View Single Post
  #5  
Old 07-20-2012, 10:16 AM
xargos xargos is offline
VideoKarma Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Massachusetts
Posts: 11
Quote:
Originally Posted by maxhifi View Post
I'd say I learned how to repair electronics, by NOT learning how to play baseball, etc, while I was growing up
Being young enough to have access to the home computers of the 1980s at an early age, this is actually pretty much how I learned to program, assemble, and fix computers!

Anyhow, thanks for all the advice, everyone.

I actually have recapped an Emerson brand AA5 (plus replaced a defective rectifier tube) that has been in the family since new. One of the first things that I heard on it was, surprisingly enough, the 1939 radio show of "A Christmas Carol." Doubtless some of the resistors have drifted, though, and without a signal generator I haven't attempted to align it.

Before that, I had assembled a modified version of the Dynaco ST-70 amplifier using new components. That was actually my first real soldering work, and surprisingly enough the thing actually worked when I completed it.

I did pick up a set of books that appears to be pretty good, but I haven't started reading it yet. It is one of the older courses designed for the US Navy, so it definitely covers vacuum tubes. Hopefully it will help me to understand the theory behind how different types of circuits work.

Besides that, I guess one of my issues is that I need to work on my confidence regarding repairing things. I generally worry that I will just make a problem worse. Then again I guess you can't learn without making some mistakes, right?
Reply With Quote
Audiokarma