So today's teaching: always remember to turn off every single sound producing object, even the subwoofer, when connecting your stuff.
Blew up my subwoofer
Blew up my subwoofer
After my experiments with interconnecting Scope PCI with XITE I ended up with a blown subwoofer
In my unconcious mind I had this false false belief that because noise from my subwoofer does not sound irritating it somehow cannot brake..
So today's teaching: always remember to turn off every single sound producing object, even the subwoofer, when connecting your stuff.
So today's teaching: always remember to turn off every single sound producing object, even the subwoofer, when connecting your stuff.
Re: Blew up my subwoofer
- kensuguro
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Re: Blew up my subwoofer
ya, the pulse you get from connecting/disconnecting is pretty bad.
- Nestor
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Re: Blew up my subwoofer
Sorry to hear that. Every now and then, when we become too familiar with something, we tend to mistake. If that makes you feel better, I think all of us has forgotten now and then to turn something off before proceeding. Anyway, all books on pro-audio stuff I have read in my life teach the same basic principle at the beginning, sort of: “when you buy something new for your studio, make sure you turn everything off before connecting anything”.
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