brand names I'll never buy

Anything about MUSIC but doesn't fit into the forums above.
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Meffy wrote:
Hink wrote:BTW Monster cable connect cables are one way (they'll work in both directions though)...is that all hype to fool the often highly educated audiophiles too?
Yes, it is. Utter and complete nonsense. Pure and simple. Sorry, but: yes, it is.

There is one purpose and one purpose only for the ad hype, unprovable claims, and pseudo-science: to convince people to pay ridiculous amounts of money for cables that are no better than other high-quality cables which cost far less.

As for cold solder joints... those are the province of very poorly skilled amateurs who load the iron tip with solder and "paint" it on. No competent electronic worker would ever do that. I learned to solder the right way (by heating wire and solder lug until THEY melt the solder, which then wets the materials to be soldered instead of "sitting on top") at age six, back in the age of vacuum tubes. The laws of physics haven't changed since. :-)
sadly most cables are soldered by machine and I believe that has as much to do with the problems as anything else...;)

I like you learned the right way, but factories hire peons often and hand them a soldering iron. I can tell you that I have worked on some very expensive guitars that the solder didn't even cover the entire contact..I'm talking factory here not someone who worked on it.

FWIW my father was an electro-mechanical engineer for Raytheon for 42 years starting in 1942, he was a big part of the early work on radar and then guidance control systems for missles (sidewinders and sparrows) except he did n't build the systems, he designed the equipment used to test gyroscopes.

My firts guitar amp was an old ham radio amp that me and my father rebuilt and made into a guitar amp, as a kid he would bring me home those P-boxes radio shack use to sell...when I was like 7 or 8 he gave me a toy called lectronics...I'm not sure who made it, but by far the best toy I had as a kid. Instead of those all in one electronic project things Radio Shack and Laffeyette use to sell it was little building blocks. You built you projects (everything from a therimin kinda thig that used a solar panel to am,fm and shortwave radios) on a cookie sheet like thing. Each block had a magnet on the bottom and one component with magnetic connectors where needed. Sometimes one as in a ground, or as much as four sides..it was cool.

My parents also use to pick up appliances left by the side of the road for trash for me to strip apart and learn from. But then when I went to a tech high schools I took machineshop/tool and die making...which meant two years of mechanical drawing as well... so like you I learn things the old way...hell I had an argument with a friend about tinning bare wires..said he never heard of it and it sounded stupid...:hihi:

That's why I build my own guitars, because I can and probably better then most...if I had a machine shop I could build a guitar from scratch including making my own pick-ups (I have re-wound pick-ups..I recreated a fly tying vice on a larger scale) and machine heads.

A good example of my thinking is the table my recorder is on (I'm using the pic with my grand daughter cause today is her birthday)

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underneath the recorder is a big hole...that way I can reach the back of my rack easily. In my rack rider is a nightlite so I can see. We call it yankee ingenuity, but I make most things like that myself. An upside I never thought of was the added ventilation, which I believe has extended the life on the 2gig seagate in my Akai (now 7 1/2 years old).

In fact the only thing that gives me a hard time is those wirse they use in headphones with small string inside, I can never get those to make good solder joints... :wink:
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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here's who I won't buy from anymore:

- Seagate. I've always had the most terrible time with their drives breaking down, overheating, errors, etc. In most cases I've been able to swap them with the vendor for another drive brand. The most recent was when the one in my MDD G4 Tower went south a year ago. Seagate refused to replace it because, as an OEM drive, it was Apple's problem. And seeing that Apple would probably insist installing the same drive to replace it, I got a Maxtor the same size to replace it. Works great.

- Samsung. Their consumer electronics are the worst - I had a microwave which rusted out on the bottom after two years, and the warranty was only for one :cry:

- Sonnet Technologies. They actually do pretty good replacement CPUs and cards for Macs, but decided not to deal with them again after one of their tech guys claimed that they were in contact with Steinberg to come up with a fix for why Cubase wouldn't work with one of their cards - and Steinberg said that they hadn't heard anything.

- BC Rich. Not only were a lot of their guitars unreliable electronically, they also had a sleazy vibe to their ads exploiting women. And Bernie Rico gave one of the most sickening interviews in Guitar Player I had ever read, in whicj he justified his behaviour and the company's image by talking about women in utter disrespect.

- Dean. They make some high-end gear, but see BC Rich above for why I won't buy. (hint: exploitation of women).

- Ford. This one's easy, since I don't drive. But even if I could, I have trepidations about buying from a company that decided paying out money for wrongful death lawsuits would be cheaper than redesigning a valve for a gas tank to prevent it from exploding when struck from behind in a collision in the first place (I am of course talking about the infamous Ford Pinto).

- Micro$oft. Tons of reasons - buggy OS and programs, choking off oxygen supply of other companies who dare to compete with them, threatening to "knife the baby" if other companies don't see it their way to drop products that would compete with M$ (a couple of times with Apple), current leader runs around onstage screaming like a shaved ape :shock: . Honestly, they seem to run their business under the Ferengi Rules Of Acquisition.
"Ooo, look at me, I'm making people HAPPY! I'm the Magical Man from Happyland! In a gumdrop house on Lollypop Laaaaaaane!" - Homer Simpson

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Hink: Machines? Unskilled solderers? YIPE! What a world. :-( I definitely agree that cables shouldn't be bought if they're made wrong. No doubt at all of that.

Your electronics scavenging history sounds familiar. Did the same myself. So did other guys far more ingenious than I!

I enjoyed learning about John Logie Baird, developer of mechanical television, who really deserves more credit than he gets. As bombs fell in the Blitz, Baird was testing the world's first working color television transmission-reception pair, with a colorful ventriloquist's dummy named "Eunice" as his subject. All home-built, from things like a tea chest and some cardboard.

What an amazing guy!

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I used to repair a lot of Sunn self-contained PA systems. For a long time, they had so many problems with the larger terminals on connectors not getting soldered properly at the factory, that I suggested that Sunn really stood for Solder UNNecessary. :D

Fortunately, they eventually corrected the problem, but I worked on a lot of their PA systems with bad solder joints in the meantime.


take care,
McLilith

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Meffy wrote:Hink: Machines? Unskilled solderers? YIPE! What a world. :-( I definitely agree that cables shouldn't be bought if they're made wrong. No doubt at all of that.

Your electronics scavenging history sounds familiar. Did the same myself. So did other guys far more ingenious than I!

I enjoyed learning about John Logie Baird, developer of mechanical television, who really deserves more credit than he gets. As bombs fell in the Blitz, Baird was testing the world's first working color television transmission-reception pair, with a colorful ventriloquist's dummy named "Eunice" as his subject. All home-built, from things like a tea chest and some cardboard.

What an amazing guy!
ever hear of heathkit? We built a nice color tv...btw my mother's name is Eunice...I bet the dummy was smarter... :hihi:
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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Heathkit -- yup. Built quite a few, but mostly had to design and build my own stuff (ham gear, test equipment, etc.). Did you know Heath used to sell airplane kits too? Not models, not toys, actual planes.

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McLilith wrote:I used to repair a lot of Sunn self-contained PA systems. For a long time, they had so many problems with the larger terminals on connectors not getting soldered properly at the factory, that I suggested that Sunn really stood for Solder UNNecessary. :D

Fortunately, they eventually corrected the problem, but I worked on a lot of their PA systems with bad solder joints in the meantime.


take care,
McLilith
I knew a girl who had a Sunn amp for years outdoors in a shed (like 15 years) we tried and it still worked :shock:
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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Meffy wrote:Heathkit -- yup. Built quite a few, but mostly had to design and build my own stuff (ham gear, test equipment, etc.). Did you know Heath used to sell airplane kits too? Not models, not toys, actual planes.
They were based out of Peabody Mass, I dont know if they're still there...but my daughters dr moved to Peabody so I'll check it out next month...never saw the planes...though one of my school chums dads (raytheon too) built a glider...perhaps it was heathkit...;)
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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dreibel wrote: - BC Rich. Not only were a lot of their guitars unreliable electronically, they also had a sleazy vibe to their ads exploiting women. And Bernie Rico gave one of the most sickening interviews in Guitar Player I had ever read, in whicj he justified his behaviour and the company's image by talking about women in utter disrespect.
I do have to say that the American made ones, especially custom shop jobs, are of extremely high quality; hell, I'd compare them to PRS. The ones you'd find at guitar center are utter crap, though. As for the sleaziness: yes, but in an 80's L.A. metal sort of way, which doesn't make it any less demeaning, but at least makes it "kitsch".

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Hink wrote:I knew a girl who had a Sunn amp for years outdoors in a shed (like 15 years) we tried and it still worked :shock:
The problems I'm talking about were primarily in their PA systems, and only lasted for perhaps a year or two. The lugs of their 1/4" jacks were soldered directly to the circuit boards, but with too little solder, and the connection was not reliable. The same thing often happened to the larger lugs on some of their potentiometers.

I have no doubt that many people have had Sunn gear that lasted their whole career without a single problem. However, there was definitely a problem for awhile with some models of their self-contained PA gear.


take care,
McLilith

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Speaking of electric guitar brands, what would be a good guitar choice for someone wanting to learn guitar? I would especially like suggestions for something with humbucker pickups, to reduce noise.

thanks,
McLilith

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A_Gruesome_Discovery wrote:
dreibel wrote: - BC Rich. Not only were a lot of their guitars unreliable electronically, they also had a sleazy vibe to their ads exploiting women. And Bernie Rico gave one of the most sickening interviews in Guitar Player I had ever read, in whicj he justified his behaviour and the company's image by talking about women in utter disrespect.
I do have to say that the American made ones, especially custom shop jobs, are of extremely high quality; hell, I'd compare them to PRS. The ones you'd find at guitar center are utter crap, though. As for the sleaziness: yes, but in an 80's L.A. metal sort of way, which doesn't make it any less demeaning, but at least makes it "kitsch".
Imo BC rich hasn't made a decent guitar since about 85...the original mockingbirds were sweet, when they sold out (they're BC Rich in name only now, like Dean) they went crappy...I had a dean fretless for years, I just sold it last year...and I have a crappy dean accoustic/electric that is just bad enough to be good... :wink:
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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McLilith wrote:Speaking of electric guitar brands, what would be a good guitar choice for someone wanting to learn guitar? I would especially like suggestions for something with humbucker pickups, to reduce noise.

thanks,
McLilith
how much you wanna spend?

http://www.warmoth.com/ :shrug:

I could build it or walk you through it...;)...but of course you might want to wait on that.

Otherwise all cheapy guitars are roughly the same, often from the same factory...a first guitar is like a first car...go get what's comfortable for now...until you learn what you like...;)
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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Hink wrote:how much you wanna spend?

http://www.warmoth.com/ :shrug:
That warmoth stuff looks interesting, but for now, I probably should just get the cheapest thing I can find--till I decide if I'll stick with it or not. My left hand got damaged a couple years ago and some of the fingers still don't want to behave properly all the time. I'm not sure if trying to learn guitar would be good excercise for them, or perhaps just irritate them further. Maybe I'll just get the cheapest used guitar I can find, which looks to be in reasonably good condition, since you say there isn't a whole lot of difference in most of the cheap ones.


thanks,
McLilith

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McLilith wrote:
Hink wrote:how much you wanna spend?

http://www.warmoth.com/ :shrug:
That warmoth stuff looks interesting, but for now, I probably should just get the cheapest thing I can find--till I decide if I'll stick with it or not. My left hand got damaged a couple years ago and some of the fingers still don't want to behave properly all the time. I'm not sure if trying to learn guitar would be good excercise for them, or perhaps just irritate them further. Maybe I'll just get the cheapest used guitar I can find, which looks to be in reasonably good condition, since you say there isn't a whole lot of difference in most of the cheap ones.


thanks,
McLilith
get a squire fat strat...;)
The highest form of knowledge is empathy, for it requires us to suspend our egos and live in another's world. It requires profound, purpose‐larger‐than‐the‐self kind of understanding.

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