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- Feb 23, 2016
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Not the worst thing so don't worry about it.I don't know why I said that.
That's what I get for logging in at 3 am.
Snow woke me up.
Not the worst thing so don't worry about it.I don't know why I said that.
That's what I get for logging in at 3 am.
Snow woke me up.
Ha-ha.The lesson seems to be that big VU meters are popular.
Tried one of those back in the day, the amp was short of power, or at least it ran very hot at normal listening volumes, and sounded a bit flat and undynamic, so probably clipping at a guess.Damn---Too Late:
View attachment 100889
I fully expect these products to be divisive, but I really dig their sci-fi looks:
BMC CS3 (6'000 EUR)
or:
BMC PureAmp (2'500 EUR)
I had the same thought, but my words to express the idea seemed a little crude to post here.That's obviously a male unit.
What it invokes in me, is the idea of a simple flat near featureless plate with magic inside. Like finding an alien artifact that somehow spins out music while being an apparently monolithic slab of metal. I think that was the design ethos they were going for.
de gustibus non est disputandum and all, but...I fully expect these products to be divisive, but I really dig their sci-fi looks:
BMC CS3 (6'000 EUR)
or:
BMC PureAmp (2'500 EUR)
I wish I had your problems .Luxman::R2R VU color matching creates a dilemma.
The white meters on the L-509X (the best Luxman integrated) match the white-yellow meters on my Revox (my 2nd best deck), but the yellow meters on the L-590AXII (the 2nd best Luxman integrated) better match the amber meters on my Studer (my best deck).