Originally posted by Steve Conner
View Post
Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Custom OT Impedance Question
Collapse
X
-
If you are making a totally outrageous, over the top amp, it increases the irony to name it after the most minimal of amps. Like naming the most destructive weapon ever made the "peacekeeper."
(Note: that is not intended as a politcal statement, please do not assume it is and get off into policy)Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
Comment
-
Like naming the most destructive weapon ever made the "peacekeeper."
Not Politics, just light History:
This Colt revolver, was called .... "The Peacemaker" .....
And the Romans said: "If you want Peace, you must be ready for War"
Or, in Latin: "Si vis Pacem, para Bellum"
100 years ago Germans fell in love with the word, so they created their own version of "Para Bellum"
So, in a nutshell, when somebody starts talking about Peace, get bhind a thick wall first and only then ask him to explain what he really means.
Just sayin'Juan Manuel Fahey
Comment
-
Originally posted by Wilder Amplification View PostCall me a holier than thou pompous prick but I have to say I side with RG on this. While I'm no Randall Aiken, RG or Steve Connor (those guy's have probably forgotten more than I'll ever know), I've noticed an increasing trend of guys starting up amp shops who claim to be "designing" their own amps yet they don't even have a basic understanding of the elementary basics (i.e. Ohm's/Watt's Law, electron flow vs charge flow, transformer voltage/impedance ratios, basic tube theory, DC load lines, how to read schematics, etc etc).
Then everytime those of us who've paid our dues by learning all of this say something about it, those guys feel compelled to attack with personal attacks, brag about how many big name people are playing their amps, how they have "golden ears" compared to guys who actually understand amp theory, and somehow think we feel "threatened" by the fact that "hobbyists" are starting up their own shops and getting the same recognition we do.
Threatened? Not in the least.
Feel like the public is being misled to think that these guys actually have electronic basics down and really know what they're doing and WHY certain component values affect the tone of an amp the way they do in a given circuit? Feel like undeserved credit is being given to someone who hasn't paid their dues to earn it? That's more like it!
Guitarists think that anyone owning an amp shop actually knows how amplifiers work. Why? Because anyone running an amp shop SHOULD know it. Then once the cat's outta the bag as to the limitations of one's knowledge, guitarists ask "Well how can we tell which techs really know their stuff?".
I mean think about it...would you want to be going to a doctor that had no concept of human anatomy but follows the "tried and true" methods of real doctors who paid their dues by learning the required knowledge to be a doctor and actually know what they're doing? Do you take your car to a mechanic who is little more than a "parts changer"?
Most of these guys are starting shops and riding on the coat tails of those who designed certain circuits. There's another message board that has lots of mods floatin' around and guys are just using those same mods to build and sell amps. Every so often I get emails from these guys who've done a certain mod, the mod didn't quite go as planned, and due to their lack of knowledge they email me and expect me to walk them through how to fix it. And these problems they have are VERY basic...getting the OT primary/PI grid drive out of phase, forgetting to ground the bias supply, not grounding cathodes, etc etc. If your working knowledge of electronics is limited to the point that prevents you from troubleshooting even the most basic problems in a given circuit on your own via a schematic, you have no business running an amplifier shop IMHO.
Now from time to time those of us who have a genuine working knowledge of electronics will run into a problem that we cannot solve and hit up another tech for help. However, we're not expecting the other tech to "do the work for us" and the nature of the issues we typically hit up other techs for are a bit more complex than the basic "wiring the OT primary out of phase". On top of this, by the time we hit up other techs, we have voltage readings, schematics, etc etc...to supply them and we kinda go through it together...not "one telling the other how to do it".
Just my $0.02.
I quit music right after that, sold it to a friend for cheap which I since lost touch. Did not really pick up the guitar till the late 90s. I dump a black face Fender Deluxe and a Bassman 100 head into the garbage can when I move in 86..........I am dead serious, Too much to move, just dumped them all in the trash.Last edited by Alan0354; 09-07-2012, 10:46 AM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Alan0354 View PostI quit music right after that, sold it to a friend for cheap which I since lost touch. Did not really pick up the guitar till the late 90s. I dump a black face Fender Deluxe and a Bassman 100 head into the garbage can when I move in 86..........I am dead serious, Too much to move, just dumped them all in the trash.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Austin View Post
Comment
-
Originally posted by deci belle View PostI was one of those guitarists that thought anyone owning an amp ought to know how it works!!
That's how I launched my entire career, starting with tinkering. I found electronics was......and still IS my ultimate passion. I quit music because because I just didn't have time.........and I grew up, got married. If I have the knowledge on patenting, I could have been rich. I don't care whether anyone believe this or not, In 1988, me and my step son was B.S ing one night about suit case with bigger wheels and retractable pull up handle. I actually drew up some diagrams, we laughed and dropped it. The rest is history. That's the reason I was here for a little bit last year, quit playing with electronics for almost 6 months, just concentrated on learning how to write patent application.
Everyone, ask yourself, I am sure you have ideas one time or the other and laugh it off.........then turned out to be a hit years later..........and kick yourself why you did not do something about it!!! I found learning and writing the patent very exciting, it really help you focusing your mind too on the design.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Steve Conner View PostBelieve it or not, during the metal era these little amps were considered junk! Nobody wanted them.
Comment
-
I want to share something really funny. Want to know how I even got into electronics and tinkering? I bought the Twin right before I went back to Hong Kong for summer vacation in 1975. I was so excited I want to carry it back. It was way too heavy as luggage, I took out one JBL and the power transformer and carried it on the plane. I lost the transformer in the Airport!!!! So when I was in Hone Kong, I had to buy a Chinese made transformer, tinker with the bias and all, had it in a wooden box hanging out at the back of the amp when I was performing. That was the first time I got into the amp tinkering. I bought the correct transformer after I came back. You can't buy parts in Hong Kong like here!!!
Comment
Comment