Talk:HiFi
This resource is not named in the best way. Invisible learning resources aren't terribly useful.
A project is being described. How about Vacuum tube amplifier repair project, linked from EE_Introduction_to_Electronics#Learning_projects?
The organization and naming systems on Wikiversity need a lot of work. --Abd 18:31, 18 January 2011 (UTC)
- This is a constructivst educational approach; where constructivism sounds just like what it is: construction. By constructing this amp, there comes confidence to master the actual electronic engineering. I am attempting to show that this, as the only native approach to Internet education, is the best.
- This way lots of highly experienced people bring information from their individual projects to help construct the knowledge. Already I have accessed someone who can prove that tubes are better than solidstate--this is individually significant, and proof of why constructivism is the native knowledge construction of the Internet, Web, and Wiki! There is also a lot of other valuable data here that could not have come any other way, and there will be more from these, and future, sources.
- Though thanks for your suggestion :)
- --JohnBessatalk 15:56, 3 February 2011 (UTC)
- John, You might also want to contact Eric Barbour on Wikipedia Review. He owns Metasonix, which makes vacuum tube amplifiers for audiophiles. —Moulton 16:11, 3 February 2011 (UTC)
Reverb Regulation with Polyonic Feedback
editJohn, have you ever come across a reverb regulator that exploited "polyonic feedback"?
These might have been used in the early days of audio tape recording, where print-through on wire-recorders or thin high-speed tapes created an unwanted synthetic echo or reverb.
But they might also have been used by Les Paul to intentionally add precision band-shaped reverb.
Moulton 15:37, 3 February 2011 (UTC)
- I know nothing about electrical engineering and especially about valves. That is what this is all about. --John Bessatalk 15:51, 3 February 2011 (UTC)