Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Alien

Member
  • Posts

    965
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Alien

  1. [quote name='ped' post='122804' date='Jan 18 2008, 12:53 PM']HI Jamie,

    There is a bash being planned with Mike @ Bassdirect somewhere around Leamington Spa at the moment. I have however just asked for the contact details for the usual Northampton venue because it seemed a hit with everyone, so I will book it in due course for around March/April time to give everyone plenty of notice....

    Does that sound OK with everyone?

    Cheers
    ped[/quote]

    Here's the details for the place we used the last couple of times:

    The Turnpike, Harpole Turn, Weedon Road, Harpole, Northamptonshire, NN7 4DD

    Tel: 01604 832340

    Andy

  2. Dood's got one / had one - I'm fairly sure you would have heard it at one of the BW bashes.
    Great quality, Dan certainly rates the sounds for bass use. I'm sure he'll chime in soon enough :)

    Andy

  3. As far as I'm concerned, the answer is the same whoever you are. You need the amount of amp power and speakers that gets you heard. That amount could be anything from a 20 Watt practice amp to a full-on concert rig running 3000 Watts through speaker stacks the size of a house.
    Horses for courses really.

    Andy

  4. I had a similar problem on a Fender copy a few years back.
    The 'key' part of the machine was loose in the shaft, where it's slotted and pinned in. I took the tuner off, pulled the shaft, and clamped it in a vice to squeeze the shaft back into a tight fit.
    Wicking a drop of superglue along the joint between the key and the shaft would probably work OK too.
    The Allen screw holds the shaft into the body of the tuning machine - don't undo it while the string is tensioned, as it'll launch half the mechanism across the room!

    Andy

  5. Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor. To the layman, the only important word is the last one :)

    As to why they're preferred over valves, well, price and weight are the obvious answers.

    Andy

  6. [quote name='DHA' post='96153' date='Nov 29 2007, 02:37 PM']The problem is output valves need output transformers and high voltage supplies which means another large transformer. Some have used pre-amp valves generating sub-watt levels into a load but this is not the same as having an output transformer and dummy load.[/quote]

    Does the output transformer make a difference? I thought that a good transformer worked fairly evenly across all frequencies. Wouldn't it be possible to leave it out and simply use a higher resistance in the dummy load (obviously with the same power rating), since the transformer is used to match the high output impedance of the valve to the low impedance of the speaker. It's just matching the dummy load to the valve impedance.

    Andy

  7. [quote name='LukeFRC' post='91207' date='Nov 20 2007, 12:55 AM']i wonder if someone could invent speakers you could fold up.[/quote]

    I've been doing some work with folding speaker cabs, on the principle that you're carrying around a big box of air that's not needed until the speakers are working. Bracing is a big problem though - getting a cab to fold up to half its original size and yet still be stiff enough to sound good is something I've not cracked yet.

    Andy

  8. A soundman friend of mine runs a d&b Technologies PA rig, and the cables that came with it are 5-core 2.5mm Pirelli mains flex, the sort of thing that's used to wire up large 3-phase equipment. If a company like d&b are using mains cable, then it ought to be OK for us mere mortals :)

    Andy

×
×
  • Create New...