so <30€? Did I got that right? If so a good deal you made there. You said its little - is it shorter than then standard 43/43.5 cm in length?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Less than one Euro per Watt per channel.Sup wrote:
Very nice. How much did it set you back?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Got myself a nice little Pioneer SX-424 today. A small, unknown receiver from the early 70's. It puts out a whopping 15 Watts per channel, but the sexy looks (after some hours spent cleaning it, of course) make up for that.
http://i205.photobucket.com/albums/bb8/ … SX-424.jpg
Two, of course. There wasn't much else (aside from a lonely quad here and there) back in 1972.androoz wrote:
How many channels are there?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Less than one Euro per Watt per channel.Sup wrote:
Very nice. How much did it set you back?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Got myself a nice little Pioneer SX-424 today. A small, unknown receiver from the early 70's. It puts out a whopping 15 Watts per channel, but the sexy looks (after some hours spent cleaning it, of course) make up for that.
http://i205.photobucket.com/albums/bb8/ … SX-424.jpg
Well, its physical dimensions are quite standard for a receiver from that era. I say little because it's the least powerful (and least costly) receiver Pioneer sold at the time..Sup wrote:
so <30€? Did I got that right? If so a good deal you made there. You said its little - is it shorter than then standard 43/43.5 cm in length?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Less than one Euro per Watt per channel.Sup wrote:
Very nice. How much did it set you back?
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
yeah I meant by today's standardsFreezer7Pro wrote:
Two, of course. There wasn't much else (aside from a lonely quad here and there) back in 1972.androoz wrote:
How many channels are there?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Less than one Euro per Watt per channel.Sup wrote:
Very nice. How much did it set you back?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Got myself a nice little Pioneer SX-424 today. A small, unknown receiver from the early 70's. It puts out a whopping 15 Watts per channel, but the sexy looks (after some hours spent cleaning it, of course) make up for that.
http://i205.photobucket.com/albums/bb8/ … SX-424.jpgWell, its physical dimensions are quite standard for a receiver from that era. I say little because it's the least powerful (and least costly) receiver Pioneer sold at the time..Sup wrote:
so <30€? Did I got that right? If so a good deal you made there. You said its little - is it shorter than then standard 43/43.5 cm in length?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Less than one Euro per Watt per channel
It's about 17" wide if I compare hastily with a speaker driver. So yeah, about 43cm.Sup wrote:
yeah I meant by today's standardsFreezer7Pro wrote:
Two, of course. There wasn't much else (aside from a lonely quad here and there) back in 1972.androoz wrote:
How many channels are there?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Less than one Euro per Watt per channel.Sup wrote:
Very nice. How much did it set you back?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Got myself a nice little Pioneer SX-424 today. A small, unknown receiver from the early 70's. It puts out a whopping 15 Watts per channel, but the sexy looks (after some hours spent cleaning it, of course) make up for that.
http://i205.photobucket.com/albums/bb8/ … SX-424.jpgWell, its physical dimensions are quite standard for a receiver from that era. I say little because it's the least powerful (and least costly) receiver Pioneer sold at the time..Sup wrote:
so <30€? Did I got that right? If so a good deal you made there. You said its little - is it shorter than then standard 43/43.5 cm in length?
Oh, and I paid 20€ for the receiver, a pair of no-name speakers with Philips drivers (I just call them 'generic Finnish speakers' - there's thirteen in the dozen of those around here), and some cheap Marantz cassette deck.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
http://www.dealextreme.com/details.dx/sku.32407.Sup wrote:
link, I wan't one 2!menzo wrote:
ordered a week ago
USB 3.0 High Speed 2-Port PCI-E Card (5Gbps)
http://www1.dealextreme.com/productimag … 2407_1.jpg
(even though I don't have any 3.0 compatible device to hook it up to)
it is a RaidSonic AC604 USB 3.0 Card but without the sticker
Last edited by menzo (2010-01-30 06:12:37)
Sprint Airave
We get horrible reception in Maine so we got this little puppy to boost our reception.
Although bought 1 week ago, arrived last Friday, built Friday night.
Case = CoolerMaster 590 configured w/5 120mm fans (RC-590-KKN1-GP)
CPU = i5 750 (BX80605I5750)
Mobo = ASUS P7P55D-E (P7P55D-E)
HSF = CoolerMaster 212+ (RR-B10-212P-G1)
Edit = GPU = Sapphire ATI 5750 1GB Vapor X (100284VXL) I fooked up and ordered the 5750 instead of the 5770 Vapor X I wanted still a damn good card!!!!
HDD = Western Digital 500GB (don't recall model #)
DVD Burner = Samsung 22X (SH-S223L)
Mem = Corsair XMS3 4 X 2GB DDR3 1600 (CMX4GX3M2A1600C9)
PSU = OCZ 600W SLI/CF (OCZ600MXSP)
Case Fans = CoolerMaster 120mm 4 pack X 2 (R4-S2S-124K-GP)
Case = CoolerMaster 590 configured w/5 120mm fans (RC-590-KKN1-GP)
CPU = i5 750 (BX80605I5750)
Mobo = ASUS P7P55D-E (P7P55D-E)
HSF = CoolerMaster 212+ (RR-B10-212P-G1)
Edit = GPU = Sapphire ATI 5750 1GB Vapor X (100284VXL) I fooked up and ordered the 5750 instead of the 5770 Vapor X I wanted still a damn good card!!!!
HDD = Western Digital 500GB (don't recall model #)
DVD Burner = Samsung 22X (SH-S223L)
Mem = Corsair XMS3 4 X 2GB DDR3 1600 (CMX4GX3M2A1600C9)
PSU = OCZ 600W SLI/CF (OCZ600MXSP)
Case Fans = CoolerMaster 120mm 4 pack X 2 (R4-S2S-124K-GP)
Last edited by OxenBreeder (2010-01-31 22:22:07)
my penis wrapped in tin foil > AiraveNarupug wrote:
http://news.cnet.com/i/bto/20070917/Spr … 70x316.gif
Sprint Airave
We get horrible reception in Maine so we got this little puppy to boost our reception.
Your penis wrapped in tin foil must be awesome cause I've gone from no bars to six with the Airave.Sup wrote:
my penis wrapped in tin foil > AiraveNarupug wrote:
http://news.cnet.com/i/bto/20070917/Spr … 70x316.gif
Sprint Airave
We get horrible reception in Maine so we got this little puppy to boost our reception.
8 bars with tinned penisNarupug wrote:
Your penis wrapped in tin foil must be awesome cause I've gone from no bars to six with the Airave.Sup wrote:
my penis wrapped in tin foil > AiraveNarupug wrote:
http://news.cnet.com/i/bto/20070917/Spr … 70x316.gif
Sprint Airave
We get horrible reception in Maine so we got this little puppy to boost our reception.
I bet you're just the size for a microwave antenna..Sup wrote:
8 bars with tinned penisNarupug wrote:
Your penis wrapped in tin foil must be awesome cause I've gone from no bars to six with the Airave.Sup wrote:
my penis wrapped in tin foil > Airave
Last edited by mikkel (2010-01-31 11:19:05)
jpjantti = me. Comes from my real name.
Last edited by GC_PaNzerFIN (2010-02-01 07:17:26)
3930K | H100i | RIVF | 16GB DDR3 | GTX 480 | AX750 | 800D | 512GB SSD | 3TB HDD | Xonar DX | W8
How much for one of your DiRT 2?
I like pie.
Normally, I would just buy the parts and build it myself but I don't have the time.
1 224-6493 Alienware Aurora Desktop
1 317-1888 Intel Core i7 975 Extreme (3.33GHz, 8MB Cache)
1 317-2665 9GB Triple Channel 1333Mhz DDR3
1 330-6074 Alienware MM Keyboard, US
1 320-8297 Dell 23 inch ST2310 WidescreenFlat Panel
1 320-8780 Single ATI Radeon HD 5970, 2GB GDDR5
1 341-0435 640GB - SATA-II 3Gb/s 7200RPM, 16MB Cache HDD
1 313-8322 Cosmic Black, Alienware Aurora Chassis, 875W PSU
1 421-2063 Genuine Windows 7 Professional, 64bit, English
1 420-9691 DataSafe Local BackUp 2.0 Basic
1 420-6436 PC-Restore, Dim/Insp
1 317-2818 Accessory Kit, Aurora, Eng
1 330-4769 Dell Resource DVD with Application Backup
1 330-6082 Alienware Optical Mouse, MG100
1 313-8751 AlienFX Color, Mars Red
1 410-1867 ADOBE READER 9.0 MULTI- LANGUAGE
1 313-8339 Single Drive: 24X CD/DVD burner (DVD+/-RW) w/double layer write capability
1 421-0975 NERO 9, ANW
1 421-0974 CYBERLINK PDVD 8.0 ANW
1 313-8948 Sound Blaster X-Fi Xtreme Audio
1 330-6348 Automatic Updates: On
1 421-1427 Alien Cyborg
1 906-5260 Dell Limited Hardware Warranty 7X24 Technical Support, Initial Year
1 905-6137 Dell Limited Hardware Warranty Plus In-Home Service [after Remote Diagnosis], Initial Year
1 906-6980 In-home Service after Remote Diagnosis, Initial Year
1 988-7347 No Warranty beyond 1 year
1 990-8029 1 Year Limited Warranty and Next Business Day,Desktop
1 421-1721 Soft Contracts,Banktec Care,Alienware
1 421-1443 Steam and Portal Factory Installed
1 421-1438 Alienhead Chrome Red
1 430-0639 Killer Xeno Pro
1 317-1904 Alienware High-Performance Liquid Cooling
1 224-6493 Alienware Aurora Desktop
1 317-1888 Intel Core i7 975 Extreme (3.33GHz, 8MB Cache)
1 317-2665 9GB Triple Channel 1333Mhz DDR3
1 330-6074 Alienware MM Keyboard, US
1 320-8297 Dell 23 inch ST2310 WidescreenFlat Panel
1 320-8780 Single ATI Radeon HD 5970, 2GB GDDR5
1 341-0435 640GB - SATA-II 3Gb/s 7200RPM, 16MB Cache HDD
1 313-8322 Cosmic Black, Alienware Aurora Chassis, 875W PSU
1 421-2063 Genuine Windows 7 Professional, 64bit, English
1 420-9691 DataSafe Local BackUp 2.0 Basic
1 420-6436 PC-Restore, Dim/Insp
1 317-2818 Accessory Kit, Aurora, Eng
1 330-4769 Dell Resource DVD with Application Backup
1 330-6082 Alienware Optical Mouse, MG100
1 313-8751 AlienFX Color, Mars Red
1 410-1867 ADOBE READER 9.0 MULTI- LANGUAGE
1 313-8339 Single Drive: 24X CD/DVD burner (DVD+/-RW) w/double layer write capability
1 421-0975 NERO 9, ANW
1 421-0974 CYBERLINK PDVD 8.0 ANW
1 313-8948 Sound Blaster X-Fi Xtreme Audio
1 330-6348 Automatic Updates: On
1 421-1427 Alien Cyborg
1 906-5260 Dell Limited Hardware Warranty 7X24 Technical Support, Initial Year
1 905-6137 Dell Limited Hardware Warranty Plus In-Home Service [after Remote Diagnosis], Initial Year
1 906-6980 In-home Service after Remote Diagnosis, Initial Year
1 988-7347 No Warranty beyond 1 year
1 990-8029 1 Year Limited Warranty and Next Business Day,Desktop
1 421-1721 Soft Contracts,Banktec Care,Alienware
1 421-1443 Steam and Portal Factory Installed
1 421-1438 Alienhead Chrome Red
1 430-0639 Killer Xeno Pro
1 317-1904 Alienware High-Performance Liquid Cooling
^ heh, that's a Dell invoice . . .
ah, i see it now - Dell resource CD, etc. i had heard Dell bought Alienware, i thought they were going to remain an independent division.
ah, i see it now - Dell resource CD, etc. i had heard Dell bought Alienware, i thought they were going to remain an independent division.
Last edited by burnzz (2010-02-01 14:02:02)
They did. Basically, Alienware replaced the XPS machines which was Dell's "gaming" division. Once I get the machine, I'll strip away anything Dell related like I always do.burnzz wrote:
^ heh, that's a Dell invoice . . .
ah, i see it now - Dell resource CD, etc. i had heard Dell bought Alienware, i thought they were going to remain an independent division.
i'm not saying Dell is bad - i have almost three hundred of them here. i just recognized the invoice.
i once placed a call for one of our servers, and the ram was swapped within half of an hour.
i once placed a call for one of our servers, and the ram was swapped within half of an hour.
Oh yea. If I need a part replaced here at work from Dell, such as a hdd, server ram, power supply, whatever, It is guaranteed I will have it then next day.burnzz wrote:
i'm not saying Dell is bad - i have almost three hundred of them here. i just recognized the invoice.
i once placed a call for one of our servers, and the ram was swapped within half of an hour.
Dell bought Alienware, and they decided to use them as their gaming devision, they're going to make XPS more mainstream and consumer-friendly.burnzz wrote:
^ heh, that's a Dell invoice . . .
ah, i see it now - Dell resource CD, etc. i had heard Dell bought Alienware, i thought they were going to remain an independent division.