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What Are You Listening To Right Now?
Overhead - Of Sun and Moon (2012)
Stephan Thelen - Fractal Sextet (2022)
Daniele Gottardo - INkBlot (2022)
Stephan Thelen - Fractal Sextet (2022)
Daniele Gottardo - INkBlot (2022)
Losing my Religion - REM
Carpet
Headphoneus Supremus
While My Guitar Gently Weeps - Jake Shimabukuro
DLeeWebb
Headphoneus Supremus
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Harmonican
New Head-Fier
Starting the day easy at the office, retiring Wednesday so just basically boxing my stuff while listening to Bill Evans' You Must Believe In Spring with the Stellia on a little iFi Zen stack.
Luckyleo
Headphoneus Supremus
Welcome to "Club Retired". Some people adjust differently than others. For me, it changed my life in magical ways! Enjoy the journey to your next chapter.Starting the day easy at the office, retiring Wednesday so just basically boxing my stuff while listening to Bill Evans' You Must Believe In Spring with the Stellia on a little iFi Zen stack.
Furthur!
Leo
I loved Metaepitome, I need to give this one a try again.Overhead - Of Sun and Moon (2012)
Stephan Thelen - Fractal Sextet (2022)
Daniele Gottardo - INkBlot (2022)
RCBinTN
Headphoneus Supremus
Congratulations on retirement, and on having the forethought to listen to Bill Evans while boxing up stuff.Starting the day easy at the office, retiring Wednesday so just basically boxing my stuff while listening to Bill Evans' You Must Believe In Spring with the Stellia on a little iFi Zen stack.
For today: an eclectic mix. Thanks to @Ableza and @Pandahead for the ideas.
From 1975, the first solo album by Vince Furnier aka Alice Cooper after the
breakup of his 10-yr old band. Narration by Vincent Price for added spookiness.
Annette said she saw the show in New Orleans, back in the day, she said Alice
came out in a spider outfit and climbed up a rope spider web. Sorry I missed it!
Mitski's 7th studio album, released two weeks ago. A recommendation by
Qobuz.
Michael Rhodes on bass. RIP, dude.
Very nice tribute to another great singer/songwriter. Well done, Vince.
Had some lagniappe time, so queued up this old-time gem.
HD800 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~>
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Harmonican
New Head-Fier
Thank youCongratulations on retirement, and on having the forethought to listen to Bill Evans while boxing up stuff.
For today: an eclectic mix. Thanks to @Ableza and @Pandahead for the ideas.
HD800 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~>
Harmonican
New Head-Fier
Thank you! We have plenty of activities planned for the near future but since wifw won't retire for severeal years I will keep busy in my man cave aseembling high-end bookshelf speakers kits purchased locally from Solen, one of the most prolific purveyor of crossover parts for just about any expensive speaker out there. Curiously the parts I buy (caps, resistors and even air-center Linkwitz coils) are not that expensive by themselves but if you purchase the pre-built cossovers it's very expensive because they are rather complex and sprawled all over the inside of the back panel. Some people even want them outside enclosed in glass so they can look at them, because a well-done fourth-order job looks impressive with multiple large red coils, black caps and resistors pretty much of any colour you want: white, black, green, etc. All the soldering is hidden under the board, looks real neat and clean.Welcome to "Club Retired". Some people adjust differently than others. For me, it changed my life in magical ways! Enjoy the journey to your next chapter.
Furthur!
Leo
But I build the crossovers myself, I like soldering so it's not a chore for me. I used to build the cabinets following a blueprint but used 1" thick fibre boards instead of of 3/4" while keeping the inside volume identical to the plan's. Now that Solen sells pre-built cabinets I just buy those instead but I ad my trademark bracing which consists of a 2" wide board stuck to the back wall with the other end abutting the back of the mid-bass driver(s) using a piece of rubber to adjust the pressure exerted on the driver. This has multiple benefits: it braces the cabinet further obviously, but also by way of slightly pushing on the driver magnet it keeps its screws tighter -provided they are well settled in the fibreboard- and prevents the driver from vibrating, which redirects more energy to the cone membrane and thus to the listener(s); it's not much of a job but it has a very audible benefit in terms of tighter yet deeper bass provided you use high-quality drivers. I learned that trick from a quasi-experimental Tannoy model that was only made and sold in Canada in limited numbers under the brand name Camber in the late 90's.