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In Reply to: RE: 8 have been sold since 1989. posted by GEO on June 26, 2012 at 20:15:52
To totally disprove the BS what you and your cronies put forth up here.
Guess what, that one amp exists, the best 2A3 amp ever produced, and it disproves any baloney you try to post on this Forum.
Jeff Medwin
Follow Ups:
'Guess what, that one amp exists, the best 2A3 amp ever produced, and it disproves any baloney you try to post on this Forum.'
Jeff, you could not possibly have heard all the 2A3 amps in the world, so how can you make that statement?. Your brain is a logic fee zone. What you just posted was a used car sales pitch at best. Does Dennis pay you a commission?
Unless that one amp is made with pure silver transformers, then it has no chance to be the best 2A3 amp ever produced.
Donald North
nt
There's certainly nothing wrong with silver-windings in a transformer, but (ask Mikey at Magnequest) there's SO much more to good transformer design.One thing I might mention here is that the same conductor INSIDE the transformer's windings behaves differently than the same wire OUTSIDE the transformer (lead-outs).
A word to the wise.
---Dennis---
Edits: 07/08/12
"the same conductor INSIDE the transformer's windings behaves differently than the same wire OUTSIDE the transformer (lead-outs)" ?
Please explain.
This is only my idea, so don't consider it the last word on this subject.You should confer with transformer and motor designers-- not just builders on this.
My own idea is that wire INSIDE a Transformer's Magnetic Field is part of a reaction between the conductors inside the Mag. Field and the laminated core which is storing and releasing energy. The output wiring that is INSIDE the transformer's Mag.-Field can thus be viewed as the output winding of a generator-- as far as this wiring's output loop is concerned.
Wiring that is OUTSIDE of this generator is merely a conductor. Energy losses there are far more than losses that occur INSIDE the generator-- it tends to self-correct its own losses, because it is part of an energy-storage/delivery system-- which tends to DELIVER on demand--not RESIST on demand.. (The transformer laminations are storing and releasing energy-- this system tends to self-correct-- to some extent).
A mere conductor, operating in empty space has no mechanism to self-correct. It is-- basically-- a resistor, although in both cases, we're also dealing with capacitance and inductance as well. Capacitance and inductance are greater INSIDE the transformer.
If you're going to use Silver, THE most important place to use it is in the output leads of your transformers/chokes-- and in all of your amp's wiring.
The LEAST important place to use it is in the transformers INTERNAL wiring-- although using it there will also result in improvement-- but improvement there will be much less than it is in output leads and in general wiring.
---Dennis---
Edits: 07/08/12
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