Ian Thompson-Bell wrote:
>
> Patrick Turner wrote:
> >
> > Are we considering an amp without R1?
> >
> > I thought we were considering a tume or opamp ect always with R1 and
R2
> > connected.
> >
> > If you wish to share your problems then you MUST spell the set up we
are
> > talking about.
> >
> > Don't EVER assume I can read your mind. I'm a terrible mind reader.
> >
> >
>
> I thought I made that clear in my original post.
After several posts go by, the focus is lost.
I sure lose the focus if you don't spell things out MORE CLEARLY.
This means the schematic of what you ARE talking about MUST be constant
and well described so there is NO confusion.
People want to know WHAT you are talking about.
Not just a formula ot theory, but something real doingt something,
ie, a vacuum tube or tubes set up for work to do something wanted.
You must learn to treat all the other guys like dumb bastards but
without insult,
and assume they know nothing unless you tell them.
All the best teachers I ever had were like this.
They ran hot and sweaty because they tried hard, god luv 'em.
That might mean a lot more typing for you.
The other day I had a posted on "Air gap on SE output transformers etc."
There were no replies because there are so few ppl building any amps
these days
AND who also want to take part in discussions here.
Its surprising really, that we have a forum available to so many folks,
and so few take part.
It proves how uncommunicative most men like to remain, and probably how
fickle they are when they
see a few trashy spams re Chinese crap produce and other catfights
regarding off topic issues.
But I never regret spelling it all out for everyone and the archives, so
that when somebody
googles 'air gap output transformers' then my post will come up amoung
and lotsa junk that isn't useful.
Same with negative feedback. What comes up after a search should be
useful, clear, and focused.
I find that when I edit a long post 3 times before clicking 'send' I
have
made the issue clearer in my own mind at least. Teaching other here
is teaching yourself.
Patrick Turner.
>
> Cheers
>
> Ian


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