Jump to content

twk123

Regulars
  • Posts

    1493
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by twk123

  1. 1 hour ago, L Carl said:

    I've read the term "recapped" often as I've been looking to build out a new system, but I don't really understand what it means (sounds like re-soldering) or what the benefit might be.  Could you define for me?
    Thanks,

    Old Capacitors dry out and drift out spec. That means your tweeter, mid range etc start playing frequencies they are not supposed to play which degrades the sound quality. Typically, the old ones are cut out and new ones soldered into the network. The Dayton 1% caps are solid caps, nothing exotic but are more than sufficient for normal playback.

     

    Good luck to the OP with the sale, I think the price point is very much fair given the cap refresh and rare finish. 

  2. 2 hours ago, emw2net said:

    Thanks for all the kind replies. I have to correct the room height: 8.2 ft not 82 feet, of course. They are now placed on the long side of the wall in the corners. But not sealed into the corners, therefor no low frequency gain. Basstraps?I have a rendering of what the ideal room treatment would look like (see attachment). The drivers seem to all be in working order. Regarding the AK-3 crossovers I am not sure Klipsch built those pre 2000?

    They have not been tampered with. I am only the second owner.

    As far as the sound: thin bass, nasal vocals, flat, muffled, little dynamic range, lack of warmth and roundness, just not 'present' or 

    life-like sounding,which is how I heard them sound in a different space, also with Jadis Orchestra. It's hard to tell the male from females apart in a chorus, for example.

     

     

    Klipschorn speakers (2).jpg

    Klipschorn speakers (3).jpg

    Klipschorn speakers (6).jpg

    HI-FI OAK 2.jpg

    This looks pretty good regarding room treatments and should account for most of the primary reflection points. An untreated rectangular room will sound like hell with those speakers. I have a similar setup with my LaScalas and I could not even bear casual listening until I put treatments in.

     

    The other major contribution factor with Klipsch sound quality is your source material. If you are running digital or streaming make sure you have the proper quality on. Also your computer's headphone jack has a garbage DAC, a standalone USB unit like one from Schiit will make a huge difference.  Dont worry about cables, just get some 100% copper ones from Monoprice on Amazon.

     

    With everything set up properly in a room like that your stereo will literally be scary to listen to sometimes for how real it is.

    • Like 1
  3. 33 minutes ago, dtel said:

    Can this really happen or was it just by chance, didn't seem like it.

     

    My son in law and daughter came by this evening to pick up some signs I made for him for his business. He had his phone on him and his Facebook app was not turned off and it was in his pocket. We were talking about the paint I used, Rust-Oleum for the signs. We sit down and was talking and about 10 minutes thenr he took out his phone and looked at it and it was an add for the same paint we talked about. He looked up kind of shocked and said can Facebook be listening to me I have not looked up this paint and have not seen an add like this on here before?

     

    I don't know since I am not on Facebook or use a phone, can this happen?

     

    .

     

     

    This 100% happens. I know a few people who have this exact same story.

    .

    I have watched a few youtube videos on these setups and literally every single room had horrible rooms with not even basic sound treatment or positioning. One guy even had these little wooden "room boundary pucks" on poles which were supposed to resonate and block the sound from reflecting off the wall somehow.

  4. On 7/9/2019 at 10:00 AM, Dave1290 said:

    I don't blame corporate at all for not allowing photos of the operation.  30 years ago my plant had the same rule in place.  Since we are automotive related, naturally the Japanese auto-makers and our "other" customers wanted plant tours all the time  So here comes a group of about 12 guys from an automaker in for a tour, ok fine, they get the high dollar tour.  We start the tour and I notice 4 of them were "sketch artists" who stood there and drew the entire manufacturing process.  In the 5 minute pitch, they drew the machine, conveyor system,  EVERY process the machine went thru to create the product.  That was just the INITIAL process, same thing into the heat treating area, then the finish and visual inspection process and packaging.  THAT was the first and only time that ever happened but they got the entire process in an hour.  As soon as they started the call to corporate was made and they got the ok.  IF I owned that company Mr. OK would have been gone in a  heartbeat!

     

    Yea, it ALL started when the US sent W. Edwards Deming to Japan to halp rebuild their society after WWII.  The US thought the guy was an idiot so they shipped him to Japan where he implemented his plan.  His process is still used today.  The US once again shot themselves in the foot imo.  Hit the link IF you want to know WHY and HOW the Japanese can do what they want to do!

     

    https://deming.org/explore/fourteen-points?apartner=aarp   

    This reminds me of how the Soviets got jet engine technology from the UK after WWII. A soviet diplomat came to the UK plant and toured the factory. The Soviets could not figure out what metal they used in the engine so he wore rubber soled shoes which picked up the shavings they later used to reverse engineer the engine components.

     

     

    • Like 1
  5. 7 minutes ago, Coytee said:

    I guess I could get them sand blasted....I hadn't really thought of that (I was presuming a light hand sand job would suffice)

     

    Though I again, am not looking to "restore" the tractor....  if I paint parts of it, I figure it only takes a little more effort to do it RIGHT so for what parts I do, I'd like to do them justice.

     

    I've not looked at the videos (slow download speeds here) but that 1066 is a spitting twin of mine other than mine has the vertical frame for a canopy.

     

    I'm here to tell you, when you are running this thing at PTO speeds, that engine just flat our roars!!  (straight pipe on mine which to be honest, I'm NOT a fan of)

     

     

     

    I would sand it down to the metal then hit it with some Epoxy Primer then paint over that and you should be good.

     

    Here a a decent quality one from Eastwood:

     

    https://www.eastwood.com/eastwood-black-epoxy-primers.html

     

    You need an HVLP gun but you could probably roll it then sand it smooth if you really need to.

  6. 7 minutes ago, JohnA said:

     

    Perzactly!

     

     

     

    It must get tiring for the rider to swing his brass balls on either side of the bike around every corner. Thats impressive stuff.

     

    Also, obligatory regarding unnecessarily loud Harley pipes:

     

     

     

    • Like 1
  7. I turned a single Industrial Heresy  into a boombox a few years ago. I am still waiting for the time I can sneak off into the woods with it when I take my brother camping and play some crazy bigfoot noises or something from off in the distance.

    • Haha 1
  8. 59 minutes ago, JL Sargent said:

    An accident during major renovations has been mentioned. Given that, I suspect it was caused by welding which starts a lot of accidental fires.

    Imagine being the tradesman out there that knows his slip up with a TIG welder torched a national treasure... :unsure:

    • Like 3
  9. I ordered this kit and used it to spray Epoxy primer on the roof of my car and it turned out really well. I like that it comes with two guns too. Just put a poster board or something on the wall and play around with the settings until you get the fan you want. That compressor seams a bit small but you can spray a light coat and get it to recharge then spray another etc.

     

    https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0046RDW3K/ref=oh_aui_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1

    • Thanks 1
  10. 45 minutes ago, Klipsch Fan said:

    Sorry, sir. This is my first forum post on any forum. I live in central California (Arroyo Grande is near San Luis Obispo) but I have a Cessna so my market area is greatly expanded.

    Wait, so you are going to fly out and load your Cessna plane with some Heresy's and fly back with them? Thats pretty awesome, PWK would approve.

    • Like 1
  11. Great thread! The KG 5.5s are a really fun Klipsch speaker. I did notice you have them very dampened with the Fiberglass. I initially tried that with mine but found them too 'dead' and decided to only line the back panel and something just clicked and they were perfect. I also did the Ti diaphragms and actually did not like them as much as the original phenolic ones. Unfortunately, I damaged one taking it out so I could not revert back and eventually my ears adjusted. The speakers just sounded more 'alive' with the originals. All in all these are great speakers and I found they sound best with Class D amps, especially since they are high efficiency 2 ways and have such an 'Open' sound. 

    • Like 1
  12. 22 hours ago, DizRotus said:

     

    Is this like the short-lived Philips “Ambilight?”

    Its a similar concept but the white needs to be neutral white. The Ambilight was a gimmick with the colors, especially since ambient color around the TV actually creates a psychological effect of de-saturating the TV itself. 

     

    Here is a really good Home Theater Geek episode where the cover the bias light and other interesting things that can affect TV performance in the room.

     

     

    • Thanks 1
  13. 5 minutes ago, billybob said:

    Yes them old pupils dilated from darkness, and then you meet any oncoming it really helps me. Especially when they have those super white or other color leds.

    This actually ties into Home Theater in an interesting way and is why I always recommend a bias light behind your TV. When you drive at night, the constant cycle of dark then sudden light of oncoming traffic or street lights cause your pupils to constantly dilate and contract which leads to fatigue and is one of the reasons why driving at night is dangerous. The same thing goes for watching TV at night, producers often cycle between light and dark scenes and it causes the same fatigue. By wearing amber glasses and having a TV bias light, it evens out the amount of light entering your eyes to avoid the constant dilation, contraction cycle.

     

    • Like 3
  14. 28 minutes ago, Max2 said:

    Just plain old dumb.  Run with what the good Lord gave you,   These people have real mental deficiencies and I don't mean for that to sound bad, because it must be a horrible and perplexing thing  to go through.  And if you need to, so be it, but don't be a putz like this chap.  There are clear muscular advantages in some situations and its down right insulting to anyone with a 3 digit IQ, let alone the gender that is being taken advantage of.    Its effing cheating man!  

     

    This "guy" must feel so proud and liberated.

     

    https://www1.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2018/october/transgender-man-who-says-hes-a-woman-wins-womens-cycling-race

    This is the real crux of the issue. This is absolutely a mental health issue and I believe is partly caused by hormone mimicking chemicals in our plastics and pesticides like Atrazine. What a perfect cover though, instead of an industry coming to terms with the fact we poisoned a generation we simply create a huge PR stunt to normalize the problem. Its absolutely sickening we are allowing and promoting kids to mutilate themselves permanently before they reach an age where they can be trusted to make their own decisions in any other aspect of life. We dont let Schizophrenic people vote twice if they hear voices in their heads, but we allow this insanity in sports?

    • Like 3
×
×
  • Create New...