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In Reply to: RE: Phoenix Engineering Falcon PSU (similar to VPI SDS) review video posted by phoenixengr on July 29, 2014 at 06:10:12
How many watts or amps can your unit safety power? I have a TNT and a HW-19 I'd like to try it on.
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Edits: 07/29/14
Why are all responses by the manufacturer consist of just a period? What's up with that?
nt
I am not seeing the "edits" thing. I am interested in the manufactures comments as I was considering purchasing one of these.
There was good information in some of his posts. But the Vinyl Police showed up and ran him off.
See ya. Dave
I think I'm beginning to understand now. I know the owner of the company and I was one of their beta test sites. Personally, I like the products and agree with most of his customer's posts.
I guess I could also understand why he might take exception to someone bagging on the products, especially since there doesn't seem to be any merit to the critisisms. Other than that, just a lot of satisfied customer endorsements and a few posters trying to stir up trouble.....
"just a lot of satisfied customer endorsements and a few posters trying to stir up trouble....."
exactly
Good riddance! We wouldn't want any information from a guy that actually builds the product. Would we?
> Good riddance! We wouldn't want any information from a guy that actually builds the product. Would we?
Especially if he builds a product that is better than similar products and costs less, too! ;-)
nt
I guess he didn't realize that a space would do the same thing as a period. I always use a space.
My guess is he took his marbles and went home. Can't blame him. He got jumped pretty good around here.
See ya. Dave
Some of the folks on this forum are ridiculous. The product in question started out as a DIY project on a DIY site. The responses to the product have been quite positive. How naive of him to think he could come to the Vinyl Asylum and talk about anything but a Denon DL-103 or a Technics SL-1200.
"Hope is a good thing. Maybe, the best of things. And no good thing ever dies."
Well, I just ordered the RoadRunner digital tachometer for my Sota Millennia. The Sota already has its own motor power supply with adjustable platter speed but it has nothing but a paper strobe disc to set speed. The RoadRunner will allow me to adjust speed while playing a record and maintain speed accuracy over time. I have been doing this by timing platter revolutions with my HP-48G calculator. I put a white dot on the platter and wrote a program for my calculator that would time the platter over hundreds of revolutions. As long as platter speed was adjusted fairly accurately to begin with using a strobe, the calculator would keep track of the revolutions by analyzing the time. In other words, the platter speed had to be accurate enough so that it would always remain less than one-half revolution off between any two times. Then the calculator program could figure out how many revolutions it had completed and provide the percent error in its rotational speed. Now I won't have to bother with that ridiculousness anymore because I can simply read the RPM from the RoadRunner's display.Best regards,
John Elison
Edits: 08/01/14
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