P
Phil Allison
Guest
"Jeff Liebermann"
"Phil Allison"
WS constantly over-snips, ignores whatever context was there and just plain
misreads.
Rod Elliot re-drew my had drawn schem his way - but it is perfectly clear.
You invented an non-existent problem with my idea BECAUSE you did not
fucking read it.
electrostatic speaker in history, later ( very similar) versions are in
production now - in China !!
Heaps about it all on the web too.
** Did you read what I wrote THIS time ??
What does the last line say ??
Where is the Quad factory ?
In the USA or the UK ?
IIRC, the problem with arcing was due to the listening room being at high
altitude and that the reviewer was pushing the speakers to their power
limit.
.... Phil
"Phil Allison"
** My writing is not at fault.Guilty as charged. I misread the web page. Sorry(tm).
** You are not alone in that - most posters do not read what is actually
written and their replies show the fact by having little or no relevance.
For the record, what happened was that it was late when I originally
read the web page. The plan was to reply in the morning. However,
when I went back to the web page in the morning, the page wouldn't
load in my browser. (Trust me. This is not a fabrication). So, I
trusted my untrustworthy memory of the page to add my comment, which
was wrong. My apologies (again).
WS is the biggest offender by far.
If you find someone
misinterpreting what you wrote, I suggest you make an effort to
clarify your writings,
WS constantly over-snips, ignores whatever context was there and just plain
misreads.
** That was idiotic - it take only a minute or so to read the whole thing.What fouled me up was the schematic.
http://sound.westhost.com/absw.htm
I'm used to seeing relays with coils and relay contacts with diamonds
for contacts. I also don't like connection tags style, where I can't
tell which way the signal is flowing. The schematic does not show a
box for the amplifiers or the "Y" adapter. With a quick glance, I saw
two relays and ASSUMED that one of them switched the input. I did not
read the entire description as I assumed that everything I needed to
know was in the schematic.
Rod Elliot re-drew my had drawn schem his way - but it is perfectly clear.
** You alone.So, who's at fault here?
You invented an non-existent problem with my idea BECAUSE you did not
fucking read it.
** The ELS63s came out in 1982, sold in large numbers and is the best known** You probably have heard of the Quad ESL63 speaker
Full disclosure: I'm not into audio these day and know nothing of the
Quad ESL63.
electrostatic speaker in history, later ( very similar) versions are in
production now - in China !!
Heaps about it all on the web too.
** That really shows.I will confess to repairing some audio equipment, but my
level of experience with modern hardware is essentially non-existent.
** WTF is that supposed to mean ?One, fully tested ESL63 was compared with each production unit by placing
the two side by side with a flat response condenser mic on axis of both
about 2 metres away. The speakers were set up in an open area with a
thickly
carpeted floor and surrounded by acoustic screens. A square wave signal
was
supplied to both speakers at some mid band frequency. Next, the polarity
of
the new unit was reversed by a DPDT switch while the operator looked at a
scope screen showing the output of the mic.
The test was passed if the signal seen on the scope all but vanished !!
Not just a neat test, but proof that all ESL63s left the factory identical
in amplitude and phase response across the audio band.
Ummmm....
** This has NO relevance top my post at all.http://www.stereophile.com/content/quad-esl-63-loudspeaker-page-2
I don't know what went wrong. It could be the reviewer was
overdriving the speakers or that there was DC on the speakers.
However, if it was a defective speaker, the comparison test should
have shown that something was wrong.
** Did you read what I wrote THIS time ??
What does the last line say ??
Where is the Quad factory ?
In the USA or the UK ?
IIRC, the problem with arcing was due to the listening room being at high
altitude and that the reviewer was pushing the speakers to their power
limit.
.... Phil