Brad Breedlove never considered himself an audiophile. The project manager for an Indianapolis-area industrial piping company has been collecting vinyl for about five years now, and the records in frequent rotation on his midrange Audio-Technica turntable include the well-worn now-classics that belonged to his parents when he was growing up.
It’s a good stereo system—but not obsessively so—that includes SVS Ultra Bookshelf speakers and an SVS SB 4000 subwoofer powered by a Schiit Vidar amp.
In September, however, Breedlove took a step into the deeper waters of the sonically serious and ordered a $369 Reduction 1.1 phono preamplifier from Bottlehead, an audio kit maker in Poulsbo, Wash., across Puget Sound from Seattle. When it arrived, the box contained slabs of unfinished alder wood, carefully packed circuit boards, vacuum tubes, and bags full of capacitors and resistors. Before he could turn on his preamp, he would have to put it together.
In the golden age of hi-fi in the 1950s and ’60s, building your own stereo equipment was almost as common as buying it. Entire magazines dedicated to the craft were full of black-and-white halftone depictions of Brylcreemed dads hunched over disemboweled sound systems from companies such as Heathkit and Dynaco, soldering irons in hand. These days it’s often the warm glow of vacuum tubes on Instagram—and a surfeit of time—that draws in people.
Breedlove had some experience framing houses and building decks, but this was his first electronics project. He borrowed a soldering iron from his brother, watched a few YouTube videos, and “just kind of figured it out,” he says. The project took about eight hours spread over two afternoons. “The instructions were easy to follow,” he says, “and the first time I fired it up, it worked.”
Bu hikaye Bloomberg Businessweek dergisinin October 26, 2020 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Bloomberg Businessweek dergisinin October 26, 2020 sayısından alınmıştır.
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