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#1
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If you need to cut steel wiremold or raceway that's already installed in
a tight space, you do NOT need the following: - Vise-grip pliers - Bolt cutters - Airplane snips - Bulldog snips - "Pipe and duct" snips - Metal seamer - Dremel rotary tool - Carbide bit for dremel tool - Cutoff wheel for dremel tool - High-tension hacksaw - Mini "tight space" hacksaw - Keyhole saw They won't work. The sheet metal is too thick. So don't bother making five trips to Home Depot to get them all. You just need your air saw, a $4 18-tooth-per-inch bimetal blade, and the will to drag your "portable" air compressor up to the studio. Yes, I know it's heavy and awkward and two flights down. I don't care. Go get the compressor. It's the only thing that works. This has been a public service announcement. -- Jay Levitt | Wellesley, MA | Hi! Faster: jay at jay dot eff-em | Where are we going? http://www.jay.fm | Why am I in this handbasket? |
#2
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You could use a Sawzall, a grinder with a cutting wheel, or a hacksaw if you
have the room........ "Jay Levitt" wrote in message ... If you need to cut steel wiremold or raceway that's already installed in a tight space, you do NOT need the following: - Vise-grip pliers - Bolt cutters - Airplane snips - Bulldog snips - "Pipe and duct" snips - Metal seamer - Dremel rotary tool - Carbide bit for dremel tool - Cutoff wheel for dremel tool - High-tension hacksaw - Mini "tight space" hacksaw - Keyhole saw They won't work. The sheet metal is too thick. So don't bother making five trips to Home Depot to get them all. You just need your air saw, a $4 18-tooth-per-inch bimetal blade, and the will to drag your "portable" air compressor up to the studio. Yes, I know it's heavy and awkward and two flights down. I don't care. Go get the compressor. It's the only thing that works. This has been a public service announcement. -- Jay Levitt | Wellesley, MA | Hi! Faster: jay at jay dot eff-em | Where are we going? http://www.jay.fm | Why am I in this handbasket? |
#3
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Jay Levitt wrote:
You just need your air saw, a $4 18-tooth-per-inch bimetal blade A reciprocating air saw? Did you try a Sawzall first? |
#4
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On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 10:31:20 -0400, Jay Levitt wrote:
If you need to cut steel wiremold or raceway that's already installed in a tight space, you do NOT need the following: - Vise-grip pliers - Bolt cutters - Airplane snips - Bulldog snips - "Pipe and duct" snips - Metal seamer - Dremel rotary tool - Carbide bit for dremel tool - Cutoff wheel for dremel tool - High-tension hacksaw - Mini "tight space" hacksaw - Keyhole saw They won't work. The sheet metal is too thick. So don't bother making five trips to Home Depot to get them all. You just need your air saw, a $4 18-tooth-per-inch bimetal blade, and the will to drag your "portable" air compressor up to the studio. Yes, I know it's heavy and awkward and two flights down. I don't care. Go get the compressor. It's the only thing that works. Why not just use a long hose? The strength of compressed air is that you can run long lines without much loss, assuming your lines are of reasonable size. |
#5
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![]() In article writes: If you need to cut steel wiremold or raceway that's already installed in a tight space, you do NOT need the following: Oh. I thought you were going to tell us that we didn't need a tool that was plugged into the wiremold. -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) However, until the spam goes away or Hell freezes over, lots of IP addresses are blocked from this system. If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo |
#6
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Or use plastic wiremold in the first place...
"Ed K" wrote in message ... You could use a Sawzall, a grinder with a cutting wheel, or a hacksaw if you have the room........ "Jay Levitt" wrote in message ... If you need to cut steel wiremold or raceway that's already installed in a tight space, you do NOT need the following: - Vise-grip pliers - Bolt cutters - Airplane snips - Bulldog snips - "Pipe and duct" snips - Metal seamer - Dremel rotary tool - Carbide bit for dremel tool - Cutoff wheel for dremel tool - High-tension hacksaw - Mini "tight space" hacksaw - Keyhole saw They won't work. The sheet metal is too thick. So don't bother making five trips to Home Depot to get them all. You just need your air saw, a $4 18-tooth-per-inch bimetal blade, and the will to drag your "portable" air compressor up to the studio. Yes, I know it's heavy and awkward and two flights down. I don't care. Go get the compressor. It's the only thing that works. This has been a public service announcement. -- Jay Levitt | Wellesley, MA | Hi! Faster: jay at jay dot eff-em | Where are we going? http://www.jay.fm | Why am I in this handbasket? |
#8
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In article znr1097599097k@trad, says...
In article writes: If you need to cut steel wiremold or raceway that's already installed in a tight space, you do NOT need the following: Oh. I thought you were going to tell us that we didn't need a tool that was plugged into the wiremold. LOL! -- Jay Levitt | Wellesley, MA | Hi! Faster: jay at jay dot eff-em | Where are we going? http://www.jay.fm | Why am I in this handbasket? |
#9
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In article ,
Jay Levitt wrote: In article znr1097599097k@trad, says... In article writes: If you need to cut steel wiremold or raceway that's already installed in a tight space, you do NOT need the following: Oh. I thought you were going to tell us that we didn't need a tool that was plugged into the wiremold. LOL! a rotary cutoff wheel on a drill motor would work George |
#10
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On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 23:06:44 -0400, Jay Levitt wrote:
In article , says... Jay Levitt wrote: You just need your air saw, a $4 18-tooth-per-inch bimetal blade A reciprocating air saw? Did you try a Sawzall first? I actually don't have a Sawzall. I seriously contemplated buying one for this one task, but since I already *have* the reciprocating air saw, I feel like I'd be wasting money. OTOH, that compressor is really a pain to lug around, so maybe I need one. OTTH, I'm not sure even the "compact" Sawzall would have fit in this space - it's at a weird angle. Long hose. Leave the compressor downstairs. The problem with any continuous run air tool is that it takes a LOT of air. No props for trying to run that sort of tool off a pancake compressor. A Milwaulkee Super Sawzall is VERY nice to have if you're renovating. All the others are okay, but the SS is the one you'll wish you had the same way you wish you had a *insert your favorite insanely expensive mic* For a tight space like that, you might try an angle grinder. I'd rent, but if you think you'd get enough use out of it, most of the ones $100 are Good Enough. |
#11
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Remove all the burrs with a file, to keep them from nicking the
insulation.... Rgds: Eric "U-CDK_CHARLES\Charles" "Charles wrote in message news:c0bbd.17$qL1.11@trndny07... On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 23:06:44 -0400, Jay Levitt wrote: In article , says... Jay Levitt wrote: You just need your air saw, a $4 18-tooth-per-inch bimetal blade A reciprocating air saw? Did you try a Sawzall first? I actually don't have a Sawzall. I seriously contemplated buying one for this one task, but since I already *have* the reciprocating air saw, I feel like I'd be wasting money. OTOH, that compressor is really a pain to lug around, so maybe I need one. OTTH, I'm not sure even the "compact" Sawzall would have fit in this space - it's at a weird angle. Long hose. Leave the compressor downstairs. The problem with any continuous run air tool is that it takes a LOT of air. No props for trying to run that sort of tool off a pancake compressor. A Milwaulkee Super Sawzall is VERY nice to have if you're renovating. All the others are okay, but the SS is the one you'll wish you had the same way you wish you had a *insert your favorite insanely expensive mic* For a tight space like that, you might try an angle grinder. I'd rent, but if you think you'd get enough use out of it, most of the ones $100 are Good Enough. |
#12
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![]() Having gotten some good advice from this group before, let me toss this question out. I'm a singer/writer with basic engineering skills, which seem to be enough for me to master my own stuff for CD. That's my basic profile. And I've already got the wall to wall recording studio that extends across my entire room. But, the sheer mental WEIGHT of having to set everything up does seem to interfere with the creative process. As a matter of course, I find that if I do my entire technical setup the night before I want to work on some music, then all I have to do is turn on the stuff the next morning and get to work without doing a lot of pre-production stuff that detracts from letting the muses do their number. I like to relax while I work, and over the years I have found that it's harder to do because the technology has gotten so complex. I miss the old mono tape recorder where I just had to push record, and GO. Stereo was a step up, but as Chet Atkins once said when Ampex issued the first 3 track, "What the hell are we going to do with the third track? This past week I was reviewing a bunch of old performances I did on my little 200 dollar Sony two channel minidisc recorder, and I found the performances to be more relaxed in general, and therefore, probably more listener friendly. I had anticipated at the time I did the original recordings that I might want to use the performances for release at a later date so I set it up this way: Left Channel was for voice Right Channel was for drum machine and basic rhythm guitar. I transfer the good performances over to the PC, and then re-record my guitar onto a new channel on the PC (Cakewalk pro 9), , and bring in a real drummer to play real drums, using my original minidisc right channel as his reference track for the timing. I would PREFER to set up a 4 channel minidisc recorder, or SOME kind of machine with at least the same quality or better than a minidisc recorder, like this. channel 1 for vocal channel 2 for guitar channel 3 for stripe (Fsk or SMPTE) channel 4 for drum machine Then at least I won't have to retrack my guitar, as well as leaving open other possibilities for later. I have been researching this for the past week, and I see that TASCAM has a minidisc 4 track recorder workstation (although it's really 12 channels, they say- which confuses me. Why call it a 4, if it's a 12?), but the price is around 1200 dollars. That's too much. I just want to spend 200 to 500 dollars for a basic recorder setup that won't hinder me with too many bells and whistles. Likewise, I see little pocket sized multitrack workstations that have a lot of features from Boss, Roland, and others for around 300 to 500 dollars or so, but I'm not sure if they provide digital outs for Wav files. One of these machines allows the user to send out MP3 files to the PC, but I don't think the quality would be up to what I can get out of my simple minidisc recorder. I know Pro engineers don't like the compression on minidisc recorders, but I find them to be more than suitable for my simple rock and roll songs, which I usually process the hell out of anyways. (We ain't talking Opera here fellas.) Personally, I can't tell the difference between a final mix from my PC over to a CD, which I also mix to minidisc at the same time. The differences that might exist don't matter to me, since I'm not scoping this, and as far as I know, it's only Pro engineers and Hummingbirds that might be able to hear the difference. As a musician, I'm sure my hearing might not be as critical and detailed as it used to be, but my audience is going deaf too. I'm more concerned with emotional impact, and I have a room upstairs that I like to practice and sing in, a place where I can keep it simple and just try to be creative without worrying about all of my gear. To sum up, here's the big question. Are there any simple, basic, inexpensive machines, minidisc or otherwise, that will allow me to use the 4 channel setup, as I listed above, and that will permit me to make a digital wav transfer back to my PC? If so, what are some recommended models? I just need something that will allow me to keep my digital output from the unit seperate as it goes back into the PC. Thanks for your suggestions. Alan |
#13
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I have been researching this for the past week, and I see that TASCAM has a
minidisc 4 track recorder workstation (although it's really 12 channels, they say- which confuses me. Why call it a 4, if it's a 12?), It has 12 INPUT channel that can be routed to the 4 TRACKS of the recorder. I used a Yamaha 8 track mini disc recorder for demos and found the sound to be "fine" for that purpose. In fact, I kinda dug that little unit for being do simple to use. --------------------------------------- "I know enough to know I don't know enough" |
#14
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#15
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Yeah I downgraded from a Digi 002 since i'm not doing much recording
of other bands. Nothing for money anyway. I purchased a new Tascam 424mkIII 4 Track cassette recorder and I really dig it. It's pretty fun and make you think a little more creatively rather than "dood let use the neve eq plugin." cheers garrett (EggHd) wrote in message ... I have been researching this for the past week, and I see that TASCAM has a minidisc 4 track recorder workstation (although it's really 12 channels, they say- which confuses me. Why call it a 4, if it's a 12?), It has 12 INPUT channel that can be routed to the 4 TRACKS of the recorder. I used a Yamaha 8 track mini disc recorder for demos and found the sound to be "fine" for that purpose. In fact, I kinda dug that little unit for being do simple to use. --------------------------------------- "I know enough to know I don't know enough" |
#16
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Mike Rivers wrote
Why not record directly on your PC, and put your money into a respectable audio interface (sound card)? As long as you're going to use your PC as a production tool, you might as well record to it as well. But the more non-audio things you use your PC for, the sooner you start running into audio recording problems. Thanks for the input Mike. I DO record directly on to a dedicated PC for studio use thru a 2048 MOTU soundcard. I may not do a perfect job of engineering, but I'm pleased with how the last project turned out, thanks to some of your own previous advice, as well as from other contributers in this group. (Listen to a track from the current CD by clicking on this link http://www.alanleatherwood.com/Alamo/djcopy.htm). Mike Rivers wrote: Why do you have to set it up every time you want to record? That's a pain in the butt. If you're going to get serious about this, you should dedicated some space for your gear, leave it set up to record, and at least give a little attention to the acoustics of the room. And if you aren't able to dedicate at least that much of your space to recording, at least for the duration of a project, you aren't serious enough to make serious CDs. You can make fine demos, however. I'm usually set up for a mixdown process, or I'm set up for someone else's project, which involves changing a lot of stuff to get back into a "recording" mode for myself. I find that with the minidisc, I can take it upstairs and just record on the fly, whenever the mood hits me. I have a small mixing board up there with two mikes plugged in to it. I think of my studio in the basement as my work "garage", but the room upstairs allows me to relax more. I just need more than two tracks. Set up a mic (probably not a very fancy one), push a button, and start playing. The technical quality isn't what most musicians today would consider "CD Quality." On the other hand, CDs have been made from less, and the people who buy those CDs from you at your gigs won't worry that you didn't record at 192 kHz, or that your pitch was a little off on a verse, or that you didn't have a full band playing behind you. ALL of my performances are built upon just my vocals and guitar, I overdub everything else, drums, the band, everything. I've worked that way for the last twenty years in most cases. . You can get a TASCAM 788 8-track 24-bit hard disk recorder/mixer for around $600 on the street. There's lots of stuff today that gets you better audio quality than a Minidisk, more than 4 tracks, and the convenience of everything in one box for under $1,000. Sounds good. But, my friend bought one a year ago, and still hasn't been able to figure out to record a song on it. Is it as simple as a minidisc recorder to operate? My friend has zero experience recording, except with his old Sony reel to reel, so it might be easier for me to figure out. Maybe I can buy it off of him cheap, since he has no idea what to do with it. ..... start haunting eBay. The "pocket" workstations are really cute, but as you suspect, they're not up to the quality of a CD that you'd want to charge money for, at least not without a lot of skillful help. The trend today seems to be to record on flash card memory rather than tape or disk, which means expensive media if you have several projects "in the works" over a significant period of time, and few of them record in uncompressed WAV format if for no other reason than that it would require more memory than the recorder costs just to record a couple of songs. They're great as work-notepads though. Fostex has one for about $300 that has a drum machine built in, as well as a guitar amplifier simulator and some vocal processing. You don't get a lot of flexibility but you can get some pretty good ideas of what could happen with the right equipment. But that's what you get for $200-$500. I agree. I don't want to use flash cards. Expensive, and they won't hold a lot of stuff. When I get an idea and record on the minidisc recorder, I can actually develop it into a complete finished song and peformance withing 20 minutes or so. Alan Cassaro http://www.alanleatherwood.com |
#17
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The Yamaha minidisc 8 track an interesting looking unit, I downloaded and saved
the specs for it. Definitely worth considering. Offhand, do you know if you can transfer the individual tracks over to a PC, digitally? Thanks al EggHd wrote: I have been researching this for the past week, and I see that TASCAM has a minidisc 4 track recorder workstation (although it's really 12 channels, they say- which confuses me. Why call it a 4, if it's a 12?), It has 12 INPUT channel that can be routed to the 4 TRACKS of the recorder. I used a Yamaha 8 track mini disc recorder for demos and found the sound to be "fine" for that purpose. In fact, I kinda dug that little unit for being do simple to use. --------------------------------------- "I know enough to know I don't know enough" |
#18
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I researched both of those units you mentioned. I don't want to record on a cassette deck, so I
did a few more hours of research today on about 80 different units from companies. Most of the units costing less than 600 dollars only allows recording up to two channels at a time. The ones using memory sticks seem useless to me, considering that I like to work in at least half hour increments. Might as well spend more money for something with a harddrive, since the extra memory sticks are going to add up quickly. I want to record 4 channels at a time, so I can change the tempo of my drum machine on the fly, rather than having to pre-record it on the units that only allow two track recording.. For multitracking all at once, it starts getting pretty pricey. However, For $799.00 there's a harddrived unit, the ZOOM MRS1608, which seems to have a lot of features for the money, plus the ability to dump it all over to the PC as uncompressed Wave files. A simple 4 track minidisc recorder would be nice for my needs, but that would make life too uncomplicated, wouldn't it? So, I guess I may cough up the extra cash for some extra bells and whistles... al Garrett Cox wrote: Yeah I downgraded from a Digi 002 since i'm not doing much recording of other bands. Nothing for money anyway. I purchased a new Tascam 424mkIII 4 Track cassette recorder and I really dig it. It's pretty fun and make you think a little more creatively rather than "dood let use the neve eq plugin." cheers garrett (EggHd) wrote in message ... I have been researching this for the past week, and I see that TASCAM has a minidisc 4 track recorder workstation (although it's really 12 channels, they say- which confuses me. Why call it a 4, if it's a 12?), It has 12 INPUT channel that can be routed to the 4 TRACKS of the recorder. I used a Yamaha 8 track mini disc recorder for demos and found the sound to be "fine" for that purpose. In fact, I kinda dug that little unit for being do simple to use. --------------------------------------- "I know enough to know I don't know enough" |
#19
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Alan Cassaro wrote:
I may not do a perfect job of engineering, but I'm pleased with how the last project turned out, thanks to some of your own previous advice, as well as from other contributers in this group. (Listen to a track from the current CD by clicking on this link http://www.alanleatherwood.com/Alamo/djcopy.htm). Sounds pretty bright to me. What kind of monitoring do you have? |
#20
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Offhand, do you know if you can
transfer the individual tracks over to a PC, digitally? No. The MD8 just has 8 analog outs. --------------------------------------- "I know enough to know I don't know enough" |
#21
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