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Olorin

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Posts posted by Olorin

  1. Gullah,

    I understand your frustration -- I've been there. It's what prompted me to approach auctions the way I do now.

    Bid what you're willing to pay for an item when you first see it, then walk away and check the auction when it closes. If someone wants to bid more than you want to pay, good for him, he can have it. If no one else wants it as much as you do, congratulations, it's yours.

    Other people have other ideas that work for them. Maybe they use the snipers because they like to get something for $95 that they were willing to pay $100 for. Me, I don't care. If it's worth a hundred bucks to me, it's worth a hundred bucks!

    Good luck on your quest. You've got some good people up there in NorCal that seem happy to help you out. I'm sure you'll find what you're after.

  2. ----------------

    On 4/9/2004 11:16:33 AM neo33 wrote:

    I just picked up a pair of beautiful Heresy speakers in raw birch with a medium stain for $275 yesterday at my local audio store. They are in excellent condition and they have no risers. What is the best placement for the speakers? How high should they be? How many feet apart? Should they be toe-in at all? All inputs are appreciated.

    ----------------

    IME, IMO, etc . . .

    In a small room, without a sub, I like mine in the corners. They pick up some bass reinforcement that way. They'll also pick up some bass gain by being coupled to the floor. You may or may not like that effect. Getting the tweeters to ear level helps a lot with the imaging and clarity, so without the risers you've got a choice to make there. Before I had the sub, my favorite placement was on stands, about 1-2 feet in from the room's corners, toed in to my listening position.

    My present room only has one good corner I could use, but now there is a sub, so corner placement is a non issue. I am also only about nine feet from them, and they are hardly toed in at all. They're about a foot off the back wall for WAF and furniture arrangement reasons.

    I'm sure if you fiddle around with them, you'll find the setup that suits your ears and your room best. I hope you get a lot of enjoyment from them.

  3. ----------------

    On 3/27/2004 2:15:46 AM Griffinator wrote:

    ----------------

    On 3/26/2004 5:23:25 PM TBrennan wrote:

    Misspelling and regional or class idiom is fine with me but punctuation crosses all boundries of region and class.

    ----------------

    You lost a comma there, my man.

    The correct punctuation should have been:

    Misspelling and regional or class idiom is fine with me
    ,
    but punctuation crosses all boundries of region and class.

    (ducking and running, lest the whole forum organize a lynching)

    9.gif9.gif9.gif

    ----------------

    I saw that, and it occurs to me that Tom's sense of humor is SO dry that he might blow the "independent clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction" rule just to make his point. It works on another level too -- the one on which all spelling or grammar correction posts must contain at least one error of the type they highlight.

    9.gif

  4. Reading that post was a wren-ching experience. One question -- why the ruffled feathers? There's no need for ranting and raven. Maybe this kind of thing gets on your ****, or maybe pun cascades are your albatross. For my own part they make me cluck and cackle with laughter, but maybe I shouldn't crow about that. People might think I'm loony.

  5. ----------------

    On 3/25/2004 11:50:19 AM garymd wrote:

    I second the academy. Hard to find though. I think it sounds better than the heresy in that spot for movies in particular. Best if you can build your own custom center. Lots of info on the forum if you go that route.

    ----------------

    Sorry Gary, but I have to respectfully disgree. I put my Academy between my Heresies and they don't come close to matching. The Heresy highs are a lot crisper and clearer to my ears. The Academy has a more laid-back presentation.

    If I were to build around my pair of Heresies, I'd do it with two more pairs of Heresies. It might not be the prettiest approach, but short of getting bigger Heritage speakers and pushing the Heresies back, it will sound the best.

    IMHO, My US$0.02, etc. :-)

  6. Wow -- that auction lasted 25 seconds! Hope it comes true for the buyer -- remember what happened to our Freak on a Leash?

    One thing for sure -- I'd hate to be the seller when his SO finds out he just gave away 500 or more dollars . . .

  7. In some cultures it is impolite to belch after a meal. In others, it is impolite not to.

    Since adding inflection is difficult with text on a screen, people have developed methods of getting the communication across. Since chat and Usenet preceded the wide availability of rich text . . . hard to get Arial 24 point bold on an 80 x 24 amber display . . . people had to come up with OTHER ways to add EMPHASIS to the things they wanted to EMPHASIZE.

    Emphasizing every word is generally interpreted as shouting. Consider it right or consider it wrong, but for online communication it's the cultural norm. Kind of like emoticons to let someone know you're being cheerful instead of dour. 9.gif

    Now as for the original question, I find no caps to be a lot less irritating than ALL CAPS. All caps are just plain hard to read, and I'll usually just skip a post that's all-capped. I'll also bail on a post as soon as I see u for you, ur for your/you're, and b4 for before. I don't care about grammatical or honest spelling mistakes, but I won't muddle through someone's mangled language just because they're too lazy to invest four key strokes in a word. I happen to think English is a fine language and I appreciate seeing it used well.

    Soapbox off. 1.gif

  8. ----------------

    On 3/22/2004 8:43:05 PM wheelman wrote:

    Sounds to me like he's rich. But he got a good deal on his heresy's. You got to save a little money when you got a million dollars worth of cars LOL. Or do you mean you own a mustang and your parents have three vipers? If you do own them either way you have great parents and you should let them know. Be carefull buddy when you do drive those dont' get killed on us.
    2.gif1.gif

    ----------------

    They're his parents' cars. He's been asked the direct question twice now, and twice he's declined to answer it.

    C'mon, Mars! Man up and tell the truth! 9.gif9.gif

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