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In Reply to: RE: Art Dudleys Tweek #1 posted by mark.korda@myfairpoint.net on August 20, 2015 at 06:48:53
That was the design of most of the console stereos my parents owned.
Jim Tavegia
Follow Ups:
Hi Muestap, what you made there is a work of art,it's beautiful! I guess I'm in the category of not caring as much about appearance but sound. I bet a 100 people could write in telling you how to improve your consoles sound but it wouldn't look award winning as yours does. I would start with isolating the turntable,more off from your speaker cabinets which will vibrate. With Arts statement #1 he further states any vibration which effects one component will effect the others preventing miscues that can spoil the fragile illusion. You all heard about the AR turntable test of someone striking the base of the turntable with a hammer and not disrupting the playback or arm 1962? Why not just (don't) strike a hammer on your turntable base, or the base it's on. Would not that be some sort of preventative hifi? With Art Dudleys reasoning should jitter be added back into DAC's and CD players? Just some stuff I wonder about. Musetap, that is one cool console! There was a console almost as good and that was in The Apartment,a movie starring Jack Lemmon. If Art is being sarcastic and it's going over my head I'll stay away from Tweek#3. It involves using a wall outlet, and as Edison said AC can be very dangerous!....Mark Korda
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