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Geoff Mackenzie December 19th 12 03:26 PM

Brennan advice please
 


"TonyL" wrote in message ...

Geoff Mackenzie wrote:
test

"TonyL" wrote in message
...
Background:

I'm looking to clean up my audio/media/CD collection setup. I also
need to make it more wife friendly. Currently I use a Pioneer amp
(recent monolithic module based, not original) into IPL transmission
line speakers and I route various inputs through it via the built-in
input selector. As a 'mature' person my hearing is OK 'for my age'
but if I'm honest with myself I find that I can't really distinguish
between uncompressed and MP3 compressed material...with a few
exceptions. That is why I'm looking at a MP3 based storage solution.
I'm after opinions before I go ahead and make some changes.

Questions:

The built in Brennan amp uses Monolithic Power MP7782 units. In the
interest of reducing clutter I'm looking to use this as my main
amplifier. It seems to that these days all amplifiers are 'created
equal' and audio quality it will be at least as 'good' as my existing
Pioneer amp. Right ? If not then why not ?

The Brennan amp only has one external input. I plan to common up
source line level outputs via a passive summing network and switch
the sources as required instead (PVR, TV etc.) In the interest of
clutter reduction and ease of use I would prefer this to a switch
box. There will be 2 (maybe 3) sources and so a simple Y-network will
suffice. Yes ? Resistor values ? Around 470R in each arm ?

Comments please ?


Geoff,

Your test using an old post from me seemed OK lol!

To reply to my own comments, I ended up with a zero (extra) cost system
using existing boxes. I send output from a blu-ray player to one of my
Pioneer amp inputs and then into my IPL TL speakers.

My blu-ray player happened to have WLAN streaming so for input I stream over
this from Windows Media Player. This program is also a DNLA network server
and has many, many useful features...much more than a Brennan. It obviously
supports auto rip from CD to MP3 and several other un/compressed formats.
Each CD typically takes a few minutes to rip. Music storage is on one of my
terabyte drives which is fully backed up elsewhere on the LAN.

So, I didn't end up with simpler hardware but I used existing hardware at
zero cost to achieve rather more than is possible with a Brennan box costing
significant £££

Cheers,

TonyL

Thanks for that! I was having problems responding to articles on the NG -
they (my replies, that is) appeared in my "sent" box but didn't show on the
NG itself. My tame computer expert came round to advise - didn't understand
a word he said, but seems like I can post now.

FWIW the reason I decided against a Brennan or any of the other solutions is
that they all require an encyclopaedic knowledge of your collection, i.e.
you have to know exactly what you are looking for. I have a fairly modest
collection of perhaps 200 LPs and the same number of CDs, and part of the
fun is lust looking through the covers and thinking "I haven't heard that
for a while" and remembering odd tracks I haven't heard for donkeys years.
I suppose my dream machine would be a Brennan (or similar) which would have
a camera attached so that you could look at the artwork as part of the
search procedure!

Yours aye,

Geoff MacK





TonyL December 19th 12 04:10 PM

Brennan advice please
 
Geoff Mackenzie wrote:

Thanks for that! I was having problems responding to articles on the
NG - they (my replies, that is) appeared in my "sent" box but didn't
show on the NG itself. My tame computer expert came round to advise
- didn't understand a word he said, but seems like I can post now.

FWIW the reason I decided against a Brennan or any of the other
solutions is that they all require an encyclopaedic knowledge of your
collection, i.e. you have to know exactly what you are looking for. I have
a fairly modest collection of perhaps 200 LPs and the same
number of CDs, and part of the fun is lust looking through the covers
and thinking "I haven't heard that for a while" and remembering odd
tracks I haven't heard for donkeys years. I suppose my dream machine
would be a Brennan (or similar) which would have a camera attached so
that you could look at the artwork as part of the search procedure!


Geoff,

Agreed. Looking through album covers is something I miss with CDs and their
little fiddly cases with hinges that fall apart. But
Windows Media Player helps. Haven't tried with vinyl but for the majority of
ripped CDs it will (optionally) search a database and attach an image which
displays thumbnails of covers along with album titles/tracks/artists. I
don't know how it works but gets it right almost every time, even with
ancient/obscure albums.

Cheers,

TonyL



Woody[_4_] December 19th 12 05:35 PM

Brennan advice please
 
Whether you like it or not the iTunes management software - for
which you don't need an iPod - does the job very effectively and
is a doddle to use.

Whilst mp3 is also effective especially at higher sampling rates
it is worth looking at AAC or Ogg both of which are less lossy
and produce better results at lower sampling rates.



--
Woody

harrogate three at ntlworld dot com



Jim Lesurf[_2_] December 20th 12 01:07 PM

Brennan advice please
 
In article , Bob Latham
wrote:
In article , Woody
wrote:
Whether you like it or not the iTunes management software - for which
you don't need an iPod - does the job very effectively and is a
doddle to use.


Whilst mp3 is also effective especially at higher sampling rates it
is worth looking at AAC or Ogg both of which are less lossy and
produce better results at lower sampling rates.


Or Flac, please don't forget flac.


I've spent a couple of years looking at ways to have all my music in one
place and no discs cluttering the place up. After a lot of checking of
costs and facilities this is what I did.


Hardware Synology DS111 NAS box Sonos connect (90) Ipad


Software dBpoweramp Cd ripper and format conversion Spin It Again


FWIW I have based my approach on flac. But I've also adopted a more
cautious and old-fashioned storeage and paying approach. I keep copies of
the files on three different (USB) hard discs. Then have one disc connected
to each of the in-use machines I employ to play audio with the third USB
disc normally sitting as a 'spare copy'. I then just play using Audacious
on ROX/Xubuntu machines, via decent USB DACs.

Slainte,

Jim

--
Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me.
Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm
Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html
Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html


RJH[_2_] December 20th 12 03:53 PM

Brennan advice please
 
On 20/12/2012 14:07, Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article , Bob Latham
wrote:
In article , Woody
wrote:
Whether you like it or not the iTunes management software - for which
you don't need an iPod - does the job very effectively and is a
doddle to use.


Whilst mp3 is also effective especially at higher sampling rates it
is worth looking at AAC or Ogg both of which are less lossy and
produce better results at lower sampling rates.


Or Flac, please don't forget flac.


I've spent a couple of years looking at ways to have all my music in one
place and no discs cluttering the place up. After a lot of checking of
costs and facilities this is what I did.


Hardware Synology DS111 NAS box Sonos connect (90) Ipad


Software dBpoweramp Cd ripper and format conversion Spin It Again


FWIW I have based my approach on flac. But I've also adopted a more
cautious and old-fashioned storeage and paying approach. I keep copies of
the files on three different (USB) hard discs. Then have one disc connected
to each of the in-use machines I employ to play audio with the third USB
disc normally sitting as a 'spare copy'. I then just play using Audacious
on ROX/Xubuntu machines, via decent USB DACs.


How do you keep the 3 disks synchronised?

Rob


Jim Lesurf[_2_] December 21st 12 08:26 AM

Brennan advice please
 
In article om, RJH
wrote:
On 20/12/2012 14:07, Jim Lesurf wrote:



FWIW I have based my approach on flac. But I've also adopted a more
cautious and old-fashioned storeage and paying approach. I keep copies
of the files on three different (USB) hard discs. Then have one disc
connected to each of the in-use machines I employ to play audio with
the third USB disc normally sitting as a 'spare copy'. I then just
play using Audacious on ROX/Xubuntu machines, via decent USB DACs.


How do you keep the 3 disks synchronised?


Mainly by trying to be organised in the way I copy files to them. :-)

I tend to generate files in batches. e.g.With the transfers from Reel tape
I've been doing I have made enough recordings to near-fill a 4GB CF card.
Then edit/process these into flac files with suitable names and side
metadata files. Then copy them to each of the 3 storage discs in turn.

Every now and then I compare the contents in various ways to see what I may
have missed and fix any differences.

Yes, I know there are many programs for synching disc contents etc. But I
tend to do things in simpler ways that I can check as I go. No hurry. Not
as if anyone is paying me to go faster. And I do enjoy assembling the
recordings as it gives me a good excuse... erm reason to listen to the
music along the way. :-)

If I were handling data for a living I'd do it differently.

Slainte,

Jim

--
Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me.
Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm
Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html
Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html


RJH[_2_] December 21st 12 08:59 AM

Brennan advice please
 
On 21/12/2012 09:26, Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article om, RJH
wrote:
On 20/12/2012 14:07, Jim Lesurf wrote:



FWIW I have based my approach on flac. But I've also adopted a more
cautious and old-fashioned storeage and paying approach. I keep copies
of the files on three different (USB) hard discs. Then have one disc
connected to each of the in-use machines I employ to play audio with
the third USB disc normally sitting as a 'spare copy'. I then just
play using Audacious on ROX/Xubuntu machines, via decent USB DACs.


How do you keep the 3 disks synchronised?


Mainly by trying to be organised in the way I copy files to them. :-)

I tend to generate files in batches. e.g.With the transfers from Reel tape
I've been doing I have made enough recordings to near-fill a 4GB CF card.
Then edit/process these into flac files with suitable names and side
metadata files. Then copy them to each of the 3 storage discs in turn.

Every now and then I compare the contents in various ways to see what I may
have missed and fix any differences.

Yes, I know there are many programs for synching disc contents etc. But I
tend to do things in simpler ways that I can check as I go. No hurry. Not
as if anyone is paying me to go faster. And I do enjoy assembling the
recordings as it gives me a good excuse... erm reason to listen to the
music along the way. :-)


Very laid back!

I'm not quite so organised and get in a muddle with the 3 source disks I
have, adding occasional bits and pieces as I listen. It's not the end of
the world - every month or so I'll consolidate with a simple enough sort
by date.

Then there's the cost, I'm up to about 500GB of music. Obviously, backup
is not an issue with three disks.

So I'm experimenting with a cheapish (£30) NAS I got from ebuyer. It's
sort of working - some latency/connection lag, and slow transfer speeds
over homeplug wotsits (15 mebabytes/sec, fine for music really). And
beholden to iTunes, it seems up to this type of arrangement but early days.

Rob


Jim Lesurf[_2_] December 21st 12 11:04 AM

Brennan advice please
 
In article om, RJH
wrote:
On 21/12/2012 09:26, Jim Lesurf wrote:

[snip]

I'm not quite so organised and get in a muddle with the 3 source disks I
have, adding occasional bits and pieces as I listen. It's not the end
of the world - every month or so I'll consolidate with a simple enough
sort by date.


I have things divided in a way that suits me, but may seem odd to many.

e.g. at the top level I divide files into sections like 'BBC' and 'HighRes'
and (now) 'Reel2Reel'. Then have subdirectories like 'Radio3' subdivided by
year, or by format. e.g. 'HDCD'.

I keep the 'metadata' in a mix of the filename/directory name and in text
files. Makes it easier to have my own search routines.

Then there's the cost, I'm up to about 500GB of music. Obviously, backup
is not an issue with three disks.


I'm using 3 x 1TB discs for audio. Have a seperate set of 2TB ones for
Video. FWIW The 1TB audio ones are FAT. The 2TB video, ext4.

One of the reasons for the approach is that a lot of the items are *not* CD
rips, and *not* 'popular' music. So the common/standard/CDDB approachs to
cataloging music files, etc, don't work well.

Slainte,

Jim

--
Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me.
Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm
Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html
Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html



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