Very cool video. One point I noticed in the assembly process was that the tube sockets are soldered into place on the PC board before the assembly is mounted into the chassis. If I were doing it I'd have bolted everything up and then soldered the sockets to eliminate stress on the solder joints when the sockets and the board are mounted. The way they do it, the solder joints get pulled or pushed after they're soldered. I like to make all my mechanical assembly first, then do the soldering...a minor point but one that can cause failure down the road.
Very cool video. One point I noticed in the assembly process was that the tube sockets are soldered into place on the PC board before the assembly is mounted into the chassis. If I were doing it I'd have bolted everything up and then soldered the sockets to eliminate stress on the solder joints when the sockets and the board are mounted. The way they do it, the solder joints get pulled or pushed after they're soldered. I like to make all my mechanical assembly first, then do the soldering...a minor point but one that can cause failure down the road.
Does McIntosh not cook its trannies in a vacuum like some other manufacturers? I know some of the French tube amp makers do that. Besides that, if the narrator is talking up tube amps, why is the tube amp sitting on top of a solid-state monoblock?
Does McIntosh not cook its trannies in a vacuum like some other manufacturers? I know some of the French tube amp makers do that. Besides that, if the narrator is talking up tube amps, why is the tube amp sitting on top of a solid-state monoblock?
For my curiosity what do you mean as master clock ? And for what ?
Crystal oscillator , oven , rubidium , cesium or what else ? A/D converter , etc .
Ciao and thank you
Marco
For my curiosity what do you mean as master clock ? And for what ?
Crystal oscillator , oven , rubidium , cesium or what else ? A/D converter , etc .
Ciao and thank you
Marco