Has anyone put Audio magazine on CD and made it available? I'd buy all of them from 1947 till it's 2000 demise if I could get it.
You would be wasting a good amount of money. With the exception of the Fall Annual Product Review issues, everything after about 1980 was pretty much useless. No schematics and few technical articles. And with reviewers like Leonard Feldman telling us that all amplifiers sound the same, and any manufacturers that advertised in the magazine always getting a good review, They were a far cry from the good old days. No more Q&A columns either. The only exception was perhaps Bascom King who would at least give a technical description of the circuit. IMO, only the ones from the 1950's and 60's were worth saving.I'd buy all of them from 1947 till it's 2000 demise if I could get it.
I learned a good deal from some of the articles in Audio in the mid-late 70's, including the circuit breakdowns of products under review. The construction projects were cool, too, with several neat circuits from Pass and Leach. One of my longest-running amps (built in 1979) was based on a Leach circuit garnered from Audio.
Well, i do remember a lot of good info in it when I had my sub in the 70s. And I see articles from earlier time that are used as reference. I'd still like an electronic copy.
The Dick Heyser speaker reviews alone were worth the cost of admission. Ed Long's analyses of LP systems were likewise excellent.
April 1948 to Dec 1989.
464 issues.
5GB.
Plug this text file into your download manager and away you go!
Collection is searchable using recoll.
Recoll finds your documents
464 issues.
5GB.
Plug this text file into your download manager and away you go!
Collection is searchable using recoll.
Recoll finds your documents
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Last edited:
Audio Anthology
Many articles from the early daze of Audio Magazine were reproduced as 'Audio Anthology', a six volume set produced by Audio Amateur / Glass Audio magazine in the early 1990s. A very useful resource. Probably still some for sale, haven't checked recently.🙂
Many articles from the early daze of Audio Magazine were reproduced as 'Audio Anthology', a six volume set produced by Audio Amateur / Glass Audio magazine in the early 1990s. A very useful resource. Probably still some for sale, haven't checked recently.🙂
Reading the article in the July 1948 issue with the PP 300b amp. They claim a single 300b is capable of 17.8 watts?
Many articles from the early daze of Audio Magazine were reproduced as 'Audio Anthology', a six volume set produced by Audio Amateur / Glass Audio magazine in the early 1990s. A very useful resource. Probably still some for sale, haven't checked recently.🙂
Are you sure it is not 'Audiocraft Magazine' that was re-issued by Audio Amateur? I have that set, it actually is three volumes.
Jan
Reading the article in the July 1948 issue with the PP 300b amp. They claim a single 300b is capable of 17.8 watts?
Operating on a 450 Volt Supply, 2 K load.
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Are you sure it is not 'Audiocraft Magazine' that was re-issued by Audio Amateur? I have that set, it actually is three volumes.
Jan
Fortunately there are reprints of many of the historic books & other information. I bought this set soon as it became available about 20 yrs ago.🙂
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here's a link to an archive of technical publications RADIO and BROADCAST HISTORY library with thousands of books and magazines
scroll down on the main page til you get to the Technical: Audio & Recording section.
there's Audio, DB, Modern Recording and several others it also has Popular Electronics!
and there's Audiocraft for Jan!
scroll down on the main page til you get to the Technical: Audio & Recording section.
there's Audio, DB, Modern Recording and several others it also has Popular Electronics!
and there's Audiocraft for Jan!
^^ Yep, that's where I got the links from. Wrote a little qbasic program that gathered the pdf links from the html page source. If there's others you want I could probably do it for you.
it also has Popular Electronics!
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there's Audio, DB, Modern Recording and several others it also has Popular Electronics!
If you search the Popular Electronics archive you can find the design for the "Plastic Tiger" and "Tigersaurus" amplifiers.
One reviewer took a line from Kipling: "Tiger tiger, burning bright..." as the latter was wont to burst into flames.
Tigersaurus, Radio-Electronics Dec 1973 page 43-47.If you search the Popular Electronics archive you can find the design for the "Plastic Tiger" and "Tigersaurus" amplifiers.
Radio-Electronics download list attached. 538 items.
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Be considerate of David "WorldRadioHistory" Gleason's bandwidth.
I have a couple gigs of his but it has taken a couple years to read maybe half of it. There is NO reason to force rapid downloads. I set my mass-downloader to slowest settings and even a 20 minute wait between files. In a couple days it fetches a gig, without hammering his server or blocking other clients.
I have a couple gigs of his but it has taken a couple years to read maybe half of it. There is NO reason to force rapid downloads. I set my mass-downloader to slowest settings and even a 20 minute wait between files. In a couple days it fetches a gig, without hammering his server or blocking other clients.
Not CDs but may still be useful. There are a LOT of useful back issues on this site. (Sorry, I notice someones already given you this link..my bad.)
AUDIO - Consumer audio and music magazine from 1947 to 2000.
Cheers Jonathan
AUDIO - Consumer audio and music magazine from 1947 to 2000.
Cheers Jonathan
I had a single "plastic tiger" amp that I built when I was a teen. Used it to power a sub, which I believe was some Utah 12" in an EV aristocrat cab. 1974?
I remember the special washers that "MUST be used to attach the heatsinks" or the plastic transistor cases would crack. I wasnt much better at plastic model building; white silicon HS paste all over the pcb...
I remember the special washers that "MUST be used to attach the heatsinks" or the plastic transistor cases would crack. I wasnt much better at plastic model building; white silicon HS paste all over the pcb...
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