Coll said:Wow no more replies cant believe how little diy interest there is on this site
I'm not. I once suggested someone soldered up their own interconnect cos they were struggling to find exactly what they wanted commercially and the replies I got made me realise that what were once everyday skills are now classed as very specialist. 40 years ago or more, HiFi was awash with homebuilt kit and speakers, in fact it was the hobbyists who kicked it all off. Then it became all commercialised and discussions gradually fell from 'what size cabinet do you feel would be ideal for my Wilmslow Audio kit speakers and do you think I should go sealed or ported' to 'Is the Norquest Naive mk2 speaker cable at £200/m going to make any difference to the sound of my £500 all-in-one'. Or thereabouts.Coll said:Wow no more replies cant believe how little diy interest there is on this site
Waxy said:I will not do the Devil's work! *diablo*
cheeseboy said:Coll said:Wow no more replies cant believe how little diy interest there is on this site
(not meant as a slight, just factual) but usually knowing electronic theory and actually doing it can have adverse effects on certain hifi beliefs, and also, if people were in to diy then they wouldn't be able to willy wave about what they own and how much it cost them! (relating to this forum, obviously)..
Vladimir said:IME people who do DIY, most thought they couldn't hit a nail on a board or solder a wire before they started. Really the learning curve isn't so steep and tools are now cheap. It's best to start with cheap tols and cheap kits and move on up. The fun is a reward on its own.
chris_bates1974 said:I'd be pretty interested in having a go at mono power amps... the thing being, I haven't the first clue where to look for advice and for the parts/kits needed for the build... Any pointers on here might get a few more people interested I would think.
andyjm said:When I was young, it was quite possible to build a home brew hifi from a bunch of bits that would match the best that money could buy. Those days are long gone. Apart from basic linear analogue amplifiers everything now is too damn complicated (or too damn small) for home construction. Modern components are generally surface mount and about the size of a match head. No diy soldering there. I think the best that can be done now is to buy pre built modules, and assemble a system from a menu of sub assemblies. For those interested minidsp from hongkong do a range of modules that allow a fully active dsp system to be designed and built. I have, and I can recommend it.