This is essentially a proof of concept. In order to complete it I bought a metal lathe and a sandblaster. Luckily I already had the copper plating setup and know someone who is OK at winding transformers. The end result is a pair of very well shielded 1:20 SUT's for an Ortophon A90. Dimensions are 4" X 7"
Klipsch Musem Of Audio History Weekend
-
This year's Klipsch Bonehead class was really great. Roy and Jim did superb
jobs at class and tours. Ginny and her crew did an amazing job running the
vi...
Schön nerdiges neues YT-Video
-
Vor geraumer Zeit habe ich mich mal wieder vor einer Kamera herumgetrieben
und Sachen zu einem hoch spannenden Vollverstärker erzählt. Guckst du hier:
bag man sam said to ham hand bob…
-
“we gotta fly, man. like now!” this will be a quick hit, just to get
something fun out of my system. i really like hybrid circuits… and the
puzzle that is ...
El Rojo Stinger
-
On May 3, 2014 the Salvation Army of Dallas-Fort Wort held its first annual
Most Good Race in Trinity Groves. Each runner would brave a 5k obstacle
course ...
REAL Fake WE 755As from Western Labo
-
Interested parties worldwide are by now well-acquainted with the Line
Magnetic LM 755EX, a field coil "remake" of a Western Electric 755A.
Although often r...
Samba de Janeiro
-
Bilder sind manchmal eben einfach aussagekräftiger:
Das einzige, das schade ist, ist die Tatsache, dass sie Eckhornkehlen gehen
werden müssen.
Confused: what are the hardwired cables for? looks like in jacks, out jacks, and a ground terminal - or is one pair of jacks for loading?
ReplyDeleteInput Jacks are Parallel for a RCA Load resistor.
ReplyDeleteI don't need no steenkin' secondary loading
dave
Hey Dave!
ReplyDeleteReminds be a bit of the 47 Labs Power Humpty. ;)
Looks good. Love the acorn nuts and the patina. How'd you do it?
se