An excellent message!
Broaden your horizens, expand your comfort zone, don't be afraid to switch lanes.
Go out on a limb, that's where the fruit is...
I feel for you
I've always been extremely satisfied that I took the technical route in my career. I studied physics at the University of Chicago, Nuclear Engineering at the University of Illinois, worked as a technican at a national lab while in college, and I'm not afraid to work on anything. I do all my work on my cars because that's the best way to know it is done right.
And here's the point, I do just about all my own work on my audio equipment. I'm not afraid to take a $20,000 DAC apart and modify it. I've done mods for myself and other people. I build most of my own cables. I add bypass switches and extra sets of inputs. And I am very happy with the results.
But I know there are many members here who feel totally incapable of such things. They have never been technical. their educational background is non-technical. They even tried to avoid math and science classes in high school and college. They assume they will never have any technical ability. I emphasize that is their assessment of their own skills, not mine.
So I'm reading Alex Karp's new book (I highly recommend it) and he points out that in the past leaders tended to be scientists or lovers of science instead of lawyers and political science students. Ben Franklin was a scientist first and a politician second. Thomas Jefferson, the primary author of the Declaration of Independence, said if first love was science and politics was his duty. As for myself, UofChicago taught me to write as well as do physics which has been very handy in my career and personal life.
So I say not only is it possible to have both scientific and literary skills, but it is natural. I think we've fooled ourselves into thinking we have to choose one or the other. and if you have chosen the non-technical route, there is nothing that says you can't be both.
So read up on your tube amp. Learn what the B+ voltage is. Get a technical friend to help you build some cables. I have my daughter, currently an honors student in business school, soldering when she is home on break.
The internet makes all of this easy to research.
Don't be afraid to change out the connectors on the back of your amp to an upgraded model. it isn't hard to replace a capacitor with either a new in-kind or an upgraded capacitor.
Finally, technical people love to help others. Find someone around you who will help you and have some fun. your system will benefit from it.
I'll freely admit there are people here with much more experience with technical things that I have. I have to go get help sometimes. That's one of the great things about the internet and forums like this.
Jerry
I first studied civil engineering, changed my major to sociology, so some early hard science followed by my real interest in the soft sciences. I've long been diy for most everything in my life, home wiring, plumbing, car and motorcycle maintenance and repair, audio equipment, appliances, I'll pretty much try to gain an understanding of everything I may have an interest in. I've always thought self sufficiency was the epitome of a life well led, and the utility of it is off the map, I have much more disposable income to spend on silly things like audio systems, cars and motorcycles. |
@carlsbad2 +1! |
100% agree. We all start somewhere. I have no professional technical training, but I’ve modified, designed, built, or enhanced just about all of my gear. The first mod I recall doing was adding more filter capacitance to my Hafler amp. Then I started poking around inside of speakers, putting plumbers putty on the backs of stamped steel woofer frames, and upgrading caps, etc. DIY cables are a great first effort for someone who wants to try something.
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