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LOL @Mike, not trying to start trouble, but I love the way you say "Not a Reonaut" in your description under your avatar.
I only noticed it now.
Reosmods would be proud that you feel it necessary to announce that you are not a Reonaut....
I think those us of in the minority should identify ourselves, there are clearly less of us than there are of you
I'm not sure if that second sentence is a jab or not
I think those us of in the minority should identify ourselves, there are clearly less of us than there are of you
I'm not sure if that second sentence is a jab or not
Yea, it's always tough. Coming from a guitar forum, people are far, far worse there so this is still pretty mild thankfully. We always want to validate our decisions and the systems we buy into.. Similarly with cars etc, if we invest money, we want to feel like we got a good deal. My logic is, there are loads of good deals/systems out there.
I'm thinking of moving away from the IPV and going for an rDna or something super compact. But I'm waiting for down-regulation so I can get 10W out of a pair of 26ga with 6 wraps or whatever I want...
@Silver, some forumites paid R350, some paid R150, now it seems some will pay R50. I'm at least in the middle, so it's not too bad! I'm just a really cheap bastid - student life eh
Yip, it's tricky but manageable on the Kayfun, the flat deck helps, but the IGO-L is a frikken nightmare@BumbleBee or a kayfun even.
Best way i've come across so far, is to wrap a loop on each lead, so that it goes completely around the screw, down side is you have to completely take out the post screws to install coils.
The biggest problem is poor screw selection. The std crappy rounded pressed Phillps screws most rebuildables use, have a tiny band that is actually flat enough to press the wire down, the rest of the surface underneath is sloped (like the kayfuns are almost fully sloped) or curved which results in the wire ALWAYS being pushed outwards as you tighten the screw. Machined (usually the knurled ones) are flush from start to finish underneath, so the wire is not pushed away and tightening is a breeze.