@jameszimmermann Now that's a room I'd like to escape.
Although, your post gets me thinking about a large scale model of electronic circuits in which people play the role of electrons experiencing resistors, capacitors, inductors, and semiconductors.
Hm. Where's Walt Disney when you need him?
Harold S. Black invented negative feedback (NFB) in tube circuits at Bell Labs in 1927 because telephone circuits were noisy.
To the best of my knowledge this was the first time the triangular amp symbol was used.
Silly, but I'd often thought that tinnitus ringing in one's ear proves a similar circuit exists in the human nervous system.
I will also claim partial credit for that. ;-)
I only did that once with the rotating prism face stuff but my focus will continue to be far more on the recording end since you're doing great hot visual mess.
Breaks necessary. Cross training. But you could try an MCT oil, ethylene blue, creatine, mushroom powder cocktail and let me know how that goes.
I've had so much pulling on my time, next recording shall still be the Two Princes intro.
F=ma, Joules, Charge -> Volts, Amps (i) -> V*A = Power >>-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------> Rock 'n Roll baby
Ohm's Law is the temperature increase of your amp as a result of enjoying great music. R = V/i
Just because its not there, doesn't mean it doesn't exist.. You can't see forces, gravity or magnetism. But if you just mentally visualise it, other hidden factors just may surface..
@MouserElec Your website keeps blocking me thinking I am a bot. I don't have much time to work out available options for my BOM and I can't access your site.
VERY FRUSTRATING!!!
I agree. Balanced cabling is the way to go, especially when you're running 25- to 50-foot mic lines.
Balanced cables are like two drunk guys shouting the exact same stupid thing in opposite directions down the cable so when they meet at the differential receiver, all the common-mode bullshit cancels out and only the clean signal survives.