So I lit 'em up this weekend. [message #37221] |
Tue, 09 July 2002 06:38 |
JLapaire
Messages: 156 Registered: May 2009
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Master |
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...literally. CD player direct into my old Crown Power Base 1 right into the Theater 4 pis. No controls. I walked around the room with earmuffs on looking for places that might rattle or boom, and happened to look at the surround of the woofer during a female vocal passage (Bjork). The internally mounted crossover was lighting up bright enough to see in daylight through the surround! Way too loud to be safe in the house, but now I understand why I had to put in those gawdawful big resistors. Knowing also that they're clear and dynamic below a watt gives me great respect for the design. Sorry for the gush, had to share. I wonder what kind of power level at what freq is required to incandesce those lamps? John
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doesn't everybody? [message #37231 is a reply to message #37226] |
Tue, 09 July 2002 09:48 |
Sam P.
Messages: 307 Registered: May 2009
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Grand Master |
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My magnum ear protectors STAY in the living room. How else are you going to "proof test" the acoustic output power in a meaningfull way? 1 watt/100dB. With muffs, ears get 70dB. 100 watts/120dB. Ears get 90, loud but not too bad. Naked ears at 120dB? No way for this guy... Even freq. response testing at lower SPL's is much more enjoyable(?) without being drilled by 12kHz. sine waves. Keeping ear protection handy means I am much more likely to wear them when mowing the yard, operating power tools, or power tuning the KZ1000 out in the garage. When you defend against all the high SPL's you can avoid, your sound system will sound consistently better. When "hammered" by spl's, the muscles in the inner ear respond protectively by tightening up. How long they take to fully relax is not clearly understood. This is why after "blasting a song or two" and then listening at a lower level, the system will sound like crap for a while, to your ears. Till they readjust and relax to the lower sound level again...Sam
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last time I flew [message #37235 is a reply to message #37234] |
Tue, 09 July 2002 11:17 |
Sam P.
Messages: 307 Registered: May 2009
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Grand Master |
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I wore foam plugs one way, and had no ear discomfort or stuffy feeling afterwards at all. Coming home I forgot the plugs, and was deaf for half the evening when I got home. I really wished I had taken my SPL with me, maybe next time, but unlikely. Pre 9/11, the last time I flew, they never batted an eye at all the "hardware" in my carry-on bag, voltmeter, wire leads, a kitchen digital clock timer, leatherman tool, black boxes. No way I'm putting up with "sock inspections" and all the new hassles, this guy will walk there first...Sam
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Re: So I lit 'em up this weekend. [message #37251 is a reply to message #37240] |
Wed, 10 July 2002 02:41 |
JLapaire
Messages: 156 Registered: May 2009
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Master |
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When I first thought I saw a flash from within I think she was just chucking the car parts and cutlery off the cliff. She's got a pretty good scream on the same disc (why can't I remember the name of it - Post maybe?) that could make you spill your beer. John
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