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#81
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Bill Graham wrote:
I have made many such suggestions to manufacturers during my life. None of them were taken. I have come to the conclusion that to adopt a user's suggestion would be putting oneself in jepordy of being sued for some percentage of the profits, so the manufacturers legal department advises them to not adapt the suggestion. IOW, by simply sending them the suggestion, you are guaranteeing that they will not change the design of their equipment. And that, in short, is the difference between Behringer and the pro audio world. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#82
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Bill Graham wrote: I have made many such suggestions to manufacturers during my life. None of them were taken. I have come to the conclusion that to adopt a user's suggestion would be putting oneself in jepordy of being sued for some percentage of the profits, so the manufacturers legal department advises them to not adapt the suggestion. IOW, by simply sending them the suggestion, you are guaranteeing that they will not change the design of their equipment. And that, in short, is the difference between Behringer and the pro audio world. or establish a friendly relationship with the manufacturers key personel and then they will solicit your input. this has happened with me george |
#83
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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In article estechnologygroup,
George's Pro Sound Co. wrote: "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Bill Graham wrote: I have made many such suggestions to manufacturers during my life. None of them were taken. I have come to the conclusion that to adopt a user's suggestion would be putting oneself in jepordy of being sued for some percentage of the profits, so the manufacturers legal department advises them to not adapt the suggestion. IOW, by simply sending them the suggestion, you are guaranteeing that they will not change the design of their equipment. And that, in short, is the difference between Behringer and the pro audio world. or establish a friendly relationship with the manufacturers key personel and then they will solicit your input. this has happened with me Sadly, a lot of the MI-grade companies (and Behringer is actually an exception) just buy whatever the factories in China want to make and they resell them in the US... because the factory makes millions of things and the US importer only buys thousands or tens of thousands, it's not even possible for the vendor to really have much say in the products they are themselves selling. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#84
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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![]() "Kevin Aylward" wrote in message ... "George's Pro Sound Co." wrote in message rlakestechnologygroup... afaik bent knob shafts signal serious abuse and if you can't figure out how to open a powered mixer, then you have no business inside of it Why would that be? I am professional analogue design engineer, and have been so for 30 years. I am not a mechanical tech, nor am I in the general business of repairing audio equipment for employment. Sure, whilst at university I did have a fair bit of on the side repair work for a music shop, a £20 repair was a good percentage increase on my £45 weekly student grant money, but I no even longer build what I design. Its a "would you expect an architect to lay bricks"? Despite this, I have opened and repaired more bits of kit that probably most in this NG. So, non expertise in opening boxes, stuffed in china, that are not designed for servicing, is hardly a good reason to avoid throwing money away by not trying. If you have some suitable instructions for opening up the PMP1280S I would welcome your obviously superior knowledge on this matter. Kevin Aylward B.Sc. www.kevinaylward.co.uk "Live Long And Prosper \V/" Kevin, hope you don't mind me saying, but your posting style is uncannily similar to that of Graham Stevenson. Blimey. Gareth. |
#85
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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"Gareth Magennis" wrote in
message hope you don't mind me saying, but your posting style is uncannily similar to that of Graham Stevenson. Blimey. Asked and answered last week. They were both senior engineers for the same company in a similar time frame. |
#86
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Gareth Magennis" wrote in message hope you don't mind me saying, but your posting style is uncannily similar to that of Graham Stevenson. Blimey. Asked and answered last week. They were both senior engineers for the same company in a similar time frame. Yes, I know. So how come they both sound the same? |
#87
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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"Gareth Magennis" wrote in
message "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Gareth Magennis" wrote in message hope you don't mind me saying, but your posting style is uncannily similar to that of Graham Stevenson. Blimey. Asked and answered last week. They were both senior engineers for the same company in a similar time frame. Yes, I know. So how come they both sound the same? I've been interacting with them for a number of years. I agree that they sound very similar at times, but I can separate them pretty easily. Kevin is more theoretical, and Graham is more practical. Graham doesn't exactly suffer fools, but Kevin has a shorter fuse. |
#88
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Gareth Magennis" wrote in message "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Gareth Magennis" wrote in message hope you don't mind me saying, but your posting style is uncannily similar to that of Graham Stevenson. Blimey. Asked and answered last week. They were both senior engineers for the same company in a similar time frame. Yes, I know. So how come they both sound the same? I've been interacting with them for a number of years. I agree that they sound very similar at times, but I can separate them pretty easily. Kevin is more theoretical, and Graham is more practical. Graham doesn't exactly suffer fools, but Kevin has a shorter fuse. Hmm, this is starting to look like some kind of Oliver Sack's precis. I wish you luck. Gareth. |
#89
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Bill Graham wrote: I have made many such suggestions to manufacturers during my life. None of them were taken. I have come to the conclusion that to adopt a user's suggestion would be putting oneself in jepordy of being sued for some percentage of the profits, so the manufacturers legal department advises them to not adapt the suggestion. IOW, by simply sending them the suggestion, you are guaranteeing that they will not change the design of their equipment. And that, in short, is the difference between Behringer and the pro audio world. Nope, Behrenger aren't the only ones who do it. And many of the smaller companies have even less inclination to change anything that isn't high priority on their list since they have less staff and money to devote to it. Trevor. |
#90
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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![]() "George's Pro Sound Co." wrote in message rlakestechnologygroup... or establish a friendly relationship with the manufacturers key personel and then they will solicit your input. this has happened with me Yep, that is usually the only way to get listened to. I do think if enough people bombard them with the same complaint or suggestion, most companies might at least take a look. Unfortunately most of us think "how stupid", "bad design" etc. but don't actually complain to the manufacturer. And when we do I wonder how much gets passed to the right people. Trevor. |
#91
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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![]() "Trevor" wrote in message u... "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Bill Graham wrote: I have made many such suggestions to manufacturers during my life. None of them were taken. I have come to the conclusion that to adopt a user's suggestion would be putting oneself in jepordy of being sued for some percentage of the profits, so the manufacturers legal department advises them to not adapt the suggestion. IOW, by simply sending them the suggestion, you are guaranteeing that they will not change the design of their equipment. And that, in short, is the difference between Behringer and the pro audio world. Nope, Behrenger aren't the only ones who do it. And many of the smaller companies have even less inclination to change anything that isn't high priority on their list since they have less staff and money to devote to it. Trevor. Behringer activly solicits end user input before final production units are put in the pipe line |
#92
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Trevor wrote:
"Scott Dorsey" wrote in message Bill Graham wrote: I have made many such suggestions to manufacturers during my life. None of them were taken. I have come to the conclusion that to adopt a user's suggestion would be putting oneself in jepordy of being sued for some percentage of the profits, so the manufacturers legal department advises them to not adapt the suggestion. IOW, by simply sending them the suggestion, you are guaranteeing that they will not change the design of their equipment. And that, in short, is the difference between Behringer and the pro audio world. Nope, Behrenger aren't the only ones who do it. And many of the smaller companies have even less inclination to change anything that isn't high priority on their list since they have less staff and money to devote to it. No, they certainly aren't the only ones who do it, but it's typical of the MI store folks. Call up Great River or Manley, tell them you want their electronics with some changes or in a funny form factor box, they'll quote you. They might quote you a lot more than you want to pay, but they'll do it because that is where much of their market is. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#93
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Trevor wrote: "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message Bill Graham wrote: I have made many such suggestions to manufacturers during my life. None of them were taken. I have come to the conclusion that to adopt a user's suggestion would be putting oneself in jepordy of being sued for some percentage of the profits, so the manufacturers legal department advises them to not adapt the suggestion. IOW, by simply sending them the suggestion, you are guaranteeing that they will not change the design of their equipment. And that, in short, is the difference between Behringer and the pro audio world. Nope, Behrenger aren't the only ones who do it. And many of the smaller companies have even less inclination to change anything that isn't high priority on their list since they have less staff and money to devote to it. No, they certainly aren't the only ones who do it, but it's typical of the MI store folks. Call up Great River or Manley, tell them you want their electronics with some changes or in a funny form factor box, they'll quote you. They might quote you a lot more than you want to pay, but they'll do it because that is where much of their market is. --scott long before Omnidrives and Driveracks a friend had ashley custom build his design of a parametric crossover stereo fully adjustable band pass filters 5 filters per channel george |
#94
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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![]() "Dec [Cluskey]" wrote in message ... When we first started using a Behringer Xen 24 channel our sound jockey really had a hissy fit and proclaimed that in our position we should be using the Allen and Heath comparable unit .... far better built. We were almost convinced until shortly after a support band was using the Allen and Heath version ... I got my brother to join me in a chat with that sound guy.... "how do you find the Allen and Heath?" .... "Don't go anywhere near them .... bin' back to the shop six times, still not right". Case proven? Pretty bad service department anyway it seems. In my opinion it is the compactness that creates the lack of complete reliability, not the price. Something the X32 should not suffer from. Well there's no such thing as "complete reliability" at any price! I do not find the Behrengers to be any less reliable than others in their class (usually the reverse) However they are certainly not as rugged as some higher priced equipment, and things like the faders will certainly not last as long in a less than pristine environment. And repairs are usually uneconomic, but if buying a new cheap mixer is cheaper than what it costs to repair a more expensively built one, I'd say that's not a big issue for me either. How the X32 will stack up I have no idea though. I bet it will probably provide some real bang for your buck regardless. Trevor. |
#95
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Trevor wrote:
"George's Pro Sound Co." wrote in message rlakestechnologygroup... or establish a friendly relationship with the manufacturers key personel and then they will solicit your input. this has happened with me Yep, that is usually the only way to get listened to. I do think if enough people bombard them with the same complaint or suggestion, most companies might at least take a look. Unfortunately most of us think "how stupid", "bad design" etc. but don't actually complain to the manufacturer. And when we do I wonder how much gets passed to the right people. Trevor. Yes, but you'd think that when you change a design to make it better, and then send the schematic to the manufacturer together with the information as to why it is better, that they would at least acknowledge your letter. I have won cases in court where the design of the equipment causes it to catch on fire and destroy a building, so its not like I don't know something about poorly designed equipment....Especially power supplies. - I was a specialist in those. |
#96
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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On Jan 7, 8:50*pm, "Bill Graham" wrote:
Trevor wrote: "George's Pro Sound Co." wrote in message erlakestechnologygroup.... or establish a friendly relationship with the manufacturers key personel and then they will solicit your input. this has happened with me Yep, that is usually the only way to get listened to. I do think if enough people bombard them with the same complaint or suggestion, most companies might at least take a look. Unfortunately most of us think "how stupid", "bad design" etc. but don't actually complain to the manufacturer. And when we do I wonder how much gets passed to the right people. Trevor. Yes, but you'd think that when you change a design to make it better, and then send the schematic to the manufacturer together with the information as to why it is better, that they would at least acknowledge your letter. I have won cases in court where the design of the equipment causes it to catch on fire and destroy a building, so its not like I don't know something about poorly designed equipment....Especially power supplies. - I was a specialist in those. Really? I thought you worked on broken effects pedals. Peace, Paul |
#97
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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PStamler wrote:
On Jan 7, 8:50 pm, "Bill Graham" wrote: Trevor wrote: "George's Pro Sound Co." wrote in message rlakestechnologygroup... or establish a friendly relationship with the manufacturers key personel and then they will solicit your input. this has happened with me Yep, that is usually the only way to get listened to. I do think if enough people bombard them with the same complaint or suggestion, most companies might at least take a look. Unfortunately most of us think "how stupid", "bad design" etc. but don't actually complain to the manufacturer. And when we do I wonder how much gets passed to the right people. Trevor. Yes, but you'd think that when you change a design to make it better, and then send the schematic to the manufacturer together with the information as to why it is better, that they would at least acknowledge your letter. I have won cases in court where the design of the equipment causes it to catch on fire and destroy a building, so its not like I don't know something about poorly designed equipment....Especially power supplies. - I was a specialist in those. Really? I thought you worked on broken effects pedals. Peace, Paul Yeah, that too. I have had a long and varied life, sonny. One of these days, after your ear wetness drys out a bit, you may be able to say the same thing. Of course, since you are unable to learn from my mistakes, you will have to make your own. |
#98
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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PStamler wrote:
On Jan 7, 8:50 pm, "Bill Graham" wrote: Trevor wrote: "George's Pro Sound Co." wrote in message erlakestechnologygroup... or establish a friendly relationship with the manufacturers key personel and then they will solicit your input. this has happened with me Yep, that is usually the only way to get listened to. I do think if enough people bombard them with the same complaint or suggestion, most companies might at least take a look. Unfortunately most of us think "how stupid", "bad design" etc. but don't actually complain to the manufacturer. And when we do I wonder how much gets passed to the right people. Trevor. Yes, but you'd think that when you change a design to make it better, and then send the schematic to the manufacturer together with the information as to why it is better, that they would at least acknowledge your letter. I have won cases in court where the design of the equipment causes it to catch on fire and destroy a building, so its not like I don't know something about poorly designed equipment....Especially power supplies. - I was a specialist in those. Really? I thought you worked on broken effects pedals. Peace, Paul I've seen some of those with accelerator pedals that I guess make the sound particles go faster. -- shut up and play your guitar * http://hankalrich.com/ http://armadillomusicproductions.com/who'slistening.html http://www.sonicbids.com/HankandShai...withDougHarman |
#99
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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![]() "Bill Graham" wrote in message ... Trevor wrote: Yep, that is usually the only way to get listened to. I do think if enough people bombard them with the same complaint or suggestion, most companies might at least take a look. Unfortunately most of us think "how stupid", "bad design" etc. but don't actually complain to the manufacturer. And when we do I wonder how much gets passed to the right people. Yes, but you'd think that when you change a design to make it better, and then send the schematic to the manufacturer together with the information as to why it is better, that they would at least acknowledge your letter. You'd hope, but unfortunately as you found, in vain with some manufacturers :-( I have won cases in court where the design of the equipment causes it to catch on fire and destroy a building, I'm willing to bet they take more notice of you in those cases! :-) Trevor. |
#100
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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"George's Pro Sound Co." wrote in message
news ![]() "Trevor" wrote in message u... "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Bill Graham wrote: I have made many such suggestions to manufacturers during my life. None of them were taken. I have come to the conclusion that to adopt a user's suggestion would be putting oneself in jepordy of being sued for some percentage of the profits, so the manufacturers legal department advises them to not adapt the suggestion. IOW, by simply sending them the suggestion, you are guaranteeing that they will not change the design of their equipment. And that, in short, is the difference between Behringer and the pro audio world. Nope, Behrenger aren't the only ones who do it. And many of the smaller companies have even less inclination to change anything that isn't high priority on their list since they have less staff and money to devote to it. Trevor. Behringer activly solicits end user input before final production units are put in the pipe line The important part is that it's *before* the product is in production. It's surprising how expensive the smallest change can be after production starts. Sean |
#101
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Trevor wrote:
"Bill Graham" wrote in message ... Trevor wrote: Yep, that is usually the only way to get listened to. I do think if enough people bombard them with the same complaint or suggestion, most companies might at least take a look. Unfortunately most of us think "how stupid", "bad design" etc. but don't actually complain to the manufacturer. And when we do I wonder how much gets passed to the right people. Yes, but you'd think that when you change a design to make it better, and then send the schematic to the manufacturer together with the information as to why it is better, that they would at least acknowledge your letter. You'd hope, but unfortunately as you found, in vain with some manufacturers :-( I have won cases in court where the design of the equipment causes it to catch on fire and destroy a building, I'm willing to bet they take more notice of you in those cases! :-) Trevor. Yes. Unfortunately, they were few and far between. I worked for an Engineer in the Bay area for a while who specialized in investigating fires and other industrial accidents... That was a fun job. There were some real weird cases. I remember one where the transformer that knocks the 12.7 KV on the telephone pole shorted out primary to secondary, and put 12 KV on this lady's house circuits while she was ironing in her kitchem. The iron got so hot she couldn't hold it. Then smoke started pouring out of the walls in her house. She ran for the door, and just after she cleared it, her whole house burst into flames and burned to the ground before the fire department could even get there. Folrtunately, there was no one else in the house, so no one was hurt. |
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