Admissions of Idiocy

Posted by: Alex S. on 07 December 2001

Looking at the thread on speaker direction got me thinking about doing wrong stuff in ignorance.

Here's 2 of mine:

Having the left and right channels reversed on the back of the 250 since logic tells you to connect the speaker cable that way.

Not knowing for 3 months that if I kept my finger on the Lingo button for long enough the deck would start going round at 45rpm. (Purchased without instructions).

My FEP gathering folly involved several interludes of mono listening to stereo records.

Alex

Posted on: 07 December 2001 by Bosh
Heres mine.......

1. Buying a replacement LP12 6 weeks before the Cirkus mod was released

2. Playing the Strat through the Epos 14s and blowing the tweeter

3. Buying Meridian 101/105 amps (1979) and not even dem'ing the Naims

Everyones a classic

Posted on: 07 December 2001 by graeme w
Alex

I've managed to figure out most of the anacronyms used on the forum, but FEP has got me. Please please please tell me what FEP means.

TIA
Graeme

Posted on: 07 December 2001 by Alex S.
Flat Earth Points.

AFAIK Joe Petrik devised the revised scale - its an excellent thread and well worth finding.

Tony Lonorgan is the Flat Earth King.

Alex

BTW Bosh, some people would congratulate you on avoiding a Cirkused deck.

Posted on: 07 December 2001 by Steve B
This must surely get first prize:

Lifting floorboards to hide speaker cable, screwing the boards back down and into the cable underneath creating a nice little short circuit.

I wasn't going to tell anyone but what the hell.

Steve B

Posted on: 07 December 2001 by Top Cat
100Kg of full-monty LP12 plus phono stages, etc. and Mana wall shelf held up by 3" screws... the buggers worked their way loose, destroying my pride and joy all over the floor.

Fully documented and very painful...

TC '..'
"Girl, you thought he was a man, but he was a Muffin..."

Posted on: 07 December 2001 by Tony L
I have got to win this…

Taking the baseboard off my old LP12, telling everyone how much better it sounds, remembering to warn that the Valhalla board is live and to always unplug before fiddling with the deck, then ignoring / forgetting my own advice….

"Hmm, that back spring needs a little tweak… KZZZZZZZZZZZZ… Ouch!… F**K!".

Tony.

Posted on: 07 December 2001 by Joe Petrik
In the mid-1980s, before I had even passable entry-level kit, I did what I could to get the most out of my hi-fi, which back then was a Technics SL-D2 table with Shure cartridge, a Technics integrated amp, and PSB Passif II speakers wired with lamp cord.

Being a student, few upgrade options were within reach but I could afford a few metres of NAC A4 cable. So, I bought some but as I tried to hook up the speakers I discovered that the cheap push-to-connect terminals on my PSBs were too narrow to fit the Naim cable.

Ah, an easy fix, I thought. Just drill out the terminals a bit, then stuff the NAC A4 into the newly created carefully chamferred apertures(TM) -- errr, I mean holes. It didn't occur to me, though, that the crossover bits were on the other side of the terminals. On the left speaker I punctured an electrolytic cap and on right one I drilled through the coil.

Interestingly, it didn't affect the performance that much.

Joe

Posted on: 07 December 2001 by Peter Stockwell
quote:
Interestingly, it didn't affect the performance that much.


sound's like you should get some bonus FEPs for that wink

Peter

Posted on: 07 December 2001 by Top Cat
You'd never notice!

TC '..'
"Girl, you thought he was a man, but he was a Muffin..."

Posted on: 07 December 2001 by Mike Sae
Once plugged in my power strip with all the components already switched on, resulting in a fantastic spark which charred the plug.

P.S. does answering to this thread lower our resale values?

Posted on: 07 December 2001 by Mike Sae
And I always thought all that fresh island air was conducive to intelligence (or was it clear skin?). wink
Posted on: 08 December 2001 by Alex S.
. . . believing all the dealers who told me how wonderful Nautilus 805s are. Then spending the best part of a year changing the entire system almost for the exclusive benefit of the speakers, and now, when they are sounding remarkably good, selling them anyway.

I guess I'm done for if the guy I'm hoping to sell them to is reading this; but he has got a pile of Krells, snigger.

Alex

Posted on: 08 December 2001 by David Ng
Replacing all the 3mm glass shelves of my target VR series with customised 9mm glass shelves, only to find out tbat its like putting a couple of pillow cases over the speakers, thereafter to deal with the weight of the 135s and scap and wires etc again.
Posted on: 08 December 2001 by Dr. Exotica
I found that one of the leads from my turntable to the 32.5 was not plugged in. How did I miss this? Well, the 32.5 was switched to mono of course.

After discovering this issue with my setup, I noted a decidable gain in both musicality and performance after reconnecting the second lead from the turntable and switching the 32.5 back to stereo. Has anyone else tried this outrageous tweak?

Erik

Posted on: 09 December 2001 by Alex S.
Joe has a clear lead so far; so come on Bam, Andy & Mr Tibbs, one of you must have done something reallysilly.

Alex

Posted on: 09 December 2001 by Andrew L. Weekes
but if there is anything I've placed it so far into the recesses of my mind it'll take some getting at!

I've had a Tony L type experience with an old amplifier though, when I used to be a service engineer.

It had uninsulated mains terminals on the power switch, and only a few seconds after being warned not to touch it by accident, I picked up the unit (which I'd been working on upside down) to turn it over, proceeding to put a finger across the mains.

The noise I made went something like 'KINELLLLL!

Andy.

Posted on: 09 December 2001 by garyi
When I got the CDi I only removed one of the transit bolts. Let me tell you the lens does some weird things when its being held!

Also in a digressional fashion, I decided that my old bedside lamp need a switch as it didn't have one. I fashoned one from a paper clip. No joking, blew myself across the room when I 'switched' it on. That was years ago though.

Posted on: 09 December 2001 by Mark Dunn
Not me being dumb but a customer...

Whilst working in a large Hi-Fi store in London (England) I had a customer who was a Doctor (G.P.). He purchased a Quad 34/306, CDP and speakers. It was our policy always to offer free installation and he accepted.

Now, Quad units have standard IEC female sockets but Quad did not supply any mains cables, just the male IEC connector. They did this so you could choose the length of mains cable necessary. This meant wiring the 13A plug to the end of a cable.

Anyhow, at his home, I'd fitted a 13A plug to the end of some cable and was in the midst of fitting the male IEC connector to the other end. I had the ground wire in one hand and the live in the other and was twisting each between thumbs and forefingers prior to lacing them into the plug. Well, Doctor Death (as he was soon to be known) plugged the other end into a mains socket and turned me on.

After a swift cheap rate flying lesson and banging my head on the mantlepiece on the other side of the room, the good Doctor was most apologetic but then offered me some brandy! I knew then that he was *really* trying to get rid of me.

Best Regards,
Mark Dunn

PS. I wonder if his name was Harold Shipman?

Posted on: 10 December 2001 by Cletus Awreetus-Awrightus
having read various posts about how cable dressing and box siting can improve the sonics I decided to see if could wring any benefits out of a rearranged system over the weekend.
So I duly moved the CD 5 to shelf above the nait 5 laid all the cables out properly, switched it back on and span a few CD's.
Cetainly sounded different but I thought I'd let it warm up for an hour.
later that day I put on Led Zep III. Wow! pretty good! Then I tried out the latest Courtney Pine to see if I thought I could tell a Sax from a Trumpet - no problem, this was a worthwhile move.
Yesterday (Sunday) I put on Die Meistersinger (karajan).
Hmm, sounds authentic, but it's a bit compressed...and the soundstage is tiny, and it sounds ...well, basically I thought that I was back to square one.
Until about 10 minutes later, when I remembered something....
it was a MONO recording, the only one I own (AFAIK.)
Ever felt dumb? I have.

By the way, the power off time was minimal, 3-4 minutes tops, but the system improved markedly over the two days. Is it possible that it is not so much warming up that improved it as settling down? Just a thought.
Paul.

Posted on: 10 December 2001 by Timbo
Selling my Tangent TM1's for KEF Concordes, when I really wanted a pair of 104AB's.

Tim

Posted on: 10 December 2001 by Joe Petrik
quote:
Joe has a clear lead so far

This didn't happen to me but if this guy posted on the forum, he'd easily take first prize.

A store in Winnipeg, Canada got a call from an obviously stoned metalhead that one of his 7-way specials suddenly had no bass. What's more, the speaker smelled funny, like something was burnt inside.

The rocker was eager to get it fixed so his jam session in the basement could continue, so he asked if the store's technician could replace the driver on the spot if he brought it to the store. Sure, no problem. Lots of 15-inch crap drivers in stock.

He brought it in and explained to the technician what had happened. The tech had a quick look and noted the obviously charred bass driver, confirming what he had expected: the voice coil was fried.

One by one the tech removed the screws holding the driver in place. Then, using a screw driver, he pried the fried unit out. As it was removed, the driver created a vacuum, pulling air into the port and set the smoldering insulation ablaze.

"F'in' cool. Wait til I tell my friends."

Joe

Posted on: 10 December 2001 by bam
Ha. Where shall I begin??? eek

I once switched on one of my hand-made amps to witness a "miniature flare" as a tantalum capacitor launched itself towards the ceiling and then broke into half a dozen flaming pieces which, as if in slow motion, slowly wafted towards my new carpet. I managed to intercept all of them but one which burned a nice hole in the fabric of my sofa. The small hole still reminds me of this years later.

On another ocassion some friends and I were having a session and swapping bits of our systems and so on like you do. Anyhow, at one point I connected my entire system up, switched everything on, turned up the volume and started the CD...NOTHING! (Strange). I checked the CD was playing. I checked the CD cables to each monoblock amp and the power connections. NOTHING. (Worrying). I checked that the bi-wire speaker cables were connected up and not shorting. NOTHING. Panic! - something must be broken. After what seemed like a long time later and very distressed I suddenly experienced a classic Homer "D'oh". I had connected the bi-wire speaker cables to the back of each amp so that the tweeter terminals both went to neg and the woofer terminals both went to pos. What are the odds of making that mistake twice on each amp? roll eyes

Posted on: 11 December 2001 by Pete, Mad Bad and Dangerous to Know
Hi,

Many years ago I was working in a TV repair shop I was left to fix all the sets while the others went out to calls, I was checking out valve black and white TV with a dry joint (I said it was a while ago) when I spotted the joint arcing so with out switching off I put the un-earthed soldering iron on it, like we all ways did, but their wasn't enough solder to make the joint so a picked up the reel of solder and touched the joint and a couple of hundred volts shot up the solder and up my arm. Their was another time when I was lifting the chassis out of a colour set and the aerial lead was stopping me so I took hold of the plug and I got a right shock from one hand on the aerial lead across my chest to the other hand on chassis, if I let go of both the chassis would of knocked the neck of the tube so I had to force my self to let go of the aerial plug then pull it out by the lead clip the chassis back in before lying down till I recovered.


pete

Posted on: 11 December 2001 by Alex S.
Are you still as mad, bad and dangerous?

Alex

Posted on: 11 December 2001 by Pete, Mad Bad and Dangerous to Know
Hi, Alex

Not quite as Mad Bad and Dangerous, even I learn eventually.

pete