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WOW, great stuffAdrian, if you don't mind me asking, how long has it taken you to create such a great collection? Do you rent a warehouse -jay
Do you have a picture of the room they're stored in?
Oh. I understand. I was anticipating a photo that looked something like that scene in "Raider of the Lost Ark":
I pictured a big version of
Adrian, that is part of my friend's collection. I love that picture so much I had a puzzle made of it. Now that was fun to put together.
Gee... Big tubes, huge tubes, huge-er tubes! Piles and Rooms of tubes, its like ... porn. I like small tubes, so sue me!My First SET Amp was similar, but less complex using a 12AX7 driving paralleled 10BQ5's, it was Six Watts per channel, and set in the same size form-factor, but it weighed in at about 36 lbs (yeah, the avatar on the left from about 12 years ago).Pictured - My 2nd SET Amp.First, I tossed out F. Langford Smith (1953) 4th Edition - I decided: Sorry, that's just not the way to design a SET Amp to drive a complex Speaker Load. My Totally Unique All 5687 circuit. It can also use 7044, 7119, E182CC, or a bunch of 6900's if I can ever afford them, etc. Built from a naked steel chassis about six, seven, maybe eight years ago.Six Watts per channel; 300 Volts B+; Built-in: Power Conditioning; 1:1 Isolation Transformer; Switching Power Supply; Two Separate High Voltage Capacitor Banks (one for each Channel under all those bias controls); Defined Startup Sequence - like in a Missile Silo (but no turning keys simultaneously); Delayed Plate Voltage via - Timers and Relays. 12 Watts / 2 channels / 12 lbs. (without the carry-around case - not seen). Bass straight down to hell; Purrfect Midrange; the sweetest Treble. Sounds Better than Sex.Anyone have an ONGAKO they would care to compare?-Steven L. Bender
"TMI"