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"
**** Summer Sale Update ****
-
Hi!
Half of the equipment from the previous summer sale post is sold, so I am
writing an update and also offering some price reduction or better deal on...
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