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jackpod

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Posts posted by jackpod

  1. If memory serves me correctly, the 8 track was invented for consumer convienence, having 4 songs to choose from versus the 4 track having only 2 and as was noted above, the 4 track had a lever you pulled to engage the capstan whereas the 8 track you just pushed it in. The 4 track was more prone to tape damage because of the 1" or so hole that allowed the capstan roller to enter the cartridge. it was very easy to snag the tape and ruin the cartridge. The quality was sacrificed for consumer convienence. I had my Muntz for years, never wanting to upgrade to the 8 track because of the much poorer quality. Back in those years I had an old 110vac converter powering I believe it was called the "Tiger" SS amp from popular electronics magazine and a pair of AR4A's in my VW Bus. Had some great times back then

    Those were the days......

  2. Well I was hoping for a little more detail on measurements etc. I am willing to try this, I guess I will just have to lay one of the units down and figure it out for myself. I do have perfect corners, 5ft x 5ft on one side and 5ft x 4 ft on the other. I have no bass issues, My issue is the sweet spot is 9ft in front of where I sit. I want to do this so I can toe-out the top hat to move the sweet spot further into the room...

  3. The 1400, 1700 and 1900 were marketed as a poor mans Mac, well beyond anything in its price range and definately something to proud to own. McIntosh also had another line but for the life of me can not think of the name right now, it started with an "S" which was even more priced for the middle class family to own. This line was out in the 70's but wasn't around too long, it fell right in line with the top of the line japanese stuff od the time. If memory serves me correctly I think it was the Mac 1700 that was a tube hybrid

  4. I was under the impression that the MC250 sounded better than the MC2100. Yes I understand the power difference. Would you consider two MC250's mono vs the MC2100?

    It depends on the vintage of the MC250, a few years into the line they totally revamped the MC250, which they didn't do with the MC2100. I would have to dig thru some paperwork to see if I could find the differences. I have listened to strapped 250's vs a 2100. The strapped 250's rocked. I still own a 250, 2100 and 5 of the mono MC50's (they only made the MC50 for 2 or 3 years). A pair of the MC50's knock the socks of an MC250

  5. Years ago my neighbor who was a service guy in the tube era gave me a hint about wiped off lettering. Take a lead pencil and lightly smear where the letters were and the lettering will magically reappear, until you wipe the graphite off. But at least you can see what it is.

    And you don't want to know where Michael Jackson's other glove is!

  6. I built my own, I didn't skimp. The box also runs a suite called Cinemar mainlobby for a touchscreen GUI for my music, dvd's, XM Radio and my Home Automation system.

    A couple hints, Don't skimp. The box I built was about $1800.00 BUT it has 1.5 terabytes of storage, that is 1500 Gigabytes. It is on a raid 5 array, for those who don't know what raid 5 is, I can have a disk drive die, the system automatically swaps in a hot spare, and it can actually run one disk short if there should happen to be 2 disk drives that die at the same time without losing ANY data. There is a total of 8 250 GB sata II drives. It is a P4 3.4ghz with 4 gigs of ram and an M-Audio 1010LT sound card which supports 4 analog pairs and a digital out. I can easily stream 5 different audio sources simoustaneously with no effort. The digital feeds a McIntosh mac 3 DAC which feeds my C39 preamp. All of my music is stored in wav format, 1250+ CD's takes 600 GB and the 4 analog feed my Nuvo Essentia Whole House Audio system. The Cinemar Package along with J River Media Center has a nice GUI for the Music called MusicLobby, complete database for my DVD's called DVDLobby, able to send IR commands to whichever of the 3 400 disc changers I have along with satelite receiver control, TVLobby and XMLobby. Select a dvd on the screen and push play. Total cost for the Cinemar Suite is probably around $500 but it is in modules, you buy what you need. Programming isn't to hard, depending on how elaborate you want to get.

    Anyone wants a few more details, let me know

    Jack

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