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FAQ: rec.audio.* Misc 2/99 (part 13 of 13)



Archive-name: AudioFAQ/part13
Last-modified: 1999/11/19
Version: 2.15

20.0 Miscellaneous

20.1 What do I need to know about warranties?
        Warranties have a few basic components.  The first is the term 
        of the warranty.  The second is what is covered.  The third is 
        who supports the warranty. The fourth is what restrictions.

        Term is fairly self evident.  What is covered is more detailed.  
        In audio electronics, typically everything is covered with a 
        "parts and labor" warranty.  Often mechanical components such as 
        tape heads are covered by different terms, such as shorter terms 
        on labor and longer terms on parts.  Likewise, speaker 
        warranties vary widely, from unconditional with no term limit to 
        a basic 30 days parts and labor.

        Some warranties come from the manufacturer.  Others come from 
        the dealer.  Still other warranty support is available with 
        certain premium charge cards.

        A common restriction on some warranties is that the equipment is 
        not covered unless it is sold by an authorized dealer.  A few 
        dealers have lied about being authorized dealers.  Equipment 
        sold by an unauthorized dealer is almost always sold completely 
        legally.  This unauthorized dealer may, in fact, be fully 
        authorized to sell, but not authorized to sell manufacturer's 
        warranties.  In buying gear this way, dealers can get it 
        cheaper, and provide the service themselves.  This kind of gear,
        with a full warranty from the dealer is referred to as gray 
        market equipment.  Manufacturers discourage buying from these 
        gray market dealers, but the risks are fairly low.  If the 
        dealer is local and well established, the risks are minimal.

        If you buy equipment mail-order, a dealer warranty may be a pain 
        in the neck, especially if you have to ship the gear to the 
        dealer more than once to get it fixed correctly.  Then again, 
        some factory service requires shipping gear far away at your 
        expense, too.

        Frequently, home audio equipment is sold with a warranty 
        restriction that if the gear is used commercially or in any 
        profit-making enterprise, then the warranty is void. This is to 
        protect the manufacturer from having to frequently repair 
        equipment meant for light service.  Professional audio equipment 
        often comes with very liberal warranty terms, such as lifetime 
        parts and labor.  Professional gear takes heavy use and severe 
        wear from constant transportation.  It is expected to be able to 
        take this abuse.

        All gear, electronic and mechanical, is known to have three 
        principal failure modes: abuse, infant failure, and end-of-life 
        failure.  In addition, a few of the failures occur at random.

        Infant failure (also called juvenile failure) occurs in the
        first fifty hours of use, and is the principal responsibility
        of warranties. Infant failure is frequently caused by defective
        parts or a design defect.

        Abuse failure is that caused by a person who pulls a cable too 
        hard, bangs the equipment on the table, pushes the controls too 
        firmly or too fast, or does anything else which the manufacturer 
        did  not expect. These are the gray areas of warranties.  They
        do not represent a manufacturing defect in the manufacturer's 
        eyes, but they do leave you with a broken device.  To get 
        the best chance of coverage against this kind of failure, select 
        a brand or a dealer with a very liberal warranty policy.

        End-of-life failures are rarely covered by warranty.  Tape heads 
        have a finite, calculable life, as do rubber rollers, speakers, 
        cables, batteries, bearings, and motors.  The life of some of 
        these components can be extended by intelligent care.  For 
        example, the life of common rechargeable batteries can be 
        extended by good recharging practice.  Likewise, some cleaners 
        can dry out rubber, and will lead to premature failure. Don't 
        expect warranty support for any of these problems, and if you 
        get it, feel lucky.

20.2 What is blind testing?  Non-blind?  Double-blind?
        If you want to compare pieces of equipment, recordings, or
        people, you could run an experiment.  You could select an
        experimenter to initiate various trials, select some subjects
        to listen to the sounds, and then ask the subjects questions
        about what they hear.  However, if you want meaningful 
        results, it is necessary to set up the experiment correctly, 
        and ask the right questions.

        One of the major problems with any experiment is that the
        subjects may become aware of the experimenter's hypothesis 
        and allow this awareness to influence their behavior.  One 
        technique for preventing such bias is to keep the person
        who conducts the experiment unaware of the hypothesis of the 
        research.  Unfortunately, experimenters invariably form SOME 
        hypothesis of what's going on, and these hypotheses affect 
        how they deal with subjects.  

        A more reasonable solution involves allowing the experimenters 
        to know the true hypothesis but somehow keeping them ignorant 
        of the specific experimental condition of each subject.  This
        is known as a Partial Blind Experimenter technique.  An example
        of this is that the person running an experiment knows that the 
        main experimenter wants to determine which connecting cables 
        are best at signal carrying, but would not know which cables 
        are being used at any given time during the experiment.

        It is also important for subjects not to become aware of 
        the experimenter's specific hypothesis.  Subjects often 
        become highly responsive to any cues, intended or unintended, 
        in the research situation that suggest what they are supposed 
        to do to appear normal or "to make the study come out right."  
        This problem can be present in judgment experiments, 
        particularly those in which each subject is exposed to more 
        than one variation of the stimulus. Such a procedure, by its 
        very nature, increases the probability that the subject will 
        begin to guess which aspects of the experiment are being 
        systematically varied by the experimenter.

        Many studies avoid this problem with what is called a Blind 
        Subject technique.  Using this approach, subjects are not told 
        specifically what the hypotheses are.  Additionally, subjects 
        are not told what specific experimental conditions they are in.  
        For example, a subject might be told that he/she is supposed to 
        determine which stereo system sounds better, when in fact the 
        experimenter wishes to examine which color or appearance of the 
        same components looks better to subjects.

        When both a Partial Blind Experimenter technique and a Blind 
        Subject technique are used at the same time, this is called a
        Double Blind experiment.  Double Blind experiments have higher 
        probability of producing statistically valid results than 
        Partial Blind Experimenter alone, Blind Subject alone, or other 
        techniques.  Double Blind experiments are highly recommended.

20.3 Where can I get a service manual or parts for brand XXX?
        The most reliable source of supply is the manufacturer's sales 
        office in your country. Here is a list of company contacts that
        may be helpful in the US. (Please send additions & corrections
        etc. to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

        AOC                     800-775-1262
        Akai Service Center     818-794-8196
        AR (now part of NHT; see NHT)
           (AB Tech Services    800-225-9847
            Ex AR Employee; Repairs old AR products)
        Cannon                  516-933-6300
        Casio                   201-361-5400
        Daewoo                  800-782-4922
        Emerson Radio           800-388-8333
        Sanyo/Fisher            213-605-6756
        General Electric        800-447-1700
        Goldstar                800-222-6457
        Hitachi                 800-526-6241
        JVC                     800-252-5722
        Kenwood                 213-639-9000
        Philips/Mag/Sylvania    615-475-8869
        Mitsubishi/Akai         714-220-1464
        NAD                     508-429-2525
        NEC                     201-882-9008
        NHT                     707-747-3331
        NHT                     800-969-2748
        NHT                     800-648-9993
        Nutone                  800-543-8687
        Onkyo                   201-825-7950
        Panasonic/Quasar        215-741-0676
        RCA                     317-231-4151
        Samsung                 800-542-1302
        Sanyo                   800-421-5013
        Sharp                   800-526-0264
        Sony                    800-282-2848
        Soundesign              800-888-4491
        Teac                    213-726-0303
        Teknica                 800-962-1271
        Toshiba                 201-628-8000
        Vandersteen             209-582-0324
        Zenith                  312-745-5152

        Alternately, contact one of the repair parts dealers listed
        in section 10.15 above. MCM and Parts Express offer free
        catalogs which can be very helpful for locating parts.

20.4 Where can I get good repairs on brand XXX?

20.5 How can I take 115V gear over to a 230V country or vice versa?
        Some equipment is available with an international power supply, 
        which can be rewired by any serviceman to either power line 
        voltage.  If you expect to be moving abroad, look for this kind 
        of equipment.  Often, the same model is available both as US 
        only and as International. Some equipment will be rewirable and 
        won't say it.  Adcom amps are known to be rewirable.

        If you rewire equipment from one voltage to another, be sure to
        also change the fuse(s).  The correct value is often printed on
        the case or chassis of the equipment.  If an amplifier, for
        example, is rewired from 115V to 230V, the fuse current rating
        needs to be reduced by 50%.

        If you know that your gear is limited to one power line voltage, 
        you can order a new power transformer for that receiver, CD 
        player, amplifier, or tuner which will be wound differently.  
        Contact the manufacturer's local service center.  This can be 
        very expensive.  A new  transformer for a 40 watt receiver would 
        wholesale for under $25 but cost $75 from a service center.

        Another alternative is to buy a power transformer that will 
        convert 115V to 230V and vice versa.  This is only practical
        for smaller gear.  Larger power amps require prohibitively
        massive and expensive transformers.  Also, the addition of a
        transformer may hurt the sound quality.

        Here are some common transformer models and 1992 list prices.  
        Power ratings are total line current multiplied by line voltage 
        (2A at 115V is 230 watts).  Larger transformers cost more. Some 
        of the costlier transformers are constructed with plugs and 
        jacks for immediate use.  Those marked * have wire leads and 
        need safe connections to be used.

        Before spending money, check into other things about audio in 
        the new country.  Broadcast frequencies are slightly different 
        in some countries than in others, so a receiver or tuner bought 
        in one country may not be able to receive some or all of the 
        stations in another country.  The US separates the AM broadcast 
        band frequencies by 10kHz while the UK uses 9kHz.  Similarly, 
        the US separates FM stations by 200kHz, where the UK has 
        stations on a 50kHz spacing pattern.  It MAY be very simple to 
        modify a receiver from US to UK spacings, but may not.  Last,
        but not least, some equipment will NOT work well on 50Hz power.

        Also, FM Radio preemphasis is different in North America and
        Europe.  One uses 50us while the other uses 75us.  To change
        receiver deemphasis may require a modification by a technician
        with special factory information.

        Also, power line frequency is 50Hz in some countries and 60Hz
        in others.  Some equipment will overheat if it was engineered
        for 60Hz operation and run on 50Hz power lines.  Some equipment
        uses the power line frequency as a reference for motor speed,
        such as turntables and tape decks.  Check the label first.

        Step Down (230V in, 115V Out)
                MagneTek/Triad  N1X*    50 Watts        $11.83
                Stancor         P-8620* 50 Watts        $14.16
                MagneTek/Triad  N3M     85 Watts        $29.95
                Stancor         P-8630  85 Watts        $43.65
                MagneTek/Triad  N6U*    200 Watts       $25.72
                Stancor         P-8632  200 Watts       $51.80
                MagneTek/Triad  N5M     250 Watts       $42.60

        Step Up (115V In, 230V Out)
                Stancor         P-8637  85 Watts        $43.10
                MagneTek/Triad  N150MG  150 Watts       $49.46
                MagneTek/Triad  N250MG  250 Watts       $54.69
                Stancor         P-8639  300 Watts       $55.51

        The Stancor and MagneTek Triad lines are carried by
        large electronic distributors.

20.6 Are there really good deals in country XXX?

20.7 How do I find out how much an XXX is worth?
        There is a "Blue Book" for used audio equipment called 
        "Orion Blue Book-Audio".  This guide lists both a 
        wholesale and a retail value for most audio gear.
                Orion Research Corporation
                1315 Main Avenue Suite 230
                Durango CO  81301 USA
                303-247-8855
                http://www.bluebook.com
        Last I knew a guide costs $169. Each Nov, a new book is printed.
        After June, the old book is discounted. If you need a single
        quote from the Orion Blue Book, send a polite request to:
                [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
        and you may get a quote back by e-mail.

20.8 Do people really hear those differences?
        Who knows?  They sure think that they do.

20.9 Why do people disagree on what is the best sound?
        There are at least three different measures of what is "Perfect 
        Sound".  All three have advocates, and all three are right, in 
        their own way.  In general, whether they admit it or not, most 
        listeners fit into one of these three preference groups:

        1.      It must sound like live music.  These people know what 
                voices sound like in person, they know what instruments 
                sound like without any amplification, and they have 
                heard orchestras perform unaided by sound systems.  They 
                want to accurately reproduce that sound.

        2.      It must sound like the recording engineer wanted it to 
                sound.  The recording engineer listened with extremely 
                good equipment to the sound coming out of the 
                microphones, and mixed them together for what he, at 
                that time, felt was artistically correct.  It may not 
                have been the same as live, but it was exactly what he 
                wanted.  In the extreme, people like John Fogerty used 
                to audition his final recording mix in his truck to see 
                how it would sound through a common, lousy stereo.

        3.      It must give me the most pleasure.  No matter how good 
                or bad live sounds, no matter what the recording 
                engineer intended, if buy some equipment will give me
                more listening pleasure then it must be the best.

        With these three perspectives, it is clear that no one system 
        will satisfy everyone.  Add to that confusion the variable that 
        everyone likes a different kind of sound, has heard live music 
        under different conditions, and has a different idea of what the 
        engineer intended.  There is an enormous range of possibilities.

        Another set of reasons is that people look for different things 
        to be right.  Some want strong bass; others want male voices to 
        sound like  male voices; others want violins to sound like 
        violins. Systems rarely do everything equally well. Speakers (in 
        particular) are compromises.  Look for the speaker where the 
        designer had your priority first.  You are perfectly right to 
        select speakers based on YOUR personal taste.

        Confounding the situation further, we all say the greatest 
        things about the stuff we already bought.  To do otherwise would 
        be to admit that we are either stupid or deaf.

        Still another reason is that most people haven't heard enough 
        variations.  Until you hear a system that can truly reconstruct 
        the three-dimensional accuracy of a stereo image accurately, you 
        may never realize that it is possible.  Some excellent 
        recordings contain enough information that with a good enough 
        system, you can hear up-down, in-out, and left-right 
        distinctions very clearly.  However, we will never experience 
        this until we are fortunate enough to hear such a fine recording 
        on a very good system.

        Finally, some of us really can't hear much difference.  We 
        aren't deaf, but we don't have a well trained ear, don't know 
        exactly what to listen for, and may even have slight hearing 
        deficiencies, such as bad sensitivity to high frequencies which 
        comes with older age, or hearing damage from listening to loud 
        sounds (machinery, rock concerts, etc).

20.10 How do I contact the manufacturer of XXXXX?  How do I get repair
                service on XXXXX?  How do I get replacement parts?
        Some magazines publish lists of contact phone numbers for the
        manufacturers of equipment.  In the US, Consumer Reports has a
        small listing in each issue and a more comprehensive listing 
        in their March issue.  Also, Audio Magazine has an exhaustive
        listing in their October "Equipment Directory".  In Europe, look
        in "What HiFi?".

        You can find many addresses by reading ads in hifi magazines. 
        You can also find out by asking at your friendly local hifi 
        shop, especially if you've built up a relationship with them.

        There is a book called the "Electronics Industry Telephone
        Directory".  It comes out yearly and is available in some
        libraries.  Many reps from parts distributors pass them out for
        free.  If you want a copy and are willing to pay for it, call
        Harris Publishing, 800-888-5900 or 216-425-9000.

        The directory of the Electronic Industries Association is
        similarly useful. You can reach the EIA at 202-457-4900.

        A good source for parts and service is often the manufacturer's 
        repair center.  The best way to locate one near you is to look
        at the literature which came with your equipment when it was
        new.  Failing that, see the ideas mentioned above in 19.10.

COPYRIGHT NOTICE
The information contained here is collectively copyrighted by the 
authors. The right to reproduce this is hereby given, provided it is 
copied intact, with the text of sections 1 through 8, inclusive. 
However, the authors explicitly prohibit selling this document, any 
of its parts, or any document which contains parts of this document.

--
Bob Neidorff; Texas Instruments     |  Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
50 Phillippe Cote St.               |  Voice   : (US) 603-222-8541
Manchester, NH  03101 USA       

Note: Texas Instruments has openings for Analog and Mixed
Signal Design Engineers in Manchester, New Hampshire.  If
interested, please send resume in confidence to address above.



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