetings EveryoneI'm new to this forum and have just recently stumbled upon this thread, a little late unfortunately. I say this because I've already purchased a couple of the Chinese B1 buffer kits and so far it's not been a great experience, you definitely get what you pay for! On the surface the kit looks ok but once you put it together it's obvious there's problems. The top end is tissy and smeared the bass is thin and muted and it just sounds bad.For starters I think I'll replace the caps and maybe the FETs.Great thread I'm really enjoying the comments.Ray
Neither picture nor detailed instructions would help much with the Chinese B1, nor the ability to identify color codes. The problem is that you cannot reliably read the colors on the resistors. That said, I am not completely sure of copyright laws, but the Chinese seller may be quite legally reproducing and selling these boards. If so, I'm not sure that the ethical questions about selling such a board have much standing. It's an interesting question and before I throw mud at someone....Anyhow, there may be other causes of the Chinese board sounding badly that parts quality or am I wrong? I am especially thinking of assembly issues.
as far as I am aware (but I could be wrong) Nelson Pass designed the B1 for use with the original LightSpeed Attenuator - which may explain why they go together so well.