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I got careless with a cartridge and knocked the stylus off 200.00 error lucky though I haven't kicked a woofer or dropped an amp. . .
Audio equipment tragedies do happen, whether the result of loud music, butter fingers, or the family pet. Have you been the cause
A trilogy of blowups for you. My old system was on a timer and when it turned on my left (HSA 200w) mono power amp put incredibly loud 60hz mains hum through two Bose 901 series threes for over an hour. The room was full of smoke, the power amp was trashed but the speakers went on for another 4 or 5 years. A fellow Audiophile was silly enough to claim that his pair of homemade speakers with 15" Altec woofers were able to handle the lows and the power of my four (double stereo to get the acoustic loading) Bose 901 series six's on the George Solti RCA Verdi Requiem - Dies Irae. After a week of this silliness I wired them up to my modified, high powered (genuine - not "saleman figures" 250w RMS with around 20,000w peak capability) Tillbrook MOSFET mono amps and handed him the volume control. I caught one of his 15" woofers about 8 foot from the cabinet! Funny, he now believes me when the discussion turns to Hi-Fi reproduction. I am still of the opinion that if someone tries that hard to be stupid, I don't have to regret the fallout! The most expensive "oops" I directly know of was when an acquantance dropped the preamp earth wire on his all Crown (Amcron) system and demolished two M600 power amps and two Crown Electrostatic speakers. OUCH!
Almost blew my brand new McIntosh amp when I failed to connect the powercord to the IEC securely. When I touched the powercord, the amp's display lit up brighter than a Christmas tree and the transformer started to do the shake like crazy. I switched off the amp and switched it back on again after 20 seconds, but it failed to come on. I finally switched the thing off and waited for half an hour before switching it back on. Thank God, it worked! It must have burned in the amp very well 'cause it sounded very good after this accident.
Put Chinese kt88's into my a Melos tube amp, one of the tubes arc's and pretty soon smoke and fire. So luckily I managed to get the damn tube out and no real damage. Quite a scare though.One of the reasons I now own a Jeff Rowland solid state amp.
Remember ESS loudspeakers? With the Heil "Air Motion Transformer"? Well, I had a pair of AMT-1d's from about '78 through '85. -Really nice sounding speaker, by the way - that I melted a number of the little foil ribbon diaphragms in the amt module, due to repeated applications of high current from a Hafler DH500 amp. Then while cranking up Fleetwood Macs' "Go Your Own Way" one night, one of the 12" woofers went its own way. Again, nice speakers, but NOT for high output.
Well not exactly almost. The UPS driver destoyed it in route. Nice people that UPS is they fought the claim until I finally gave up and had my amp fixed at the factory at my expense. By the way I never signed for the amp, the driver left it sit outside by my door for hours since no one was home when he got there.
After a good workout in another room I wanted ted to cool down to Beethoven. The amp is below the turntable and the sweat hitting the tubes of my NYAL OTL 4 shutdown the unit quickly. Two days later I reinserted the amp in the system and all way well.
In my younger days I knocked out a McIntosh solid-state amp when I failed to turn it off before cutting power to an Ampex 440 tape recorder that was directly connected to it. The high surge from the Ampex through its 600 ohm outputs was too much for the McIntosh. Never did that again.
Various mods are to blame. A Dynaco ST70 suffered a death when I failed to record the color code on a driver board upgrade. I have had 2 pairs of speakers where the surrounds gave out but both were due to old age. I shorted a power supply on a Audio Alchemy Headphone amp while relocating the audio equipment. So go's life!
I confess! I wear out audio equipment. So far the tally is two cassette decks, two CD players, and a twenty year old pair of bookshelf speakers. The speakers survived seven moves and two trips to the beach (Hint: Keep the sand in the stands, not in the speaker cabinets). How's that for subjective testing? The woofer surrounds disintegrated last year while playing Mouse on Mars' "Bib" (loud music). Let the Consumer Reports rabble eat cake!
I dropped an old Dynaco ST 70 out of a 3rd story window onto concrete to see what would happen. Believe it or not, the damage was less catstrophic that I would've expected. In fact, with a little time and some parts, I think I could have had it running again . . .
Friends and I were having a HUGE party one night and I brought my system over. I had a Sony ES amp, pre-amp, and CD player hooked to four pairs of speakers. I specifically told everyone who was allowed access to the system not to crank the volume past a certain level -- well, you know what happened. There were sparks, then flames shooting about two feet out of the amp.