Best Of
Re: Polk Audio 8TL crossover update
There are other relevant measurements for capacitor quality, such as ESR (which is very important in audio).
MrGeology
1 ·
Re: Noise.
Some people can get there more quickly and that's not a system thing, but a mental thing.
To clarify, I don't mean to say that anyone is crazy, but more that it is a personal choice that one has to make mentally. When do you jump off the speeding train of spending money for better gear, cables, noise reduction, tweaks, etc. to achieve audio nirvana? Some can reach their nirvana with less.
billbillw
2 ·
Re: Housing market's gonna crash
The big problem, it seems to me, is pretty much always that people have a disheartening tendency to buy high and sell low, be it stocks, gold, real estate, trading cards, or Beanie Babies.
Don't do that.

Don't do that.
1 ·
Re: Housing market's gonna crash
If someone asks my advice about home ownership, I tell them all the same thing.
Can you fix things yourself?
If not, can you afford to pay someone to fix things?
If the answer is NO to both, then home ownership is not for you.
Some people cant save money but they can budget to live paycheck to paycheck. It's an interesting thing.
But there are exceptions to saying no to both questions. When I bought my fixer upper in the 80's the only tool I was proficient at using was a splitting maul. With the help of some buds in the building trade I got my learning on quickly. Anything to stop paying someone else's mortgage.
motorstereo
1 ·
Re: Housing market's gonna crash
That's pretty much what I said, but you added almost 1000 words. 
billbillw
9 ·
Re: Noise.
So, let me clarify a bit on the noise I am talking about. It's a combination of noise floor, room minimum dB level, RFI, EMI, leakage current, jitter, Allan deviation, reflections within the room, timing variances within the 1's and 0's (whether it be immediate, misread, short or long), along with noise that rides the incoming A/C waveform, or if you stream? Through the incoming cable.
This noise is not the same as vinyl surface noise or tube noise, although you want to try and keep those as low as possible as well.
I used to listen to my CDP and think that there was no noise. This was with a reference player. Two years ago, as I really got into improving every aspect of my streaming rig, I started to slowly discover that streaming started sounding cleaner than physical music. WHAT?
So, I started looking into why this would be....as I never had any issues with CD's before. Especially with the Marantz. I learned a lot about the "noises", how they manifested themself, where they came from, what gear I could use or utilize to get rid of it and what caused what, what affected what and how to eliminate as much of this noise as possible.
I wouldn't have....or probably wouldn't have ever known any of this for years to come, had it not been for a cheap, $14 ethernet cable upgrade. That lead to me learning about what E cables did. Then there was the Muon Pro.
Geez, I hated that thing for the first week or two...but after that, my audio journey really took off. That lead to me upgrading my clock, which lead to me upgrading my CDP to a transport and dedicated DAC.
Had it not been for my streaming journey taking off like it did, I would still be happily listening to that same noise I have listened to all my life. That transport was the last piece of gear I bought. Since then, every new addition to the rig has been nothing but things that help the rig eliminate any and every type of noise.
From the Purons, to shielded (double and triple shielded) cables, to the Snubway and MC....every purchase since then attacks noise. Literally no more of the gear merry go 'round. Doing that really exposed what the gear I already had.....well, what it actually can do.
I would like to think I have a pretty decent system in the whole grand scheme of things. Not that it's a competition or anything....I know full well that there are many systems out there that make my system look like a blue light K-mart special. That's all fine and dandy, to each their own. But with that said, I haven't heard a system....any system do so many things so well, across all frequencies and volume levels, with so many genres of music so cleanly, effortlessly and with such blackness in-between the images. All this with no boundaries within the room, other than height. In other words, I have yet to hear a sound come from directly above my head or beneath my listening chair.
I don't think it's the gear that does this. I think it's because of the loss of noise. I honestly have no desire to change any gear. Just tweak things here and there. Upgrade some more cables, mess around with the SDFB (which will be on the way shortly) and start working on upgrading the vinyl portion of my rig. Everything else sounds so good now, I am not yearning to do anything really.
A question was raised elsewhere that got me thinking tonight. The question was two parts. How do you know when you are done? That was one part. The other part was, are you an audiophile or a music lover?
I think my answer to that is this. Now that the noise is gone? I may now be done being an audiophile because all I hear now is the music. That's all I hear now....and it's radiantly shining a small slice of audio heaven on Earth for me.
I cannot emphasize enough to all of you (even if you think you have no noise) to thwart any hint of noise from distracting you from what is possible.
Tom
This noise is not the same as vinyl surface noise or tube noise, although you want to try and keep those as low as possible as well.
I used to listen to my CDP and think that there was no noise. This was with a reference player. Two years ago, as I really got into improving every aspect of my streaming rig, I started to slowly discover that streaming started sounding cleaner than physical music. WHAT?
So, I started looking into why this would be....as I never had any issues with CD's before. Especially with the Marantz. I learned a lot about the "noises", how they manifested themself, where they came from, what gear I could use or utilize to get rid of it and what caused what, what affected what and how to eliminate as much of this noise as possible.
I wouldn't have....or probably wouldn't have ever known any of this for years to come, had it not been for a cheap, $14 ethernet cable upgrade. That lead to me learning about what E cables did. Then there was the Muon Pro.
Geez, I hated that thing for the first week or two...but after that, my audio journey really took off. That lead to me upgrading my clock, which lead to me upgrading my CDP to a transport and dedicated DAC.
Had it not been for my streaming journey taking off like it did, I would still be happily listening to that same noise I have listened to all my life. That transport was the last piece of gear I bought. Since then, every new addition to the rig has been nothing but things that help the rig eliminate any and every type of noise.
From the Purons, to shielded (double and triple shielded) cables, to the Snubway and MC....every purchase since then attacks noise. Literally no more of the gear merry go 'round. Doing that really exposed what the gear I already had.....well, what it actually can do.
I would like to think I have a pretty decent system in the whole grand scheme of things. Not that it's a competition or anything....I know full well that there are many systems out there that make my system look like a blue light K-mart special. That's all fine and dandy, to each their own. But with that said, I haven't heard a system....any system do so many things so well, across all frequencies and volume levels, with so many genres of music so cleanly, effortlessly and with such blackness in-between the images. All this with no boundaries within the room, other than height. In other words, I have yet to hear a sound come from directly above my head or beneath my listening chair.
I don't think it's the gear that does this. I think it's because of the loss of noise. I honestly have no desire to change any gear. Just tweak things here and there. Upgrade some more cables, mess around with the SDFB (which will be on the way shortly) and start working on upgrading the vinyl portion of my rig. Everything else sounds so good now, I am not yearning to do anything really.
A question was raised elsewhere that got me thinking tonight. The question was two parts. How do you know when you are done? That was one part. The other part was, are you an audiophile or a music lover?
I think my answer to that is this. Now that the noise is gone? I may now be done being an audiophile because all I hear now is the music. That's all I hear now....and it's radiantly shining a small slice of audio heaven on Earth for me.
I cannot emphasize enough to all of you (even if you think you have no noise) to thwart any hint of noise from distracting you from what is possible.
Tom
treitz3
4 ·
Re: Housing market's gonna crash
No matter how someone does things, in the end, we all leave it for someone else..
Toolfan66
4 ·
Re: Can I fix a mark Levinson 33 Monoblock thread
Given the visual signs, I am pretty confident it is not a ribbon cable. Especially already finding the burnt transistors on the regulator board. I do plan to deoxit any ribbon/mechanical connections.
There are also some known things to do with these like replacing the surge resistors and replacing relays associated with the shut off/on sequences.
In my research and experience so far, the issue with levinson ribbons is that the connections do not actually lock, they are simply seated and easily removed/connected.
There are also some known things to do with these like replacing the surge resistors and replacing relays associated with the shut off/on sequences.
In my research and experience so far, the issue with levinson ribbons is that the connections do not actually lock, they are simply seated and easily removed/connected.
VR3
1 ·
Re: Housing market's gonna crash
If someone asks my advice about home ownership, I tell them all the same thing.
Can you fix things yourself?
If not, can you afford to pay someone to fix things?
If the answer is NO to both, then home ownership is not for you.
Some people cant save money but they can budget to live paycheck to paycheck. It's an interesting thing.
Can you fix things yourself?
If not, can you afford to pay someone to fix things?
If the answer is NO to both, then home ownership is not for you.
Some people cant save money but they can budget to live paycheck to paycheck. It's an interesting thing.
VR3
3 ·

