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FS: 3000 watt amp $179!! 900 watt woofers $36!! new- free shipping
NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less
Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: http://www.nexxon.com TOLL FREE 866-242-0681 At Nexxon you always get free shipping. You always get brand new products You always get a full warranty. You always get 30 days to return it if you are not satisfied for any reason. NO TAX, NO SHIPPING, NO BS orders: http://nexxon.com/orders.htm HOME THEATER - CAMERAS - WOOFERS: ======================================= CLICK HERE FOR HTML VERSION: http://nexxon.com/specials/specialsboss.htm FOR A LIMITED TIME / WHILE SUPPLIES LAST (Sale prices effective 10/13/03 - 10/17/03) Alpine 7998 $799 at crutchfield.com YOUR PRICE: $579!! brand new sealed package The CDA-7998 CD receiver is a system-builder's dream come true! This MP3-playing Alpine has top-quality power supply and output capacitors for ultra-pure sound, plus gold-plated 4-volt preamp outputs that deliver a hot, clean signal to your amps and subs. (Component amps are required with this receiver - it doesn't have an internal amp). The FantomFace XL faceplate is 30% larger than other single-DIN-sized receivers, but it takes up no more room in your dash. It's fully motorized (even the rotary control knob), and disappears when you power down, leaving nothing but a plain black panel to confound thieves. Alpine's best and brightest BioLite® display will keep you "in-the-know" under any lighting condition. Its high-resolution graphics will amaze and amuse you. And switchable green or amber button illumination gives you more options to match your dash lighting. Tone shaping possibilities are extensive. The Bass Engine® Pro section puts a 5-band parametric equalizer, 6-channel digital time correction, a 6-position crossover, plus subwoofer phase and level controls at your command. Is your music sounding a little flat and lifeless? The remarkable Media ExpanderT re-energizes MP3s, CDs, FM and XM Radio with three levels of enhancement - choose the one that pleases your ear. Computer users can take advantage of Alpine's exclusive i-PersonalizeT feature. Surf on over to Alpine's website, and you can create customized Bass Engine setups as well as a 3-line text greeting, burn the info to a disc, and upload it onto the CDA-7998! http://nexxon.com/specials/alpine7998.jpg 1400 watts BOSS R1400D Class D MonoBlock Power Amplifier with Remote Subwoofer level Control Car Amplifier (R 1400D) Features: Remote Subwoofer Level Control Line out (for system building) Variable low pass crossover: 50Hz - 250 Hz @ 24 dB/octave Variable subsonic filter: 10Hz-40Hz @24 dB/octave Phase switch Max Power 1 ohms 1400W x 1 RMS Power 4 ohms 500W x 1 RMS Power 2 ohms 800W x 1 Frequency Response 20-300Hz S/N Ratio 100dB Dimensions: 11 3/4" x 2 3/16" x 11 7/16" MSRP $295.00 Sale price: $149 2200 watts R-2200D Boss Audio R2200D Class D Amplifier MonoBlock Power Amplifier with Remote Subwoofer Level Control SPECIFICATIONS RIOT CLASS D MONOBLOCK AMPLIFIERS Max power, 1 ohm 2200w x 1 RMS power, 4 ohm 800w x 2 RMS power, 2 ohm 1400w x 1 Frequency response 20-300Hz S/N ratio 100dB Dimensions, 11 3/4''W x 2 3/16''H x 14 3/16'' RIOT Class D Amplifiers Remote subwoofer level control Line out (for system building) Variable low pass crossover: 50Hz-250Hz @ 24 dB/octave Variable subsonic filer: 10Hz-40Hz @ 24 dB/octave Phase switch Sale price: $169 3000 watts R3000D CLASS D MonoBlock Class D Amplifier Power Amplifier with Remote Subwoofer Level Control SPECIFICATIONS RIOT CLASS D MONOBLOCK AMPLIFIERS Max power, 1 ohm 3000w x 1 RMS power, 4 ohm 1200w x 2 RMS power, 2 ohm 2200w x 1 Frequency response 20-300Hz S/N ratio 100dB Dimensions, 11 3/4"W x 2 3/16"H x 15 3/8" Sale price: $179 BOSS RIP-12C 12" Die Cast Frame Subwoofer-4 Ohms-900 Watts Car Subwoofer Features: 12" SUBWOOFER POWER PEAK 900W HANDLING CONTINUOUS 450W METALLIC INJECTION CONE MAGNET STRUCTURE 120 oz VOICE COIL 3" DUAL KAPTON EFFICIENCY (1 WATT/1 METER) 96dB FREQUENCY RESPONSE 28Hz ~2kHz IMPEDANCE DUAL 4 ohm MOUNTING DEPTH 5-7/8" RIP-12C MSRP $139.00 Sale price: $36 (thirtysix) - with any amp purchase - always free shipping More info on specials: (prices on this email may be lower) http://nexxon.com/specials/specials.htm http://nexxon.com/specials/repacks.htm http://nexxon.com/specials/specials1.htm http://nexxon.com/specials/specials2.htm http://nexxon.com/specials/specials3.htm http://nexxon.com/specials/specials4.htm http://nexxon.com/specials/specialsl.htm To place your Order: http://nexxon.com/orders.htm 303-948-8786 - toll free 1-866-242-0681 Questions: Website: http://nexxon.com |
#2
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On 14/10/03 5:02 PM, in article ,
"Nexxon" wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, SCAM ALERT! |
#3
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On 14/10/03 5:02 PM, in article ,
"Nexxon" wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, SCAM ALERT! |
#4
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"OFFICIAL RAM BLUEBOOK VALUATION" wrote in message ws.com... On 14/10/03 5:02 PM, in article , "Nexxon" wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, SCAM ALERT! VALUE ALERT!!! This company is a member of the Better Business Bureau, and their report may be viewed he http://www.denver.bbb.org/commonrepo...095&national=Y The above post is in fact, a forgery by Brian L. McCarty. I've just detonated a huge load of dynamite under his infamous "WorldJAZZ" scam -- see my website, http://www.worldjazz.tv, and McCarty's website, http://www.worldjazz.com, to see how a scammer works and lives. Brian, any investors will doubtless call me first, and I'll give them the straight poop. Your scam is DOOOOMMMMMEDDDDD. BWAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHHAHAHHAHHAHA! The above is, of course, a forgery by Brian L. McCarty, r.a.m.'s great pestilence and disease. Brian is secretary of the Far North Queensland Film and Television Association (FNQFTA) in Cairns, Queensland, Australia. Brian L. McCarty resides in a condo at 65 Vasey Esplanade, Trinty Beach, Cairns, Queensland, Australia. It is with great pleasure that I announce that Brian L. McCarty's "Coral Seas" studio project, an obvious scam, is now officially dead. The remains may be viewed at http://www.coralseastudios.com . Brian, we are celebrating your 49th birthday with news that the Coral Seas project has gone belly-up. We watch with great anticipation for the collapse of your WorldJAZZ Scam. It's obvious that WorldJAZZ (http://www.worldjazz.com) is a nonperforming non-asset, simply an invitation for the gullible to lose money. Coral Sea Studios, on the other hand, which McCarty (author of the above post) also maintains, has already sunk beneath the waves. The project is officially dead. Brian, why do you keep around a zombie website? Surely no business partners for Brian L. McCarty! "WorldJAZZ JAZZ MUSIC TELEVISION S NATIONAL CABLE COMING SOON! SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT DAILY JAZZ PROGRAMMING TO BE SUPPLIED BY WORLDJAZZ TO MOSCOW CENTRAL TV BEGINNING DECEMBER 2004" Whoops! The above appears to be a pack of lies from the "WorldJAZZ" website, http://www.worldjazz.com. Moscow Central TV is being informed about this travesty. The website goes on to say, "WorldJAZZ has been named OFFICIAL CO-SPONSOR of the 2004 Jersey Jazz Bass Festival SEPTEMBER 22-25 2004 LIVE BROADCAST PLANNED" But there is no "Jersey Jazz Bass Festival" ! It's a complete fiction! There IS a fishing tournament called the "Jersey Bass Festival". And there's no "PETER THLIVEROSKI". It's a play on the name of Peter Thliveros, a sports fisherman. Lying is Brian's vocation. WorldJAZZ.com is built on the principle of the "Big Lie", first enunciated by Joseph Goebbels. Unfortunately, Brian doesn't know when to stop. The fact of his lying on rec.audio.marketplace results in his constant exposure on Google, which drives away the very suckers he would like to get for WorldJAZZ. We help this process of awareness along with a very active information program. Bluebook Value of Coral Sea Studios = MINUS $270,000. Bluebook Value of WorldJAZZ Scam = Less Than Zero, precise numbers are under INVESTIGATION. The Face Behind the Mask:Scammer Brian L. McCarty, Moscow Central TV, David C.L. Feng, David Ellison, Ying Hong Huang, Lee Hodges, Anthony Ramallo, Melinda Hsu, Melinda Shu 80 Raffles Place, Coral Sea Studios, WorldJazz, Enron, K1 Ventures, Trinity Beach, Cairns, Australia, Boomerang McCarty had an early scheme for Internet radio. He claims to have sold musical performance properties and/or a business plan to Black Entertainment Television for $9.2M. Subsequently, he left Los Angeles. One unsubstantiated rumor is that he left to avoid prosecution for a sex crime, presumably by paying off the victim or family. Once in Australia, he made the acquaintance of the brother of P.M. John Howard, who introduced him to contacts at ABN Amro, an investment banking firm. They created a business plan for some kind of a sound studio, still represented by the website http://www.coralseastudios.com. After approximately a year, ABN withdrew from partnership, but left the studio project still solvent. Some time later, it went bankrupt or nearly so, owing $270,000 to it's employees. At this point, Australia's entitlement law kicked in, paying the employees monies owed them, with the exception of codirectors McCarty and Jeff Wexler. It would appear that McCarty's enterprises failed because he has some kind of mental imbalance, which exhibits signs of both schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The impersonations which he makes of me are a fraction of the numerous identities which he has used in the past, and continues to use, on occasion, in the present. McCarty may actually believe he is the person who he impersonates. Many of the identities are of elaborate construction, taking some six months or more to take shape. McCarty seems to have a magical belief that use of false identities provides a shield. Since his business failure, McCarty has tried to obtain new financing. These methods characteristically rely on false identities and false business fronts. His domain registrations are in the names of nonexistent people, and his websites advertise nonexistent associations and companies, frequently by theft of trademark. For example, my name, Robert Morein, was used as a fictitious endorsement on his website http://www.coraseastudios.com. Since he was caught some three months ago claiming to be a producer for a syndicated jazz music program, his name has not appeared publicly on any of his business enterprises. McCarty is currently attempting to revive his Internet radio scheme, WorldJAZZ, under the name http://www.worldjazz.com. This webpage currently consists completely of false associations and endorsements. There is no "Jersey Jazz Bass Festival", and "Peter Thliveroski" is a modification of "Peter Thliveros", a sports bass fisherman! McCarty has certain bizarre beliefs regarding the pricing of used audio equipment appearing on rec.audio.marketplace. He refers constantly to a book known as the "Orion Bluebook", which reports surveys of audio dealers for prices they paid for used equipment, and prices at which sold. Anyone who advertises on rec.audio.marketplace with prices in excess of the "wholesale average condition" price is subject to attack by McCarty, who does so with the vigor of the Red Brigades. Tactics he has employed against victims are the filing of false crime reports with local police departments alleging that the seller deals in stolen goods and alleged zoning violations. Anyone can become a McCarty victim by disagreeing with him in a public forum. In the past, consequences have been virus attacks, email bomb attacks, defamatory postings, and chronic impersonation. All this is contradictory to McCarty's apparent goal of obtaining finance for his business projects. An intelligent scammer works quietly, while McCarty may be the best known scammer of all time. McCarty is 49 years old, and appears to be ill, requiring intermittent hospital care. He apparently lacks mobility. It is possible that this contributes to his mental imbalance. Among McCarty's aliases, we have: Anthony Ramallo, David Ellison, David C.L. Feng, Ying Hong Huang, Lee Hodges, Melinda Hsu, Melinda Shu, Robert Morein, Robert X Morein, Sylvan Morein, Sylvan X Morein, et al. |
#5
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"OFFICIAL RAM BLUEBOOK VALUATION" wrote in message ws.com... On 14/10/03 5:02 PM, in article , "Nexxon" wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, SCAM ALERT! VALUE ALERT!!! This company is a member of the Better Business Bureau, and their report may be viewed he http://www.denver.bbb.org/commonrepo...095&national=Y The above post is in fact, a forgery by Brian L. McCarty. I've just detonated a huge load of dynamite under his infamous "WorldJAZZ" scam -- see my website, http://www.worldjazz.tv, and McCarty's website, http://www.worldjazz.com, to see how a scammer works and lives. Brian, any investors will doubtless call me first, and I'll give them the straight poop. Your scam is DOOOOMMMMMEDDDDD. BWAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHHAHAHHAHHAHA! The above is, of course, a forgery by Brian L. McCarty, r.a.m.'s great pestilence and disease. Brian is secretary of the Far North Queensland Film and Television Association (FNQFTA) in Cairns, Queensland, Australia. Brian L. McCarty resides in a condo at 65 Vasey Esplanade, Trinty Beach, Cairns, Queensland, Australia. It is with great pleasure that I announce that Brian L. McCarty's "Coral Seas" studio project, an obvious scam, is now officially dead. The remains may be viewed at http://www.coralseastudios.com . Brian, we are celebrating your 49th birthday with news that the Coral Seas project has gone belly-up. We watch with great anticipation for the collapse of your WorldJAZZ Scam. It's obvious that WorldJAZZ (http://www.worldjazz.com) is a nonperforming non-asset, simply an invitation for the gullible to lose money. Coral Sea Studios, on the other hand, which McCarty (author of the above post) also maintains, has already sunk beneath the waves. The project is officially dead. Brian, why do you keep around a zombie website? Surely no business partners for Brian L. McCarty! "WorldJAZZ JAZZ MUSIC TELEVISION S NATIONAL CABLE COMING SOON! SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT DAILY JAZZ PROGRAMMING TO BE SUPPLIED BY WORLDJAZZ TO MOSCOW CENTRAL TV BEGINNING DECEMBER 2004" Whoops! The above appears to be a pack of lies from the "WorldJAZZ" website, http://www.worldjazz.com. Moscow Central TV is being informed about this travesty. The website goes on to say, "WorldJAZZ has been named OFFICIAL CO-SPONSOR of the 2004 Jersey Jazz Bass Festival SEPTEMBER 22-25 2004 LIVE BROADCAST PLANNED" But there is no "Jersey Jazz Bass Festival" ! It's a complete fiction! There IS a fishing tournament called the "Jersey Bass Festival". And there's no "PETER THLIVEROSKI". It's a play on the name of Peter Thliveros, a sports fisherman. Lying is Brian's vocation. WorldJAZZ.com is built on the principle of the "Big Lie", first enunciated by Joseph Goebbels. Unfortunately, Brian doesn't know when to stop. The fact of his lying on rec.audio.marketplace results in his constant exposure on Google, which drives away the very suckers he would like to get for WorldJAZZ. We help this process of awareness along with a very active information program. Bluebook Value of Coral Sea Studios = MINUS $270,000. Bluebook Value of WorldJAZZ Scam = Less Than Zero, precise numbers are under INVESTIGATION. The Face Behind the Mask:Scammer Brian L. McCarty, Moscow Central TV, David C.L. Feng, David Ellison, Ying Hong Huang, Lee Hodges, Anthony Ramallo, Melinda Hsu, Melinda Shu 80 Raffles Place, Coral Sea Studios, WorldJazz, Enron, K1 Ventures, Trinity Beach, Cairns, Australia, Boomerang McCarty had an early scheme for Internet radio. He claims to have sold musical performance properties and/or a business plan to Black Entertainment Television for $9.2M. Subsequently, he left Los Angeles. One unsubstantiated rumor is that he left to avoid prosecution for a sex crime, presumably by paying off the victim or family. Once in Australia, he made the acquaintance of the brother of P.M. John Howard, who introduced him to contacts at ABN Amro, an investment banking firm. They created a business plan for some kind of a sound studio, still represented by the website http://www.coralseastudios.com. After approximately a year, ABN withdrew from partnership, but left the studio project still solvent. Some time later, it went bankrupt or nearly so, owing $270,000 to it's employees. At this point, Australia's entitlement law kicked in, paying the employees monies owed them, with the exception of codirectors McCarty and Jeff Wexler. It would appear that McCarty's enterprises failed because he has some kind of mental imbalance, which exhibits signs of both schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The impersonations which he makes of me are a fraction of the numerous identities which he has used in the past, and continues to use, on occasion, in the present. McCarty may actually believe he is the person who he impersonates. Many of the identities are of elaborate construction, taking some six months or more to take shape. McCarty seems to have a magical belief that use of false identities provides a shield. Since his business failure, McCarty has tried to obtain new financing. These methods characteristically rely on false identities and false business fronts. His domain registrations are in the names of nonexistent people, and his websites advertise nonexistent associations and companies, frequently by theft of trademark. For example, my name, Robert Morein, was used as a fictitious endorsement on his website http://www.coraseastudios.com. Since he was caught some three months ago claiming to be a producer for a syndicated jazz music program, his name has not appeared publicly on any of his business enterprises. McCarty is currently attempting to revive his Internet radio scheme, WorldJAZZ, under the name http://www.worldjazz.com. This webpage currently consists completely of false associations and endorsements. There is no "Jersey Jazz Bass Festival", and "Peter Thliveroski" is a modification of "Peter Thliveros", a sports bass fisherman! McCarty has certain bizarre beliefs regarding the pricing of used audio equipment appearing on rec.audio.marketplace. He refers constantly to a book known as the "Orion Bluebook", which reports surveys of audio dealers for prices they paid for used equipment, and prices at which sold. Anyone who advertises on rec.audio.marketplace with prices in excess of the "wholesale average condition" price is subject to attack by McCarty, who does so with the vigor of the Red Brigades. Tactics he has employed against victims are the filing of false crime reports with local police departments alleging that the seller deals in stolen goods and alleged zoning violations. Anyone can become a McCarty victim by disagreeing with him in a public forum. In the past, consequences have been virus attacks, email bomb attacks, defamatory postings, and chronic impersonation. All this is contradictory to McCarty's apparent goal of obtaining finance for his business projects. An intelligent scammer works quietly, while McCarty may be the best known scammer of all time. McCarty is 49 years old, and appears to be ill, requiring intermittent hospital care. He apparently lacks mobility. It is possible that this contributes to his mental imbalance. Among McCarty's aliases, we have: Anthony Ramallo, David Ellison, David C.L. Feng, Ying Hong Huang, Lee Hodges, Melinda Hsu, Melinda Shu, Robert Morein, Robert X Morein, Sylvan Morein, Sylvan X Morein, et al. |
#6
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Nexxon wrote:
NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? |
#7
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Nexxon wrote:
NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? |
#8
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"WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. But we tend to look at it from the perspective of the home audiophile. These brands cater to the youth market. If the specs were accurate, then the current required could be briefly provided by large reservoir caps. I'm impressed that they are a member of the BBB Online; that implies that disputes will probably be amicably resolved. |
#9
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"WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. But we tend to look at it from the perspective of the home audiophile. These brands cater to the youth market. If the specs were accurate, then the current required could be briefly provided by large reservoir caps. I'm impressed that they are a member of the BBB Online; that implies that disputes will probably be amicably resolved. |
#10
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On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 20:47:00 -0400, "Robert Morein"
wrote: "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. No, really... -- Ron But we tend to look at it from the perspective of the home audiophile. These brands cater to the youth market. If the specs were accurate, then the current required could be briefly provided by large reservoir caps. I'm impressed that they are a member of the BBB Online; that implies that disputes will probably be amicably resolved. |
#11
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On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 20:47:00 -0400, "Robert Morein"
wrote: "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. No, really... -- Ron But we tend to look at it from the perspective of the home audiophile. These brands cater to the youth market. If the specs were accurate, then the current required could be briefly provided by large reservoir caps. I'm impressed that they are a member of the BBB Online; that implies that disputes will probably be amicably resolved. |
#12
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"Ron" wrote in message news On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 20:47:00 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. No, really... Have you tried ebay? ;-) John |
#13
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"Ron" wrote in message news On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 20:47:00 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. No, really... Have you tried ebay? ;-) John |
#14
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"Ron" wrote in message news On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 20:47:00 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. No, really... -- Ron You may be right, but there is no physical reason it can't be done. Installers frequently use multiple banks of 1 Farad capacitors to stiffen the car power. At 12V, a 1 Farad capacitor stores 12 Couloumbs of charge. A single capacitor could provide 120 amperes for 1/10 of a second. Ten capacitors could provide 120 amperes for about one second. Of course the voltage goes to zero during this interval, but it gives the idea, and the amplifier spec is for a one ohm load. In a design I'm working on, I'm using little International Rectifoer TO-220 MOSFETS which have an Imax of 40 amperes each. While it's still possible, or likely, that the amp spec is not truthful, look at the situation from this pov: A young adult male has a choice of buying this stuff from Nexxon, or from another source, perhaps eBay, where the seller may sell defective equipment, and/or not honor the warranty. In this case, Nexxon has committed themselves to an established arbitration process with the consequence of adverse publicity for them, should they scoff the result of the mediation. Wouldn't you feel more comfortable referring the young adult male who came to you for advice to these people? It doesn't mean we have to take a ride in the car. I can't stand these rigs when they come down my street. But we tend to look at it from the perspective of the home audiophile. These brands cater to the youth market. If the specs were accurate, then the current required could be briefly provided by large reservoir caps. I'm impressed that they are a member of the BBB Online; that implies that disputes will probably be amicably resolved. |
#15
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"Ron" wrote in message news On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 20:47:00 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. No, really... -- Ron You may be right, but there is no physical reason it can't be done. Installers frequently use multiple banks of 1 Farad capacitors to stiffen the car power. At 12V, a 1 Farad capacitor stores 12 Couloumbs of charge. A single capacitor could provide 120 amperes for 1/10 of a second. Ten capacitors could provide 120 amperes for about one second. Of course the voltage goes to zero during this interval, but it gives the idea, and the amplifier spec is for a one ohm load. In a design I'm working on, I'm using little International Rectifoer TO-220 MOSFETS which have an Imax of 40 amperes each. While it's still possible, or likely, that the amp spec is not truthful, look at the situation from this pov: A young adult male has a choice of buying this stuff from Nexxon, or from another source, perhaps eBay, where the seller may sell defective equipment, and/or not honor the warranty. In this case, Nexxon has committed themselves to an established arbitration process with the consequence of adverse publicity for them, should they scoff the result of the mediation. Wouldn't you feel more comfortable referring the young adult male who came to you for advice to these people? It doesn't mean we have to take a ride in the car. I can't stand these rigs when they come down my street. But we tend to look at it from the perspective of the home audiophile. These brands cater to the youth market. If the specs were accurate, then the current required could be briefly provided by large reservoir caps. I'm impressed that they are a member of the BBB Online; that implies that disputes will probably be amicably resolved. |
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On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 04:06:08 -0400, "Robert Morein"
wrote: "Ron" wrote in message news On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 20:47:00 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. No, really... -- Ron You may be right, but there is no physical reason it can't be done. Installers frequently use multiple banks of 1 Farad capacitors to stiffen the car power. At 12V, a 1 Farad capacitor stores 12 Couloumbs of charge. A single capacitor could provide 120 amperes for 1/10 of a second. Ten capacitors could provide 120 amperes for about one second. Of course the voltage goes to zero during this interval, but it gives the idea, and the amplifier spec is for a one ohm load. Right. So, to provide 360A you would need 3.6Farad and to maintain reasonable voltage while doing so you'd need at least 10Farads. The Rockford Fosgate CPC10 1 Farad Capacitor costs about $100 each -- about $1000 for the bank to feed the $179 amp... And, BTW, do you really believe the $179 amp output stage is up to the task of driving 360A for 100mSec? In a design I'm working on, I'm using little International Rectifoer TO-220 MOSFETS which have an Imax of 40 amperes each. And how much are 18 of these FETs, along with the required heatsinks and mandatory protection circuit? Can you build an amp around them for $90 (so it can sell for $179)? While it's still possible, or likely, that the amp spec is not truthful, look at the situation from this pov: A young adult male has a choice of buying this stuff from Nexxon, or from another source, perhaps eBay, where the seller may sell defective equipment, and/or not honor the warranty. In this case, Nexxon has committed themselves to an established arbitration process with the consequence of adverse publicity for them, should they scoff the result of the mediation. Wouldn't you feel more comfortable referring the young adult male who came to you for advice to these people? To be honest, I would tell the young adult that the spec is, in all likelyhood (like, 99.999% likely) false. That he doesn't need 3000W (or even 300W, for that matter) and that he should go to an honest provider. It doesn't mean we have to take a ride in the car. I can't stand these rigs when they come down my street. You got me there :-). -- Ron But we tend to look at it from the perspective of the home audiophile. These brands cater to the youth market. If the specs were accurate, then the current required could be briefly provided by large reservoir caps. I'm impressed that they are a member of the BBB Online; that implies that disputes will probably be amicably resolved. |
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On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 04:06:08 -0400, "Robert Morein"
wrote: "Ron" wrote in message news On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 20:47:00 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. No, really... -- Ron You may be right, but there is no physical reason it can't be done. Installers frequently use multiple banks of 1 Farad capacitors to stiffen the car power. At 12V, a 1 Farad capacitor stores 12 Couloumbs of charge. A single capacitor could provide 120 amperes for 1/10 of a second. Ten capacitors could provide 120 amperes for about one second. Of course the voltage goes to zero during this interval, but it gives the idea, and the amplifier spec is for a one ohm load. Right. So, to provide 360A you would need 3.6Farad and to maintain reasonable voltage while doing so you'd need at least 10Farads. The Rockford Fosgate CPC10 1 Farad Capacitor costs about $100 each -- about $1000 for the bank to feed the $179 amp... And, BTW, do you really believe the $179 amp output stage is up to the task of driving 360A for 100mSec? In a design I'm working on, I'm using little International Rectifoer TO-220 MOSFETS which have an Imax of 40 amperes each. And how much are 18 of these FETs, along with the required heatsinks and mandatory protection circuit? Can you build an amp around them for $90 (so it can sell for $179)? While it's still possible, or likely, that the amp spec is not truthful, look at the situation from this pov: A young adult male has a choice of buying this stuff from Nexxon, or from another source, perhaps eBay, where the seller may sell defective equipment, and/or not honor the warranty. In this case, Nexxon has committed themselves to an established arbitration process with the consequence of adverse publicity for them, should they scoff the result of the mediation. Wouldn't you feel more comfortable referring the young adult male who came to you for advice to these people? To be honest, I would tell the young adult that the spec is, in all likelyhood (like, 99.999% likely) false. That he doesn't need 3000W (or even 300W, for that matter) and that he should go to an honest provider. It doesn't mean we have to take a ride in the car. I can't stand these rigs when they come down my street. You got me there :-). -- Ron But we tend to look at it from the perspective of the home audiophile. These brands cater to the youth market. If the specs were accurate, then the current required could be briefly provided by large reservoir caps. I'm impressed that they are a member of the BBB Online; that implies that disputes will probably be amicably resolved. |
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On 10/15/03 10:10 AM, in article Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06,
"WindsorFox[SS]" wrote: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? RIPOFF ALERT STANDS! |
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On 10/15/03 10:10 AM, in article Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06,
"WindsorFox[SS]" wrote: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? RIPOFF ALERT STANDS! |
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#22
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"OFFICIAL BLUEBOOK QUOTATION SYSTEM" wrote in message ws.com... On 10/15/03 12:15 PM, in article , "Ron" wrote: what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. RIPOFF ALERT STANDS, note "dealer" isn't listed as dealer has no business license and is operating from a condo. Like you, Brian? You operate from a condo, and you use fake people and fake corporations. From BBS records: Complaints Concerned Sales Issues: 3 Outcome of all complaints - Resolved: 3 Delivery Issues: 1 Outcome of the complaint - Resolved: 1 The above post is in fact, a forgery by Brian L. McCarty. I've just detonated a huge load of dynamite under his infamous "WorldJAZZ" scam -- see my website, http://www.worldjazz.tv, and McCarty's website, http://www.worldjazz.com, to see how a scammer works and lives. Brian, any investors will doubtless call me first, and I'll give them the straight poop. Your scam is DOOOOMMMMMEDDDDD. BWAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHHAHAHHAHHAHA! The above is, of course, a forgery by Brian L. McCarty, r.a.m.'s great pestilence and disease. Brian is secretary of the Far North Queensland Film and Television Association (FNQFTA) in Cairns, Queensland, Australia. Brian L. McCarty resides in a condo at 65 Vasey Esplanade, Trinty Beach, Cairns, Queensland, Australia. It is with great pleasure that I announce that Brian L. McCarty's "Coral Seas" studio project, an obvious scam, is now officially dead. The remains may be viewed at http://www.coralseastudios.com . Brian, we are celebrating your 49th birthday with news that the Coral Seas project has gone belly-up. We watch with great anticipation for the collapse of your WorldJAZZ Scam. It's obvious that WorldJAZZ (http://www.worldjazz.com) is a nonperforming non-asset, simply an invitation for the gullible to lose money. Coral Sea Studios, on the other hand, which McCarty (author of the above post) also maintains, has already sunk beneath the waves. The project is officially dead. Brian, why do you keep around a zombie website? Surely no business partners for Brian L. McCarty! "WorldJAZZ JAZZ MUSIC TELEVISION S NATIONAL CABLE COMING SOON! SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT DAILY JAZZ PROGRAMMING TO BE SUPPLIED BY WORLDJAZZ TO MOSCOW CENTRAL TV BEGINNING DECEMBER 2004" Whoops! The above appears to be a pack of lies from the "WorldJAZZ" website, http://www.worldjazz.com. Moscow Central TV is being informed about this travesty. The website goes on to say, "WorldJAZZ has been named OFFICIAL CO-SPONSOR of the 2004 Jersey Jazz Bass Festival SEPTEMBER 22-25 2004 LIVE BROADCAST PLANNED" But there is no "Jersey Jazz Bass Festival" ! It's a complete fiction! There IS a fishing tournament called the "Jersey Bass Festival". And there's no "PETER THLIVEROSKI". It's a play on the name of Peter Thliveros, a sports fisherman. Lying is Brian's vocation. WorldJAZZ.com is built on the principle of the "Big Lie", first enunciated by Joseph Goebbels. Unfortunately, Brian doesn't know when to stop. The fact of his lying on rec.audio.marketplace results in his constant exposure on Google, which drives away the very suckers he would like to get for WorldJAZZ. We help this process of awareness along with a very active information program. Bluebook Value of Coral Sea Studios = MINUS $270,000. Bluebook Value of WorldJAZZ Scam = Less Than Zero, precise numbers are under INVESTIGATION. The Face Behind the Mask:Scammer Brian L. McCarty, Moscow Central TV, David C.L. Feng, David Ellison, Ying Hong Huang, Lee Hodges, Anthony Ramallo, Melinda Hsu, Melinda Shu 80 Raffles Place, Coral Sea Studios, WorldJazz, Enron, K1 Ventures, Trinity Beach, Cairns, Australia, Boomerang McCarty had an early scheme for Internet radio. He claims to have sold musical performance properties and/or a business plan to Black Entertainment Television for $9.2M. Subsequently, he left Los Angeles. One unsubstantiated rumor is that he left to avoid prosecution for a sex crime, presumably by paying off the victim or family. Once in Australia, he made the acquaintance of the brother of P.M. John Howard, who introduced him to contacts at ABN Amro, an investment banking firm. They created a business plan for some kind of a sound studio, still represented by the website http://www.coralseastudios.com. After approximately a year, ABN withdrew from partnership, but left the studio project still solvent. Some time later, it went bankrupt or nearly so, owing $270,000 to it's employees. At this point, Australia's entitlement law kicked in, paying the employees monies owed them, with the exception of codirectors McCarty and Jeff Wexler. It would appear that McCarty's enterprises failed because he has some kind of mental imbalance, which exhibits signs of both schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The impersonations which he makes of me are a fraction of the numerous identities which he has used in the past, and continues to use, on occasion, in the present. McCarty may actually believe he is the person who he impersonates. Many of the identities are of elaborate construction, taking some six months or more to take shape. McCarty seems to have a magical belief that use of false identities provides a shield. Since his business failure, McCarty has tried to obtain new financing. These methods characteristically rely on false identities and false business fronts. His domain registrations are in the names of nonexistent people, and his websites advertise nonexistent associations and companies, frequently by theft of trademark. For example, my name, Robert Morein, was used as a fictitious endorsement on his website http://www.coraseastudios.com. Since he was caught some three months ago claiming to be a producer for a syndicated jazz music program, his name has not appeared publicly on any of his business enterprises. McCarty is currently attempting to revive his Internet radio scheme, WorldJAZZ, under the name http://www.worldjazz.com. This webpage currently consists completely of false associations and endorsements. There is no "Jersey Jazz Bass Festival", and "Peter Thliveroski" is a modification of "Peter Thliveros", a sports bass fisherman! McCarty has certain bizarre beliefs regarding the pricing of used audio equipment appearing on rec.audio.marketplace. He refers constantly to a book known as the "Orion Bluebook", which reports surveys of audio dealers for prices they paid for used equipment, and prices at which sold. Anyone who advertises on rec.audio.marketplace with prices in excess of the "wholesale average condition" price is subject to attack by McCarty, who does so with the vigor of the Red Brigades. Tactics he has employed against victims are the filing of false crime reports with local police departments alleging that the seller deals in stolen goods and alleged zoning violations. Anyone can become a McCarty victim by disagreeing with him in a public forum. In the past, consequences have been virus attacks, email bomb attacks, defamatory postings, and chronic impersonation. All this is contradictory to McCarty's apparent goal of obtaining finance for his business projects. An intelligent scammer works quietly, while McCarty may be the best known scammer of all time. McCarty is 49 years old, and appears to be ill, requiring intermittent hospital care. He apparently lacks mobility. It is possible that this contributes to his mental imbalance. Among McCarty's aliases, we have: Anthony Ramallo, David Ellison, David C.L. Feng, Ying Hong Huang, Lee Hodges, Melinda Hsu, Melinda Shu, Robert Morein, Robert X Morein, Sylvan Morein, Sylvan X Morein, et al. |
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"OFFICIAL BLUEBOOK QUOTATION SYSTEM" wrote in message ws.com... On 10/15/03 12:15 PM, in article , "Ron" wrote: what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. RIPOFF ALERT STANDS, note "dealer" isn't listed as dealer has no business license and is operating from a condo. Like you, Brian? You operate from a condo, and you use fake people and fake corporations. From BBS records: Complaints Concerned Sales Issues: 3 Outcome of all complaints - Resolved: 3 Delivery Issues: 1 Outcome of the complaint - Resolved: 1 The above post is in fact, a forgery by Brian L. McCarty. I've just detonated a huge load of dynamite under his infamous "WorldJAZZ" scam -- see my website, http://www.worldjazz.tv, and McCarty's website, http://www.worldjazz.com, to see how a scammer works and lives. Brian, any investors will doubtless call me first, and I'll give them the straight poop. Your scam is DOOOOMMMMMEDDDDD. BWAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHHAHAHHAHHAHA! The above is, of course, a forgery by Brian L. McCarty, r.a.m.'s great pestilence and disease. Brian is secretary of the Far North Queensland Film and Television Association (FNQFTA) in Cairns, Queensland, Australia. Brian L. McCarty resides in a condo at 65 Vasey Esplanade, Trinty Beach, Cairns, Queensland, Australia. It is with great pleasure that I announce that Brian L. McCarty's "Coral Seas" studio project, an obvious scam, is now officially dead. The remains may be viewed at http://www.coralseastudios.com . Brian, we are celebrating your 49th birthday with news that the Coral Seas project has gone belly-up. We watch with great anticipation for the collapse of your WorldJAZZ Scam. It's obvious that WorldJAZZ (http://www.worldjazz.com) is a nonperforming non-asset, simply an invitation for the gullible to lose money. Coral Sea Studios, on the other hand, which McCarty (author of the above post) also maintains, has already sunk beneath the waves. The project is officially dead. Brian, why do you keep around a zombie website? Surely no business partners for Brian L. McCarty! "WorldJAZZ JAZZ MUSIC TELEVISION S NATIONAL CABLE COMING SOON! SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT DAILY JAZZ PROGRAMMING TO BE SUPPLIED BY WORLDJAZZ TO MOSCOW CENTRAL TV BEGINNING DECEMBER 2004" Whoops! The above appears to be a pack of lies from the "WorldJAZZ" website, http://www.worldjazz.com. Moscow Central TV is being informed about this travesty. The website goes on to say, "WorldJAZZ has been named OFFICIAL CO-SPONSOR of the 2004 Jersey Jazz Bass Festival SEPTEMBER 22-25 2004 LIVE BROADCAST PLANNED" But there is no "Jersey Jazz Bass Festival" ! It's a complete fiction! There IS a fishing tournament called the "Jersey Bass Festival". And there's no "PETER THLIVEROSKI". It's a play on the name of Peter Thliveros, a sports fisherman. Lying is Brian's vocation. WorldJAZZ.com is built on the principle of the "Big Lie", first enunciated by Joseph Goebbels. Unfortunately, Brian doesn't know when to stop. The fact of his lying on rec.audio.marketplace results in his constant exposure on Google, which drives away the very suckers he would like to get for WorldJAZZ. We help this process of awareness along with a very active information program. Bluebook Value of Coral Sea Studios = MINUS $270,000. Bluebook Value of WorldJAZZ Scam = Less Than Zero, precise numbers are under INVESTIGATION. The Face Behind the Mask:Scammer Brian L. McCarty, Moscow Central TV, David C.L. Feng, David Ellison, Ying Hong Huang, Lee Hodges, Anthony Ramallo, Melinda Hsu, Melinda Shu 80 Raffles Place, Coral Sea Studios, WorldJazz, Enron, K1 Ventures, Trinity Beach, Cairns, Australia, Boomerang McCarty had an early scheme for Internet radio. He claims to have sold musical performance properties and/or a business plan to Black Entertainment Television for $9.2M. Subsequently, he left Los Angeles. One unsubstantiated rumor is that he left to avoid prosecution for a sex crime, presumably by paying off the victim or family. Once in Australia, he made the acquaintance of the brother of P.M. John Howard, who introduced him to contacts at ABN Amro, an investment banking firm. They created a business plan for some kind of a sound studio, still represented by the website http://www.coralseastudios.com. After approximately a year, ABN withdrew from partnership, but left the studio project still solvent. Some time later, it went bankrupt or nearly so, owing $270,000 to it's employees. At this point, Australia's entitlement law kicked in, paying the employees monies owed them, with the exception of codirectors McCarty and Jeff Wexler. It would appear that McCarty's enterprises failed because he has some kind of mental imbalance, which exhibits signs of both schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The impersonations which he makes of me are a fraction of the numerous identities which he has used in the past, and continues to use, on occasion, in the present. McCarty may actually believe he is the person who he impersonates. Many of the identities are of elaborate construction, taking some six months or more to take shape. McCarty seems to have a magical belief that use of false identities provides a shield. Since his business failure, McCarty has tried to obtain new financing. These methods characteristically rely on false identities and false business fronts. His domain registrations are in the names of nonexistent people, and his websites advertise nonexistent associations and companies, frequently by theft of trademark. For example, my name, Robert Morein, was used as a fictitious endorsement on his website http://www.coraseastudios.com. Since he was caught some three months ago claiming to be a producer for a syndicated jazz music program, his name has not appeared publicly on any of his business enterprises. McCarty is currently attempting to revive his Internet radio scheme, WorldJAZZ, under the name http://www.worldjazz.com. This webpage currently consists completely of false associations and endorsements. There is no "Jersey Jazz Bass Festival", and "Peter Thliveroski" is a modification of "Peter Thliveros", a sports bass fisherman! McCarty has certain bizarre beliefs regarding the pricing of used audio equipment appearing on rec.audio.marketplace. He refers constantly to a book known as the "Orion Bluebook", which reports surveys of audio dealers for prices they paid for used equipment, and prices at which sold. Anyone who advertises on rec.audio.marketplace with prices in excess of the "wholesale average condition" price is subject to attack by McCarty, who does so with the vigor of the Red Brigades. Tactics he has employed against victims are the filing of false crime reports with local police departments alleging that the seller deals in stolen goods and alleged zoning violations. Anyone can become a McCarty victim by disagreeing with him in a public forum. In the past, consequences have been virus attacks, email bomb attacks, defamatory postings, and chronic impersonation. All this is contradictory to McCarty's apparent goal of obtaining finance for his business projects. An intelligent scammer works quietly, while McCarty may be the best known scammer of all time. McCarty is 49 years old, and appears to be ill, requiring intermittent hospital care. He apparently lacks mobility. It is possible that this contributes to his mental imbalance. Among McCarty's aliases, we have: Anthony Ramallo, David Ellison, David C.L. Feng, Ying Hong Huang, Lee Hodges, Melinda Hsu, Melinda Shu, Robert Morein, Robert X Morein, Sylvan Morein, Sylvan X Morein, et al. |
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"OFFICIAL BLUEBOOK QUOTATION SYSTEM" wrote in message ws.com... On 10/15/03 10:10 AM, in article Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06, "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? RIPOFF ALERT STANDS! RIPOFF ALERT RECINDED! Complaints Concerned Sales Issues: 3 Outcome of all complaints - Resolved: 3 Delivery Issues: 1 Outcome of the complaint - Resolved: 1 The above post is in fact, a forgery by Brian L. McCarty. I've just detonated a huge load of dynamite under his infamous "WorldJAZZ" scam -- see my website, http://www.worldjazz.tv, and McCarty's website, http://www.worldjazz.com, to see how a scammer works and lives. Brian, any investors will doubtless call me first, and I'll give them the straight poop. Your scam is DOOOOMMMMMEDDDDD. BWAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHHAHAHHAHHAHA! The above is, of course, a forgery by Brian L. McCarty, r.a.m.'s great pestilence and disease. Brian is secretary of the Far North Queensland Film and Television Association (FNQFTA) in Cairns, Queensland, Australia. Brian L. McCarty resides in a condo at 65 Vasey Esplanade, Trinty Beach, Cairns, Queensland, Australia. It is with great pleasure that I announce that Brian L. McCarty's "Coral Seas" studio project, an obvious scam, is now officially dead. The remains may be viewed at http://www.coralseastudios.com . Brian, we are celebrating your 49th birthday with news that the Coral Seas project has gone belly-up. We watch with great anticipation for the collapse of your WorldJAZZ Scam. It's obvious that WorldJAZZ (http://www.worldjazz.com) is a nonperforming non-asset, simply an invitation for the gullible to lose money. Coral Sea Studios, on the other hand, which McCarty (author of the above post) also maintains, has already sunk beneath the waves. The project is officially dead. Brian, why do you keep around a zombie website? Surely no business partners for Brian L. McCarty! "WorldJAZZ JAZZ MUSIC TELEVISION S NATIONAL CABLE COMING SOON! SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT DAILY JAZZ PROGRAMMING TO BE SUPPLIED BY WORLDJAZZ TO MOSCOW CENTRAL TV BEGINNING DECEMBER 2004" Whoops! The above appears to be a pack of lies from the "WorldJAZZ" website, http://www.worldjazz.com. Moscow Central TV is being informed about this travesty. The website goes on to say, "WorldJAZZ has been named OFFICIAL CO-SPONSOR of the 2004 Jersey Jazz Bass Festival SEPTEMBER 22-25 2004 LIVE BROADCAST PLANNED" But there is no "Jersey Jazz Bass Festival" ! It's a complete fiction! There IS a fishing tournament called the "Jersey Bass Festival". And there's no "PETER THLIVEROSKI". It's a play on the name of Peter Thliveros, a sports fisherman. Lying is Brian's vocation. WorldJAZZ.com is built on the principle of the "Big Lie", first enunciated by Joseph Goebbels. Unfortunately, Brian doesn't know when to stop. The fact of his lying on rec.audio.marketplace results in his constant exposure on Google, which drives away the very suckers he would like to get for WorldJAZZ. We help this process of awareness along with a very active information program. Bluebook Value of Coral Sea Studios = MINUS $270,000. Bluebook Value of WorldJAZZ Scam = Less Than Zero, precise numbers are under INVESTIGATION. The Face Behind the Mask:Scammer Brian L. McCarty, Moscow Central TV, David C.L. Feng, David Ellison, Ying Hong Huang, Lee Hodges, Anthony Ramallo, Melinda Hsu, Melinda Shu 80 Raffles Place, Coral Sea Studios, WorldJazz, Enron, K1 Ventures, Trinity Beach, Cairns, Australia, Boomerang McCarty had an early scheme for Internet radio. He claims to have sold musical performance properties and/or a business plan to Black Entertainment Television for $9.2M. Subsequently, he left Los Angeles. One unsubstantiated rumor is that he left to avoid prosecution for a sex crime, presumably by paying off the victim or family. Once in Australia, he made the acquaintance of the brother of P.M. John Howard, who introduced him to contacts at ABN Amro, an investment banking firm. They created a business plan for some kind of a sound studio, still represented by the website http://www.coralseastudios.com. After approximately a year, ABN withdrew from partnership, but left the studio project still solvent. Some time later, it went bankrupt or nearly so, owing $270,000 to it's employees. At this point, Australia's entitlement law kicked in, paying the employees monies owed them, with the exception of codirectors McCarty and Jeff Wexler. It would appear that McCarty's enterprises failed because he has some kind of mental imbalance, which exhibits signs of both schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The impersonations which he makes of me are a fraction of the numerous identities which he has used in the past, and continues to use, on occasion, in the present. McCarty may actually believe he is the person who he impersonates. Many of the identities are of elaborate construction, taking some six months or more to take shape. McCarty seems to have a magical belief that use of false identities provides a shield. Since his business failure, McCarty has tried to obtain new financing. These methods characteristically rely on false identities and false business fronts. His domain registrations are in the names of nonexistent people, and his websites advertise nonexistent associations and companies, frequently by theft of trademark. For example, my name, Robert Morein, was used as a fictitious endorsement on his website http://www.coraseastudios.com. Since he was caught some three months ago claiming to be a producer for a syndicated jazz music program, his name has not appeared publicly on any of his business enterprises. McCarty is currently attempting to revive his Internet radio scheme, WorldJAZZ, under the name http://www.worldjazz.com. This webpage currently consists completely of false associations and endorsements. There is no "Jersey Jazz Bass Festival", and "Peter Thliveroski" is a modification of "Peter Thliveros", a sports bass fisherman! McCarty has certain bizarre beliefs regarding the pricing of used audio equipment appearing on rec.audio.marketplace. He refers constantly to a book known as the "Orion Bluebook", which reports surveys of audio dealers for prices they paid for used equipment, and prices at which sold. Anyone who advertises on rec.audio.marketplace with prices in excess of the "wholesale average condition" price is subject to attack by McCarty, who does so with the vigor of the Red Brigades. Tactics he has employed against victims are the filing of false crime reports with local police departments alleging that the seller deals in stolen goods and alleged zoning violations. Anyone can become a McCarty victim by disagreeing with him in a public forum. In the past, consequences have been virus attacks, email bomb attacks, defamatory postings, and chronic impersonation. All this is contradictory to McCarty's apparent goal of obtaining finance for his business projects. An intelligent scammer works quietly, while McCarty may be the best known scammer of all time. McCarty is 49 years old, and appears to be ill, requiring intermittent hospital care. He apparently lacks mobility. It is possible that this contributes to his mental imbalance. Among McCarty's aliases, we have: Anthony Ramallo, David Ellison, David C.L. Feng, Ying Hong Huang, Lee Hodges, Melinda Hsu, Melinda Shu, Robert Morein, Robert X Morein, Sylvan Morein, Sylvan X Morein, et al. |
#25
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"OFFICIAL BLUEBOOK QUOTATION SYSTEM" wrote in message ws.com... On 10/15/03 10:10 AM, in article Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06, "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? RIPOFF ALERT STANDS! RIPOFF ALERT RECINDED! Complaints Concerned Sales Issues: 3 Outcome of all complaints - Resolved: 3 Delivery Issues: 1 Outcome of the complaint - Resolved: 1 The above post is in fact, a forgery by Brian L. McCarty. I've just detonated a huge load of dynamite under his infamous "WorldJAZZ" scam -- see my website, http://www.worldjazz.tv, and McCarty's website, http://www.worldjazz.com, to see how a scammer works and lives. Brian, any investors will doubtless call me first, and I'll give them the straight poop. Your scam is DOOOOMMMMMEDDDDD. BWAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHHAHAHHAHHAHA! The above is, of course, a forgery by Brian L. McCarty, r.a.m.'s great pestilence and disease. Brian is secretary of the Far North Queensland Film and Television Association (FNQFTA) in Cairns, Queensland, Australia. Brian L. McCarty resides in a condo at 65 Vasey Esplanade, Trinty Beach, Cairns, Queensland, Australia. It is with great pleasure that I announce that Brian L. McCarty's "Coral Seas" studio project, an obvious scam, is now officially dead. The remains may be viewed at http://www.coralseastudios.com . Brian, we are celebrating your 49th birthday with news that the Coral Seas project has gone belly-up. We watch with great anticipation for the collapse of your WorldJAZZ Scam. It's obvious that WorldJAZZ (http://www.worldjazz.com) is a nonperforming non-asset, simply an invitation for the gullible to lose money. Coral Sea Studios, on the other hand, which McCarty (author of the above post) also maintains, has already sunk beneath the waves. The project is officially dead. Brian, why do you keep around a zombie website? Surely no business partners for Brian L. McCarty! "WorldJAZZ JAZZ MUSIC TELEVISION S NATIONAL CABLE COMING SOON! SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT DAILY JAZZ PROGRAMMING TO BE SUPPLIED BY WORLDJAZZ TO MOSCOW CENTRAL TV BEGINNING DECEMBER 2004" Whoops! The above appears to be a pack of lies from the "WorldJAZZ" website, http://www.worldjazz.com. Moscow Central TV is being informed about this travesty. The website goes on to say, "WorldJAZZ has been named OFFICIAL CO-SPONSOR of the 2004 Jersey Jazz Bass Festival SEPTEMBER 22-25 2004 LIVE BROADCAST PLANNED" But there is no "Jersey Jazz Bass Festival" ! It's a complete fiction! There IS a fishing tournament called the "Jersey Bass Festival". And there's no "PETER THLIVEROSKI". It's a play on the name of Peter Thliveros, a sports fisherman. Lying is Brian's vocation. WorldJAZZ.com is built on the principle of the "Big Lie", first enunciated by Joseph Goebbels. Unfortunately, Brian doesn't know when to stop. The fact of his lying on rec.audio.marketplace results in his constant exposure on Google, which drives away the very suckers he would like to get for WorldJAZZ. We help this process of awareness along with a very active information program. Bluebook Value of Coral Sea Studios = MINUS $270,000. Bluebook Value of WorldJAZZ Scam = Less Than Zero, precise numbers are under INVESTIGATION. The Face Behind the Mask:Scammer Brian L. McCarty, Moscow Central TV, David C.L. Feng, David Ellison, Ying Hong Huang, Lee Hodges, Anthony Ramallo, Melinda Hsu, Melinda Shu 80 Raffles Place, Coral Sea Studios, WorldJazz, Enron, K1 Ventures, Trinity Beach, Cairns, Australia, Boomerang McCarty had an early scheme for Internet radio. He claims to have sold musical performance properties and/or a business plan to Black Entertainment Television for $9.2M. Subsequently, he left Los Angeles. One unsubstantiated rumor is that he left to avoid prosecution for a sex crime, presumably by paying off the victim or family. Once in Australia, he made the acquaintance of the brother of P.M. John Howard, who introduced him to contacts at ABN Amro, an investment banking firm. They created a business plan for some kind of a sound studio, still represented by the website http://www.coralseastudios.com. After approximately a year, ABN withdrew from partnership, but left the studio project still solvent. Some time later, it went bankrupt or nearly so, owing $270,000 to it's employees. At this point, Australia's entitlement law kicked in, paying the employees monies owed them, with the exception of codirectors McCarty and Jeff Wexler. It would appear that McCarty's enterprises failed because he has some kind of mental imbalance, which exhibits signs of both schizophrenia and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The impersonations which he makes of me are a fraction of the numerous identities which he has used in the past, and continues to use, on occasion, in the present. McCarty may actually believe he is the person who he impersonates. Many of the identities are of elaborate construction, taking some six months or more to take shape. McCarty seems to have a magical belief that use of false identities provides a shield. Since his business failure, McCarty has tried to obtain new financing. These methods characteristically rely on false identities and false business fronts. His domain registrations are in the names of nonexistent people, and his websites advertise nonexistent associations and companies, frequently by theft of trademark. For example, my name, Robert Morein, was used as a fictitious endorsement on his website http://www.coraseastudios.com. Since he was caught some three months ago claiming to be a producer for a syndicated jazz music program, his name has not appeared publicly on any of his business enterprises. McCarty is currently attempting to revive his Internet radio scheme, WorldJAZZ, under the name http://www.worldjazz.com. This webpage currently consists completely of false associations and endorsements. There is no "Jersey Jazz Bass Festival", and "Peter Thliveroski" is a modification of "Peter Thliveros", a sports bass fisherman! McCarty has certain bizarre beliefs regarding the pricing of used audio equipment appearing on rec.audio.marketplace. He refers constantly to a book known as the "Orion Bluebook", which reports surveys of audio dealers for prices they paid for used equipment, and prices at which sold. Anyone who advertises on rec.audio.marketplace with prices in excess of the "wholesale average condition" price is subject to attack by McCarty, who does so with the vigor of the Red Brigades. Tactics he has employed against victims are the filing of false crime reports with local police departments alleging that the seller deals in stolen goods and alleged zoning violations. Anyone can become a McCarty victim by disagreeing with him in a public forum. In the past, consequences have been virus attacks, email bomb attacks, defamatory postings, and chronic impersonation. All this is contradictory to McCarty's apparent goal of obtaining finance for his business projects. An intelligent scammer works quietly, while McCarty may be the best known scammer of all time. McCarty is 49 years old, and appears to be ill, requiring intermittent hospital care. He apparently lacks mobility. It is possible that this contributes to his mental imbalance. Among McCarty's aliases, we have: Anthony Ramallo, David Ellison, David C.L. Feng, Ying Hong Huang, Lee Hodges, Melinda Hsu, Melinda Shu, Robert Morein, Robert X Morein, Sylvan Morein, Sylvan X Morein, et al. |
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"Ron" wrote in message ... On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 04:06:08 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "Ron" wrote in message news On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 20:47:00 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. No, really... -- Ron You may be right, but there is no physical reason it can't be done. Installers frequently use multiple banks of 1 Farad capacitors to stiffen the car power. At 12V, a 1 Farad capacitor stores 12 Couloumbs of charge. A single capacitor could provide 120 amperes for 1/10 of a second. Ten capacitors could provide 120 amperes for about one second. Of course the voltage goes to zero during this interval, but it gives the idea, and the amplifier spec is for a one ohm load. Right. So, to provide 360A you would need 3.6Farad and to maintain reasonable voltage while doing so you'd need at least 10Farads. The Rockford Fosgate CPC10 1 Farad Capacitor costs about $100 each -- about $1000 for the bank to feed the $179 amp... True. And, BTW, do you really believe the $179 amp output stage is up to the task of driving 360A for 100mSec? In a design I'm working on, I'm using little International Rectifoer TO-220 MOSFETS which have an Imax of 40 amperes each. And how much are 18 of these FETs, along with the required heatsinks and mandatory protection circuit? Can you build an amp around them for $90 (so it can sell for $179)? MOSFETS don't require thermal protection, other than a thermal breaker. I paid about $4.00 each from Digikey, so I suspect the quantity price is around $0.50 each. While it's still possible, or likely, that the amp spec is not truthful, look at the situation from this pov: A young adult male has a choice of buying this stuff from Nexxon, or from another source, perhaps eBay, where the seller may sell defective equipment, and/or not honor the warranty. In this case, Nexxon has committed themselves to an established arbitration process with the consequence of adverse publicity for them, should they scoff the result of the mediation. Wouldn't you feel more comfortable referring the young adult male who came to you for advice to these people? To be honest, I would tell the young adult that the spec is, in all likelyhood (like, 99.999% likely) false. That he doesn't need 3000W (or even 300W, for that matter) and that he should go to an honest provider. It doesn't mean we have to take a ride in the car. I can't stand these rigs when they come down my street. You got me there :-). -- Ron He probably wouldn't hear a word you say, with his level of hearing damage and comprehension. |
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"Ron" wrote in message ... On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 04:06:08 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "Ron" wrote in message news On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 20:47:00 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. No, really... -- Ron You may be right, but there is no physical reason it can't be done. Installers frequently use multiple banks of 1 Farad capacitors to stiffen the car power. At 12V, a 1 Farad capacitor stores 12 Couloumbs of charge. A single capacitor could provide 120 amperes for 1/10 of a second. Ten capacitors could provide 120 amperes for about one second. Of course the voltage goes to zero during this interval, but it gives the idea, and the amplifier spec is for a one ohm load. Right. So, to provide 360A you would need 3.6Farad and to maintain reasonable voltage while doing so you'd need at least 10Farads. The Rockford Fosgate CPC10 1 Farad Capacitor costs about $100 each -- about $1000 for the bank to feed the $179 amp... True. And, BTW, do you really believe the $179 amp output stage is up to the task of driving 360A for 100mSec? In a design I'm working on, I'm using little International Rectifoer TO-220 MOSFETS which have an Imax of 40 amperes each. And how much are 18 of these FETs, along with the required heatsinks and mandatory protection circuit? Can you build an amp around them for $90 (so it can sell for $179)? MOSFETS don't require thermal protection, other than a thermal breaker. I paid about $4.00 each from Digikey, so I suspect the quantity price is around $0.50 each. While it's still possible, or likely, that the amp spec is not truthful, look at the situation from this pov: A young adult male has a choice of buying this stuff from Nexxon, or from another source, perhaps eBay, where the seller may sell defective equipment, and/or not honor the warranty. In this case, Nexxon has committed themselves to an established arbitration process with the consequence of adverse publicity for them, should they scoff the result of the mediation. Wouldn't you feel more comfortable referring the young adult male who came to you for advice to these people? To be honest, I would tell the young adult that the spec is, in all likelyhood (like, 99.999% likely) false. That he doesn't need 3000W (or even 300W, for that matter) and that he should go to an honest provider. It doesn't mean we have to take a ride in the car. I can't stand these rigs when they come down my street. You got me there :-). -- Ron He probably wouldn't hear a word you say, with his level of hearing damage and comprehension. |
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OFFICIAL BLUEBOOK QUOTATION SYSTEM wrote:
On 10/15/03 12:15 PM, in article , "Ron" wrote: what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. RIPOFF ALERT STANDS, note "dealer" isn't listed as dealer has no business license and is operating from a condo. You're a moron. I can sell anything I want on an Internet site under a unique name with no need for a business license. |
#29
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OFFICIAL BLUEBOOK QUOTATION SYSTEM wrote:
On 10/15/03 12:15 PM, in article , "Ron" wrote: what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. RIPOFF ALERT STANDS, note "dealer" isn't listed as dealer has no business license and is operating from a condo. You're a moron. I can sell anything I want on an Internet site under a unique name with no need for a business license. |
#30
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"WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:d%mjb.77307$AH4.60483@lakeread06... OFFICIAL BLUEBOOK QUOTATION SYSTEM wrote: On 10/15/03 12:15 PM, in article , "Ron" wrote: what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. RIPOFF ALERT STANDS, note "dealer" isn't listed as dealer has no business license and is operating from a condo. You're a moron. I can sell anything I want on an Internet site under a unique name with no need for a business license. I concur; my opinion is expressed graphically at http://www.worldjazz.tv |
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"WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:d%mjb.77307$AH4.60483@lakeread06... OFFICIAL BLUEBOOK QUOTATION SYSTEM wrote: On 10/15/03 12:15 PM, in article , "Ron" wrote: what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. RIPOFF ALERT STANDS, note "dealer" isn't listed as dealer has no business license and is operating from a condo. You're a moron. I can sell anything I want on an Internet site under a unique name with no need for a business license. I concur; my opinion is expressed graphically at http://www.worldjazz.tv |
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On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 15:02:01 -0400, "Robert Morein"
wrote: "Ron" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 04:06:08 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "Ron" wrote in message news On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 20:47:00 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. No, really... -- Ron You may be right, but there is no physical reason it can't be done. Installers frequently use multiple banks of 1 Farad capacitors to stiffen the car power. At 12V, a 1 Farad capacitor stores 12 Couloumbs of charge. A single capacitor could provide 120 amperes for 1/10 of a second. Ten capacitors could provide 120 amperes for about one second. Of course the voltage goes to zero during this interval, but it gives the idea, and the amplifier spec is for a one ohm load. Right. So, to provide 360A you would need 3.6Farad and to maintain reasonable voltage while doing so you'd need at least 10Farads. The Rockford Fosgate CPC10 1 Farad Capacitor costs about $100 each -- about $1000 for the bank to feed the $179 amp... True. And, BTW, do you really believe the $179 amp output stage is up to the task of driving 360A for 100mSec? In a design I'm working on, I'm using little International Rectifoer TO-220 MOSFETS which have an Imax of 40 amperes each. And how much are 18 of these FETs, along with the required heatsinks and mandatory protection circuit? Can you build an amp around them for $90 (so it can sell for $179)? MOSFETS don't require thermal protection, other than a thermal breaker. I paid about $4.00 each from Digikey, so I suspect the quantity price is around $0.50 each. MOSFETs are not subject to thermal runaway, but they sure require protection if you want a 350A stage to be trouble free. Putting a circuit breaker in the signal path is not a good idea, even in a $179 amplifier. However, we're getting to the nit-picking stage real fast here... I guess my point is that at this price point, it's highly likely the 3KW spec is a lie. Don't you agree with that? -- Ron While it's still possible, or likely, that the amp spec is not truthful, look at the situation from this pov: A young adult male has a choice of buying this stuff from Nexxon, or from another source, perhaps eBay, where the seller may sell defective equipment, and/or not honor the warranty. In this case, Nexxon has committed themselves to an established arbitration process with the consequence of adverse publicity for them, should they scoff the result of the mediation. Wouldn't you feel more comfortable referring the young adult male who came to you for advice to these people? To be honest, I would tell the young adult that the spec is, in all likelyhood (like, 99.999% likely) false. That he doesn't need 3000W (or even 300W, for that matter) and that he should go to an honest provider. It doesn't mean we have to take a ride in the car. I can't stand these rigs when they come down my street. You got me there :-). -- Ron He probably wouldn't hear a word you say, with his level of hearing damage and comprehension. |
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On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 15:02:01 -0400, "Robert Morein"
wrote: "Ron" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 04:06:08 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "Ron" wrote in message news On Tue, 14 Oct 2003 20:47:00 -0400, "Robert Morein" wrote: "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:Je0jb.73317$AH4.43019@lakeread06... Nexxon wrote: NEXXON_CAR_AUDIO - The Best for Less Over 19,000+ Car Audio, 7,000+ Home Electronics Products, Free Shipping Satisfaction Guaranteed, 276+ Brands, Amps, Woofers, Equalizers, CD Players, Speakers, DVD, Etc. If we don't have it - you don't want it. Please visit the website: You don't have Eclipse, that surely does not mean I do not want it. Even IF you could produce a 3000 watt amp for any price, let alone $179, exactly what automotive electrical system do you expect to power it?? Obviously there's hype in the advertising. what's 'hype' to a seller, is ripoff to a buyer. Even if that rating is for instantaneous power, the current delivered to the speakers would be 250A, meaning that the current drawn from the battery would be 360A (best case). If anyone believes this $179 amp comes even close, I have a wonderful bridge for sale. No, really... -- Ron You may be right, but there is no physical reason it can't be done. Installers frequently use multiple banks of 1 Farad capacitors to stiffen the car power. At 12V, a 1 Farad capacitor stores 12 Couloumbs of charge. A single capacitor could provide 120 amperes for 1/10 of a second. Ten capacitors could provide 120 amperes for about one second. Of course the voltage goes to zero during this interval, but it gives the idea, and the amplifier spec is for a one ohm load. Right. So, to provide 360A you would need 3.6Farad and to maintain reasonable voltage while doing so you'd need at least 10Farads. The Rockford Fosgate CPC10 1 Farad Capacitor costs about $100 each -- about $1000 for the bank to feed the $179 amp... True. And, BTW, do you really believe the $179 amp output stage is up to the task of driving 360A for 100mSec? In a design I'm working on, I'm using little International Rectifoer TO-220 MOSFETS which have an Imax of 40 amperes each. And how much are 18 of these FETs, along with the required heatsinks and mandatory protection circuit? Can you build an amp around them for $90 (so it can sell for $179)? MOSFETS don't require thermal protection, other than a thermal breaker. I paid about $4.00 each from Digikey, so I suspect the quantity price is around $0.50 each. MOSFETs are not subject to thermal runaway, but they sure require protection if you want a 350A stage to be trouble free. Putting a circuit breaker in the signal path is not a good idea, even in a $179 amplifier. However, we're getting to the nit-picking stage real fast here... I guess my point is that at this price point, it's highly likely the 3KW spec is a lie. Don't you agree with that? -- Ron While it's still possible, or likely, that the amp spec is not truthful, look at the situation from this pov: A young adult male has a choice of buying this stuff from Nexxon, or from another source, perhaps eBay, where the seller may sell defective equipment, and/or not honor the warranty. In this case, Nexxon has committed themselves to an established arbitration process with the consequence of adverse publicity for them, should they scoff the result of the mediation. Wouldn't you feel more comfortable referring the young adult male who came to you for advice to these people? To be honest, I would tell the young adult that the spec is, in all likelyhood (like, 99.999% likely) false. That he doesn't need 3000W (or even 300W, for that matter) and that he should go to an honest provider. It doesn't mean we have to take a ride in the car. I can't stand these rigs when they come down my street. You got me there :-). -- Ron He probably wouldn't hear a word you say, with his level of hearing damage and comprehension. |
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On Thu, 16 Oct 2003 10:58:27 -0400, Ron wrote:
I guess my point is that at this price point, it's highly likely the 3KW spec is a lie. Don't you agree with that? How can anybody possibly be stupid enough to believe otherwise? A 3KW amp for $179 is something only seen in JCWhitney fictions and as real as a 700HP 190mph sports car selling for $5000. $5000 won't buy even a fraction of the engine just like $179 won't buy even a fraction of the power supply of a 3KW amp. That amp wouldn't put out 3KW if you put 20,000 volts through it. |
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On Thu, 16 Oct 2003 10:58:27 -0400, Ron wrote:
I guess my point is that at this price point, it's highly likely the 3KW spec is a lie. Don't you agree with that? How can anybody possibly be stupid enough to believe otherwise? A 3KW amp for $179 is something only seen in JCWhitney fictions and as real as a 700HP 190mph sports car selling for $5000. $5000 won't buy even a fraction of the engine just like $179 won't buy even a fraction of the power supply of a 3KW amp. That amp wouldn't put out 3KW if you put 20,000 volts through it. |
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Robert Morein wrote:
I concur; my opinion is expressed graphically at http://www.worldjazz.tv Yeah, but the letter colors need to be changed. |
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Robert Morein wrote:
I concur; my opinion is expressed graphically at http://www.worldjazz.tv Yeah, but the letter colors need to be changed. |
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TCS wrote:
On Thu, 16 Oct 2003 10:58:27 -0400, Ron wrote: I guess my point is that at this price point, it's highly likely the 3KW spec is a lie. Don't you agree with that? How can anybody possibly be stupid enough to believe otherwise? A 3KW amp for $179 is something only seen in JCWhitney fictions and as real as a 700HP 190mph sports car selling for $5000. $5000 won't buy even a fraction of the engine just like $179 won't buy even a fraction of the power supply of a 3KW amp. That amp wouldn't put out 3KW if you put 20,000 volts through it. Suuuuure it will, it's just sleepin'. It's pinin', pinin' for tha Fjords mate... |
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TCS wrote:
On Thu, 16 Oct 2003 10:58:27 -0400, Ron wrote: I guess my point is that at this price point, it's highly likely the 3KW spec is a lie. Don't you agree with that? How can anybody possibly be stupid enough to believe otherwise? A 3KW amp for $179 is something only seen in JCWhitney fictions and as real as a 700HP 190mph sports car selling for $5000. $5000 won't buy even a fraction of the engine just like $179 won't buy even a fraction of the power supply of a 3KW amp. That amp wouldn't put out 3KW if you put 20,000 volts through it. Suuuuure it will, it's just sleepin'. It's pinin', pinin' for tha Fjords mate... |
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"WindsorFox[SS]" wrote in message news:nrFjb.78464$AH4.70123@lakeread06... Robert Morein wrote: I concur; my opinion is expressed graphically at http://www.worldjazz.tv Yeah, but the letter colors need to be changed. What would you suggest? I didn't want to obscure the background, since that's the most interesting part of the site. |
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