Post pics of your builds....
Mar 11, 2006 at 11:37 PM Post #991 of 9,811
Quote:

Originally Posted by Polaris111688
Hehe, I'm slow with these things...
tongue.gif


But in any case, a LEGO case might be a pretty interesting idea..



very funny...
 
Mar 11, 2006 at 11:41 PM Post #992 of 9,811
LEGO case... bamaslama... nah!
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Still, I don't think it would be a horrible idea for a design with not all that much heat.
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Mar 12, 2006 at 1:13 AM Post #993 of 9,811
Quote:

Originally Posted by familyman
very funny...


O RLY?? O_o
 
Mar 12, 2006 at 3:47 AM Post #994 of 9,811
Quote:

Originally Posted by Teerawit
O RLY?? O_o


RLY
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Mar 12, 2006 at 3:40 PM Post #995 of 9,811
Hehe, guess I should've added No pun intended..
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I will be posting pics later next week of my updated PIMETA with TREAD regulator and the oversized heatsink.
tongue.gif
 
Mar 13, 2006 at 12:30 PM Post #996 of 9,811
I thought that when talking about black, it should be black.
So I needed a black shielded iPod dock connector. And in the end I got it!

So here are my last builds.

IMGP0976.jpg


IMGP0964.jpg


IMGP0956.jpg


I am kind of proud about them.

Any comments? and yes I do build them myself.

Rgds Hans
 
Mar 13, 2006 at 6:15 PM Post #997 of 9,811
Hey all,

Here are some pics of my first build, a simple CMOY. Pretty messy with the wiring inside, but hey I'm just glad it worked on the first try. Oh, and just wanted to thank everyone on the board because without all of the information here there is no way I would have been able to build this. Thanks.

Aaron

io.jpg

sv.jpg

inside.jpg

all.jpg
 
Mar 13, 2006 at 11:37 PM Post #998 of 9,811
Here is a pic of my Cavalli-Lovell MK2 headphone amp.

Tubes: 6922 Holland Bugle Boys
5687 Tung Sol Black Plates

Negative Feedback controlled by a stepped attenuator.

CCS circuit was replaced recently with a Servo design, no more adjusting trimpots!

Slow Start Circuit

Super Fast and Powerful Power Supply.

Stepped attenuator for Volume Control

Headphones: Sennheiser HD600's
CD Player: NAD C542

All electronics were designed by RuneEight and MainsHum from HeadWize. Excellent documentation provided by Batman, Also from HeadWize.

Custom Copper and Black Walnut Chassis designed and built by myself.

Performance: I thought I knew what HiFi was before I built this amp. But I was wrong. This is the most incredible sounding stereo system I have yet to listen to. The dynamic range and tonal accuracy are incredible. It reproduces strings and horns so well it gives you chills. Bass is tight and deep. The sound is effortless due to the oversized power supply and clever circuit design. The distortion is inaudible with the NFB adjusted correctly and it has plenty of power to destroy even the most robust audiophile's hearing :)
I know this is the same thing everyone says about thier amp. But this one really performs that well.


There is detailed instructions and parts list over at Headwize.

Nice to meet everyone over here and I look forward to expanding my online group of audio nuts.

Jwags818
Corvallis Oregon
 
Mar 14, 2006 at 12:28 AM Post #999 of 9,811
Quote:

Originally Posted by hoosterw
IMGP0956.jpg


I am kind of proud about them.

Any comments? and yes I do build them myself.

Rgds Hans



deeeaaad sexxxy!
 
Mar 14, 2006 at 3:24 AM Post #1,000 of 9,811
Updated PIMETA with TREAD regulator inside. TREAD board is bolted to the heatsink you see there. The LM317AT, specifically, is bolted on with a self-tapping screw.

n1342260049_30000380_3789.jpg
 
Mar 15, 2006 at 10:04 PM Post #1,002 of 9,811
Hehe, nice. Must've took a bit of redesigning.
 
Mar 16, 2006 at 4:02 PM Post #1,003 of 9,811
Hello,

Here some pictures of my M3 headphone amp. I have used the normal parts from the BOM on the amb website. The headphone amp sounds great with my HD580 ! I have used an amplification of 5 (4k resistor) which is plenty for any PC and CD source with my HD580 to have a good range for the volume level pot. I have placed the transformer (I bought a normal pcb transformer from mouse instead of the fancy toroidal pcb version from digikey) in an old walwart housing from an old zip drive, because when it was next to the headphone amp pcb I had a little hum.

Before the amp was in a housing it had a little noise and hum, but now in his housing it is dead silent even with open volume (with nothing connected to the amp rca's). If you connect a dac you will hear the noise from the dac a little bit (NOS DAC).

m31.jpg


m32.jpg



Have fun,

Edwin
 
Mar 16, 2006 at 7:01 PM Post #1,005 of 9,811
How about some pictures of that nice M^3 all buttoned up? That looks like a nice case...
 

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