unclefred
New Head-Fier
It's just what Jason was expecting.They read numbers instead of listening to it, who got the Aegir 2 shipped to their house?
It's just what Jason was expecting.They read numbers instead of listening to it, who got the Aegir 2 shipped to their house?
Yes. And 54 Martha was where Westpole was located. They were the booking agency for the Sons Of Champlin way back in the day.The famous Jefferson Airplane house is at 2400 Fulton in San Francisco...
And the Grateful Dead lived at 710 Ashbury St., before they hightailed it up to Marin.The famous Jefferson Airplane house is at 2400 Fulton in San Francisco...
love this classic movie!! RIP Melinda and Darrin
The first review I've seen and a comparo with OG Aegir-
https://audio-head.com/review-schiit-audio-aegir-2/
Also, I've already seen posts elsewhere exclaiming they would never buy an amp with a Damping factor of 10.
Not to mention all of the equipment resting on carpet. Probably a fair amount of static to be dealt with.So a dude with speakers a foot from the back wall and one speaker a foot from the side wall (both hard walls, zero room treatment) is reviewing audio equipment.
Ok. Whatever.
Not to mention all of the equipment resting on carpet. Probably a fair amount of static to be dealt with.
But what do you do if you want to access the spare tire and don't know where it is in the middle of nowhere?
At least his turntable is at knee height. Or maybe he's justNot to mention all of the equipment resting on carpet. Probably a fair amount of static to be dealt with.
At least his turntable is at knee height. Or maybe he's justshortvertically challenged.
The little bit of paper warning about TRRS connectors inside on top of the box was good. If that had been in the manual, I probably would have missed it until it was too late. Not that I have such a connector in use, but still. When my MJ3 arrived, I had to consult the small paper manual almost immediately because I had no idea what the tiny symbols on the front toggles meant. Okay, I could have experimented for the output level, but feedback and push-pull, no way am I going to know what it's doing by listening. So, having a little manual of paper beside the unit to quickly work it out was very handy. I put paper manuals in a plastic bag in a draw or cupboard near the device. Essential for the weird error codes that sometimes pop up on the washing machine or how to find the right comfy setting on the air conditioner. Going to the computer and trying to find the manual, then most likely having to print it out and then tramp back to the device to work stuff out? Nah, too much bother, and besides, paper manuals give me something funny to read while I hum to myself during blackouts.Let's discuss manuals:
1. I know if we get rid of them, someone's gonna complain about us being cheap/assholes/etc. Understood.
2. However, if we get rid of them, we're right there with $3500 products (Cintiq) with no manuals and with massively complex apps and other stupid stuff with no manuals.
3. Most manuals are about 10% useful information and 90% scolding (looking at tools especially).
4. Manuals are almost always somewhat wrong.
So: manuals? Pro? Con? Indifferent?
Edit: I linked Tyler to this, so he'll definitely read your opinions.
Edit2: also, for the high school debate team champions, don't try to shift this to plastic bags and other crap in the box. We get it. We've been trying to eliminate plastic bags. Nothing is good enough so far. You get to choose between weirdo semi-plastic molded stuff to hold the non-bagged product in place, and bags. Some things (Tyrs) require foam, period. Magnis and Midgards and stuff like that have been moved to, or are being moved to, all-recycled cardboard. We beat FedEx to this, FWIW.