thetubeguy1954
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Hello everyone! My name is Tom but in all the audio forums I'm known as Thetubeguy1954. I've been an avid music lover and because of my desire to hear my music reproduced as accurately as possible, an audiophile as well, since Feb. 9, 1964, when I heard The Beatles on the Ed Sullivan show! I still remember my dad laughing at me because I kept yelling STOP SCREAMING!!!!!!! to the girls on the TV. I don't remember how I attained it, but the very next day I had a transistor radio so I could listen to music and every night I fell asleep listening to rock on FM until it went off-air sometime between 12 midnight and 1 am.
The next nudge in my audio journey occurred when a new kid I met at school invited me over to his house. As soon as I entered I heard music. As it turned out his parents were both avid music lovers and they had --for the first time I'd ever seen one-- a very nice Motorola console. I just couldn't believe my ears! To me, back then, this sounded almost real. They played Fats Domino, Connie Francis, Dean Martin, Johnny Cash, Nate "King" Cole, Frank Sinatra, and of course, Elvis Presley! I'm sure there are many more artists I can no longer remember but after 55 years that's to be expected.
Over the next couple of years, after hearing how good music sounded when played on the various mono & stereo music consoles over friend's and relative's homes, I tried talking my parents into buying a music console for our home as well. But nothing happened :disbelief: so when I turned 13 in 1/1967 I started talking my bike out once a month on the days you could throw-away literally anything you could bring to the end of your driveway. On those days I'd searched for music consoles to "gut". It didn't take long until I had a tube, tuner/preamp, 2 monotube amps, and a turntable. I became quite ingenuitive. Back then in Hartford, Connecticut --where I grew up-- a company called "Hartford Club Beverages" used to deliver large bottles of soda in wood crates. So I took one of these crates and turned it upside, down and I cut a hole in the bottom of the crate and mounted the turntable there. Next with the turntable facing forward I cut another hole and mounted the tuner/preamp on what was now the 'front" of the crate. I then took the two monotube amps and flipped over two more wood crates so they were also upside down and I simply placed one amp each on two separate crates. Finally --please remember I was a dumb kid at the time-- a friend and I sneak out of our homes at midnight on a Friday night. Then we rode our bikes down to the local high school and took to a pair of LARGE University Sound speakers that were mounted to the sides of the building from which they announced the football games and I had my speakers! For a kid of 13, my system was better sounding than anything I heard any adult own when we'd visit their houses!
Today I'm a 66-year-old toad and my system consists of a YBA Genesis CD4 CDP --used strictly as a transport-- a tube Musical Paradise MP-D2 DAC, a Don Sachs Audio custom SP-14 preamp, a T+A Amp 8 (thank you Randy) and a pair of Reference 3A Taksim speakers. I also have various high-end ICs, power cords and speaker wires. With that, I'll end and thank you all for having me here...
The next nudge in my audio journey occurred when a new kid I met at school invited me over to his house. As soon as I entered I heard music. As it turned out his parents were both avid music lovers and they had --for the first time I'd ever seen one-- a very nice Motorola console. I just couldn't believe my ears! To me, back then, this sounded almost real. They played Fats Domino, Connie Francis, Dean Martin, Johnny Cash, Nate "King" Cole, Frank Sinatra, and of course, Elvis Presley! I'm sure there are many more artists I can no longer remember but after 55 years that's to be expected.
Over the next couple of years, after hearing how good music sounded when played on the various mono & stereo music consoles over friend's and relative's homes, I tried talking my parents into buying a music console for our home as well. But nothing happened :disbelief: so when I turned 13 in 1/1967 I started talking my bike out once a month on the days you could throw-away literally anything you could bring to the end of your driveway. On those days I'd searched for music consoles to "gut". It didn't take long until I had a tube, tuner/preamp, 2 monotube amps, and a turntable. I became quite ingenuitive. Back then in Hartford, Connecticut --where I grew up-- a company called "Hartford Club Beverages" used to deliver large bottles of soda in wood crates. So I took one of these crates and turned it upside, down and I cut a hole in the bottom of the crate and mounted the turntable there. Next with the turntable facing forward I cut another hole and mounted the tuner/preamp on what was now the 'front" of the crate. I then took the two monotube amps and flipped over two more wood crates so they were also upside down and I simply placed one amp each on two separate crates. Finally --please remember I was a dumb kid at the time-- a friend and I sneak out of our homes at midnight on a Friday night. Then we rode our bikes down to the local high school and took to a pair of LARGE University Sound speakers that were mounted to the sides of the building from which they announced the football games and I had my speakers! For a kid of 13, my system was better sounding than anything I heard any adult own when we'd visit their houses!
Today I'm a 66-year-old toad and my system consists of a YBA Genesis CD4 CDP --used strictly as a transport-- a tube Musical Paradise MP-D2 DAC, a Don Sachs Audio custom SP-14 preamp, a T+A Amp 8 (thank you Randy) and a pair of Reference 3A Taksim speakers. I also have various high-end ICs, power cords and speaker wires. With that, I'll end and thank you all for having me here...