
December 17th 15, 05:57 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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New Armstrong history webpages
On 17/12/2015 18:42, Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article , Jim Lesurf
wrote:
I have just put up two new webpages on the history of Armstrong audio
and 'related topics'. You can find them at
http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong...s/1979-81.html
and http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong...nale/1982.html
I'm now curious that no-one has commented on the contents - particularly of
the 1982 page!
And Martin Colloms was quite a sensible fellow back in the '70s. :-)
--
Eiron.
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December 18th 15, 01:33 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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New Armstrong history webpages
In article , Jim Lesurf
scribeth thus
In article , Eiron
wrote:
On 17/12/2015 18:42, Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article , Jim Lesurf
wrote:
I have just put up two new webpages on the history of Armstrong audio
and 'related topics'. You can find them at
http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong...s/1979-81.html
and http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong...nale/1982.html
I'm now curious that no-one has commented on the contents -
particularly of the 1982 page!
And Martin Colloms was quite a sensible fellow back in the '70s. :-)
I keep wondering if someone started putting something into the water that
reviewers drank from the mid 1970s onwards. Was LSD getting easier for some
to obtain, I wonder... ;-
Jim
Yes I used to regard him as one of the better ones then it all started
going downhill, and i stopped buying hi-fi news;!
--
Tony Sayer
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December 18th 15, 02:52 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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New Armstrong history webpages
Jim Lesurf wrote:
http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong...nale/1982.html
I'm now curious that no-one has commented on the contents - particularly of
the 1982 page!
** You mention speaking with Peter Walker about the "crow bar" circuit in the ESL63. Here is a schem for an early version.
http://www.quadesl.com/schematics/quad63_schematic.gif
The triac used is a T6000B, rated at 16 amps continuous and 150 amp surge for 10mS. Other units use a T2800B, rated at 8 amps with a 100 amp surge rating.
Later ESL63s, from 1989 onwards, used a TIC216D, rated at 6 amps with a 50 amp surge rating.
http://www.euronet.nl/users/temagm/a...ematic_new.jpg
As the crow bar is intended to clip transients that exceed the voltage limit of the panels and only to be used with amplifiers that have electronic current limiting, any of the above are more than adequate.
Large amplifiers with no current limiting are warned against, but if used could fry the smaller triacs or the 1.5 ohm 5W resistor in series. Later models also had a circuit breaker in series.
In any case, the speaker itself was protected, because triacs invariably fail short.
..... Phil
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December 18th 15, 08:58 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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New Armstrong history webpages
In article , Phil
Allison wrote:
** You mention speaking with Peter Walker about the "crow bar" circuit
in the ESL63. Here is a schem for an early version.
http://www.quadesl.com/schematics/quad63_schematic.gif
The triac used is a T6000B, rated at 16 amps continuous and 150 amp
surge for 10mS. Other units use a T2800B, rated at 8 amps with a 100 amp
surge rating.
Later ESL63s, from 1989 onwards, used a TIC216D, rated at 6 amps with a
50 amp surge rating.
http://www.euronet.nl/users/temagm/a...ematic_new.jpg
As the crow bar is intended to clip transients that exceed the voltage
limit of the panels and only to be used with amplifiers that have
electronic current limiting, any of the above are more than adequate.
Agreed. But the 732 *doesn't* have current limiters and can deliver
sustained RMS currents above the values you gave.
PJW clearly intended the ESL to be used with amps like the 405 which had
current limiters. But I felt they were a PITA for people who had
'difficult' speakers - as the orginal 405 design actually showed very
neatly.
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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December 19th 15, 02:13 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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New Armstrong history webpages
Jim Lesurf wrote:
** You mention speaking with Peter Walker about the "crow bar" circuit
in the ESL63. Here is a schem for an early version.
http://www.quadesl.com/schematics/quad63_schematic.gif
The triac used is a T6000B, rated at 16 amps continuous and 150 amp
surge for 10mS. Other units use a T2800B, rated at 8 amps with a 100 amp
surge rating.
Later ESL63s, from 1989 onwards, used a TIC216D, rated at 6 amps with a
50 amp surge rating.
http://www.euronet.nl/users/temagm/a...ematic_new.jpg
As the crow bar is intended to clip transients that exceed the voltage
limit of the panels and only to be used with amplifiers that have
electronic current limiting, any of the above are more than adequate.
Agreed. But the 732 *doesn't* have current limiters and can deliver
sustained RMS currents above the values you gave.
** The 5A rail fuses you fitted to the 732 would prevent that in most cases.
PLUS, Your article incorrectly said the triacs were 5 amp rated.
PJW clearly intended the ESL to be used with amps like the 405 which had
current limiters. But I felt they were a PITA for people who had
'difficult' speakers - as the orginal 405 design actually showed very
neatly.
** Quad modified the original 405's current limiter in response to ill informed criticism in some reviews - not because owners experienced a real problem.
Ironic that you new page so strongly bemoans the often unfair effects of erroneous reviews on amp makers.
..... Phil
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December 18th 15, 01:30 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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New Armstrong history webpages
In article , Phil
Allison scribeth thus
Jim Lesurf wrote:
http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong...nale/1982.html
I'm now curious that no-one has commented on the contents - particularly of
the 1982 page!
** You mention speaking with Peter Walker about the "crow bar" circuit in the
ESL63. Here is a schem for an early version.
http://www.quadesl.com/schematics/quad63_schematic.gif
The triac used is a T6000B, rated at 16 amps continuous and 150 amp surge for
10mS. Other units use a T2800B, rated at 8 amps with a 100 amp surge rating.
Later ESL63s, from 1989 onwards, used a TIC216D, rated at 6 amps with a 50 amp
surge rating.
http://www.euronet.nl/users/temagm/a...ematic_new.jpg
As the crow bar is intended to clip transients that exceed the voltage limit of
the panels and only to be used with amplifiers that have electronic current
limiting, any of the above are more than adequate.
Large amplifiers with no current limiting are warned against, but if used could
fry the smaller triacs or the 1.5 ohm 5W resistor in series. Later models also
had a circuit breaker in series.
In any case, the speaker itself was protected, because triacs invariably fail
short.
.... Phil
Quite the case!. Has anyone had problems with nearby mobile phones
tripping the protection crowbar as mine seem to be very sensitive to
that sort of signal?.
--
Tony Sayer
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