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In Reply to: What are your mains? posted by Dalancroft on July 19, 2002 at 14:55:44:
I have a Sony V444ES receiver,with a Sony DVP-S9000ES and a SCD333ES. both the Receiver and DVP-S9000ES have dedicated Ultimate Outlets. The UO for the receiver feeds off power ports and a Mini-Lab cable. all other PCs are DIY... i use a pair of Audience AU24 IC for the DVP-S9000ES. My mains are Acoustic Research HO308s.. sweet little monitors.. The surrounds and center are Boston Acoustics VRM series speakers... I have some sound dampening sheets on anything that rattles and have my system VERY isolated from the speakers.. I use a bass trap and a Richter Scale III to attenuate the room resonances at about 48Hz (only EQ i employ!) and some wall treatments to minimize reflectance... The room is odd shaped and the system is cornered so i don't create a lot of parallel surface issues... My system is sounding very nice for being a mid-fi grade. Jazz/Classical sounds very natural and there. I am very surprised at the sound the V444ES can produce.I live between Lakeside and Alpine but work in Sorrento Valley and used to work in Torrey Pines... I ain't a city boy, so i enjoy going back to the rural home i have on 4 acres with much wildlife (including 3 little wild ones of my own!).
Biggest benefit of living in the boonies? the stereo get's as loud as i want and the Coyotes are the only ones that complain...Once!
Trained the kids from the start NOT to be sensitive to sounds for bedtime!
Good luck with Gregg, he really does a good job.
Follow Ups:
The reason I ask is that my wife is a researcher for Collateral Therapeutics in Sorrento Valley and I know a number of biotech firms are either there or in the N. Torrey Pines area.Wouldn't THAT be a hoot!
Me, I was born & raised in Oregon (Portland) but I'm a surburban boy through & through. Amazingly enough, even though I'm 1000 miles south of my old stomping grounds, UC doesn't look THAT much different from my home neighborhood. Only sunnier. And drier.
yes, i'm a graduate from UCSD (1988!) in Biochem/CellBio and have worked in Biotech ever since... now in the computational side of things. I've worked at Hybritech, Mycogen, Stratagene, and now Chemnavigator...I love the Portland area and been bird watching and photographing on Sauvie (?Spelling) Island a few times... i have a friend who has a place in Hood River also...
Small world!
are you still going oooooooooh 3D picture????;-)
I try not to touch a computer on days beginning with "S"! Especially on a weekend in which a buddy was turning 40 and about 22 people got on limo buses and headed to Temecula for a day of serious partying. Hoo boy, yesterday was too bright! Not to mention loud.Yes, it is a small world. Let's see, Lila (wife) was @ UCSD from 1991-1997 earning her Ph.D. in molecular pharmacology. You probably know a few if not a lot of the same people. She was in Dr. Joan Heller Brown's lab.
Yes, I still AM going, "WOW!" He played "The Fifth Element," as I'm sure he did for you, and I just stuttered in amazement. Yesterday my toddler (2 next month) and I watched all kinds of movies including "Fantasia 2000." Absolutely superb. I am very pleased and even Lila (who's usually fairly tight-fisted) thought it was worth the $$$. I didn't tell her about Gregg's travel fee though; that'll be our little secret.
Gregg told me all about your place -- sounds nice, placid, relaxing, a real getaway from the urban grind. For a suburban place, though, our house is relatively peaceful as well. We only have neighbors on one side as the other three are sloping backyards & the neighbors' homes are quite a bit away, which is nice.
ok, you stumped me! Temecula and partying are not two words i typically hear in the same sentence...golf?
Fermented fruit of the vine.Great friends, good food, abundant libations and plenty of sun -- what could be better?
duh! see what happens when you are out of social-circles for a few years...you forget e actually have a wine country!
Unless you're a teetotaller -- even if you are -- it's worth a visit. The wineries have come a long way and it is quite bucolic and rural in atmosphere . . .
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