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WTB: VU Meters
"Eeyore" wrote in message ... Iain Churches wrote: "Eeyore" wrote Iain Churches wrote: I would be interested to buy good second-hand VU meters by Ernest Turner or Sifam. Ernest Turner http://www.kolumbus.fi/iain.churches...tTurner702.jpg Sifam http://www.kolumbus.fi/iain.churches...SIFAM_AL20.jpg Those SIFAMs are current product. In fact they only made them like that to pander to modern 'retro' styling ! I have spoken with Sifam about these, and asked for a quote. They still make the retro AL20 There's no STILL about it. It's a NEW(ish) product from Sifam made to cater for the NEW fad for retro styling. because it was used in a large percentage of UK built studio and broadcast equipment Total nonsense. Sounds like a sales person was leading you up the garden path. All the UK consoles I've ever seen have the AL19,29,39 / 22,32,42AF style meter´ It may not be the original, I don't know, but AL20 seems to be a direct replacement for the round Sifam VU used in the Leevers Rich, and also some versions of the Vortexion H4 series mixer. Just ask them how long it's been in the catalogue. Who cares. I am just glad it is available now:-) Do you know a source for any Ernest Turner meters, Graham? Regards Iain |
WTB: VU Meters
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: Eeyore wrote: Sifam seem to be a strange company - I contacted them about a replacement or repair for the meter on a Ferrograph test set and got a pretty unhelpful reply. Unhelpful in what way ? Do you expect a large company to be interested in making a loss on a one-off repair ? Of course not. I just wanted to do business with them in the normal way. They didn't seem interested. Not my usual experience of a small UK company. When you say 'repair' what bits are you looking for ? Graham |
WTB: VU Meters
Iain Churches wrote: Do you know a source for any Ernest Turner meters, Graham? Certainly no idea off the top of my head. You could ask these guys though. They have lots of old kit kicking around. http://www.proaudioeurope.com/3/home Graham |
WTB: VU Meters
In article ,
Eeyore wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: Eeyore wrote: Sifam seem to be a strange company - I contacted them about a replacement or repair for the meter on a Ferrograph test set and got a pretty unhelpful reply. Unhelpful in what way ? Do you expect a large company to be interested in making a loss on a one-off repair ? Of course not. I just wanted to do business with them in the normal way. They didn't seem interested. Not my usual experience of a small UK company. When you say 'repair' what bits are you looking for ? The meter movement was open circuit. I contacted them to find out if they could either repair or supply a replacement. The chap I spoke to was very off hand - talking about obsolete gear - and never got back to me. I eventually got a similar movement off Ebay and swopped the scale. To give the full story I'd bought a good but very tatty RTS2 only from a place I used to work at. And bought several more off Ebay if I could get them at a decent price - working or not. And eventually ended up with a mint set including the monitor unit. . Sold all the others after repair etc at a reasonable profit. -- *I have plenty of talent and vision. I just don't care. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
WTB: VU Meters
"Eeyore" wrote in message ... Iain Churches wrote: Do you know a source for any Ernest Turner meters, Graham? Certainly no idea off the top of my head. You could ask these guys though. They have lots of old kit kicking around. http://www.proaudioeurope.com/3/home They have some interesting goodies there.including a Neve V, a Neve 80, an AMS Neve MMC1 and a Neumann VMS70 lathe. Iain |
WTB: VU Meters
On Wed, 06 Feb 2008 13:14:24 +0000, Audix wrote:
I know the Decca PPM and have a pair of them. Mine use Ernest Turner 703 movements, scaled from -30 to +18dB. The drive amps to go with them are a custom Decca job too. I have also seen an Ernest Turner early twin movement with Decca scales. I have never seen a formal specification of the Decca PPM. Not a BBC scale then? Remember the BBC engineering version of the motto: "Nation shall peak 6 unto nation" d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
WTB: VU Meters
Don Pearce wrote: Audix wrote: I know the Decca PPM and have a pair of them. Mine use Ernest Turner 703 movements, scaled from -30 to +18dB. The drive amps to go with them are a custom Decca job too. I have also seen an Ernest Turner early twin movement with Decca scales. I have never seen a formal specification of the Decca PPM. Not a BBC scale then? Doesn't sound like it. 48dB dynamic range on a meter is pretty good. Graham |
WTB: VU Meters
"Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Wed, 06 Feb 2008 13:14:24 +0000, Audix wrote: I know the Decca PPM and have a pair of them. Mine use Ernest Turner 703 movements, scaled from -30 to +18dB. The drive amps to go with them are a custom Decca job too. I have also seen an Ernest Turner early twin movement with Decca scales. I have never seen a formal specification of the Decca PPM. Not a BBC scale then? Remember the BBC engineering version of the motto: "Nation shall peak 6 unto nation" I was told that the BBC type PPM was actually first used by Decca. I have also seen this mentioned somewhere on the web, by Tony Griffiths I think, but I do not have a link. But the Decca PPM as such had an Ernest Turner meter with the red segment starting at +8dBm. IIRC It had a rise time of 10mS and a slow decay (2 secs) They was also a later faster version with the peak level marked at +12dBm. Iain |
WTB: VU Meters
"Eeyore" wrote in message
... Don Pearce wrote: Audix wrote: I know the Decca PPM and have a pair of them. Mine use Ernest Turner 703 movements, scaled from -30 to +18dB. The drive amps to go with them are a custom Decca job too. I have also seen an Ernest Turner early twin movement with Decca scales. I have never seen a formal specification of the Decca PPM. Not a BBC scale then? Doesn't sound like it. 48dB dynamic range on a meter is pretty good. And not the same as the EBU scale either, which is like the BBC one, but calibrated in dB, from -22dB to +4dB, with 0dB equal to 6 on the BBC scale. Yes, a 48dB dynamic range on a meter is impressive, but possibly less useful in a broadcast environment. David. |
WTB: VU Meters
"Iain Churches" wrote in message
ti.fi... But the Decca PPM as such had an Ernest Turner meter with the red segment starting at +8dBm. IIRC It had a rise time of 10mS and a slow decay (2 secs) They was also a later faster version with the peak level marked at +12dBm. Is the Decca PPM actually marked in dBm, rather than just dB?. David. |
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