I posted the link earlier...Still can't post a link. It's on Amazon.
Hammond 1590F Aluminum Diecast Case
but, you should be able to post the link now.
that seems to be a different one though...
I posted the link earlier...Still can't post a link. It's on Amazon.
Hammond 1590F Aluminum Diecast Case
but, you should be able to post the link now.
I was thinking about this on my 100W build and my conclusion was that while 2x50w is more compact, and electrically equivalent, the 2x50W resistors are probably less efficient at dissipating heat than a 100W resistor and will run hotter at the same power level. The 100W part has more than 3x the "footprint" of the 50W part - 3100mm^2 vs 920mm^2. My case isn't ventilated so it's mostly cooled by conduction. "In theory" I would expect the 2x50W parts to be quite a bit hotter (1.5x?) but I didn't have the parts or patience to actually test it out, I only bought the 100W parts...Basicaly, to do it right at 100W, we need 5 x 100W resistors per the diagram. Its actually more compact to use 2x 50W for each, due to smaller tabs.
This is important advice - you want to use wire between them, even if just a short bit, because these resistors will move as they heat up and cool down, and experience vibration, and get knocked around like all gear does sometimes. A solid soldered connection between two fixed components that experience temperature cycling, vibration, and shock is sort of a test machine for solder joint failure analysis!The main thing is If you can get the holes in the solder lugs to line up, you can put a scrap of wire through and solder the joint, then trim the wire. I think that's more positive than just a solder bridge.
Yep, probably easier to solder too. I felt like a real beginner trying to solder those Arcol lugs at first! I'm using a 90-watt Edsyn soldering station, and finally I gave up and put on the largest tip I have - a 1/4" chisel tip that looks like it's for stained glass or something. That did the trick.Would it be even better to make them more offset and have a short wire length between lugs?
Does anyone on here build these for others? I'd love one but not sure I have the capability to build one myself.
Many thanks to JohnH for this sweet design and to Gene Ballzz for "knowing a guy"!
I was put in touch with the "guy" and had him build me the JohnH M2.
This thing is amazing! Does exactly what everyone says and had me playing late into the night on a work night too!
The "guy" did an AMAZING job on the build and quality of work, great attention to detail.
I'm thrilled with the ability to attenuate at any of the settings with NO change in tonality and it allows me to run the SV20H into its sweet spot easily at lower room volume!
Anyone needing an attenuator absolutely could not do better without spending over a thousand bucks (I've even heard a couple of those that did not do as well)!
My compliments to "the guy"!