Had a jc2 power button fail because the glue that mounted it on fell off ! I guess they glue the input and power buttons on to the face plate . So I sent it out to get fixed , $175.00 with shipping and the repair shop put a small scratch in the face plate . The repair shop is like that must have been there I didn't do it . I call parasound and talked to the owner he said he would talk to the repair shop and call me back . 2 weeks later I called him back and he thinks i'm pulling a fast one on him or something ! If I dinged the front I would have said put a new 1 on . I drive a new caddy I think I can afford it ass$#@# .
I agree with Larryi. The JC2 is specified as consuming 25 watts of AC power in standby, and 30 watts when turned on. For a preamp of its size and weight (24 pounds), a consumption of 25 watts seems to me to be perfectly consistent with a temperature rise on parts of its housing of perhaps 20 degrees or so above room ambient temperature. In other words, to about 90 degrees F.
I don't see that as being of any significance, as long as a modicum of common sense is exercised with respect to placement and ventilation provisions.
Omg it's not in a cabinet , plenty of ventilation around it . When everything is off for days its still 90 . Sometimes my savannah cat sleeps on it . Lol
My new caddy turbo is a piece of junk ass well . I have to tighten the turbo once a month . Oil is leaking out of the engine seals , not dripping . Its fast and cunffy but for 50k you would think they could keep the oil in the engine .
The caddy issue would be warranty service I think. I had some engine issues back in the day due to the dealer overfilling the oil. I hope that's not the problem, but either way it shouldn't cost you a cent. Maybe you're redlining it too much!
good point Geofkait....I had an Alfa many years ago. I saw the Graduate, and had to have the Duetta. It was wonderful when working, but it hardly saw daylight...in the shop all the time.
Glue on power buttons?? Sooo many ways to fix that error and to visualize when open the faceplate. All you need is scredriver; drill with proper bits; bolts and nuts from your old computer or dies to cut the thread in the faceplate hole and camera to use technology to visualise assembly after dissasembly. That could be done by 6th grader for $25 amazon gift card.
So hate to bump an old post but this is real. Bought a brand new JC2 and the power button fell off. They sent me a new button and I pulled the face plate off to repair. Everything is glued to the faceplate! The glue is dryed out and brittle and everything I touch just falls off! Wish I could post a picture....nobody believes this!
This is the second time it's happened in 4 years so I'm not sure it's bad PR. They handled it better the second time instead of charging $175, but I'm having trouble picturing "everything I touch just falls off!". The JC2 has a total of 2 buttons, just what is being touched?!
I have the Parasound Hint never a problem great sound and questions always answered timely. I would not put Parasound in the same category as Emotiva as I had owned Emo monos and pre and the Hint was a definitive move up in sound.
Speaking of Emotiva, Paul Mcgowan of PS Audio was at the Axpona 2018 audio show, and took a video cam around to various booths. Several audio veterans knew Paul and greeted him and made small talk.
Then Paul wondered over to the Emotiva booth. Dan Laufman, seeing an opportunity(I guess?) immediately stepped into salesman mode and dragged Paul and his cam to his displayed products, spewing prices and features like a used car salesman. It was kind of sad. Dan was also dressed like one with several gaudy gold pieces about his person.
And for me, that wraps up what Emotiva is about. Here's a link if anyone wants a laugh:
I should have read this thread before I purchased a JC2 demo in May, 2015. I felt there was 3rd order harmonic distortion from the beginning, but over the phone Richard Schramm assured me there wasn't. The on-off button recently fell off and I brought it in to George Meyer in Los Angeles for repair. It took 3 weeks to get it back because of Covid-19 and in addition to the button repair it seems no fewer than 17 capacitors needed replacement. I have to say that the sound is now glorious with no hint of distortion. A recent test on one of these 11 year old units revealed excessive 3rd harmonic distortion. Any comments are welcomed.
Parasound makes awesome stuff. I have the JC3+ and have yet to find anything that sounds better. As for the made in Taiwan thing... I spent 20 years in the bicycle industry working for a medium sized bicycle manufacturer. We had our frames manufactured in several countries, including the U.S., but by far the best quality we ever achieved was in Taiwan. I know that bicycles are not the same as electronics, but the point is that Taiwan has really come a long way in their manufacturing excellence. China is also making some excellent quality electronics these days, but they constantly get bashed. Some of the worst products I've ever owned (reliability-wise) have been made in the U.S., U.K. and France. Probably the best track record for products I have owned have been Japanese made.
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