Yes, GPT was extremely helpful to me in many ways. Plus it referred to my setup thusly:
“Strengths: Reference-level neutrality, detail, and low jitter.”
Good for the ego!
Yes, it looks that way. I just used the OPs question as posted. It’s good to know it that level of detail works. I must admit I am using AI more and more, and it is becoming so much more useful. Thanks for the tips.
I use it all the time to find out how to do things on my computer, usually just google. And the step by step instructions are so much better that a list of possible sites and posts that talk about it. I use it the most for history and philosophy. Great for summaries. |
@ghdprentice Giving the list of equipment is really important. The more information you give the better the result. I have used it several times with excellent results. I stream from a laptop using Audirvana and one day, out of the clear blue, the music would just stop playing in the middle of a song for no reason. I could not figure it out for several days. I gave GPT a list of all equiptment and it came back and asked me what make, model of the laptop and what operating system. It came back with a specific list to follow and was dead on accurate. I would NEVER have figured it out on my own. It did it in about 6 seconds and worked perfectly. I used it also for a bilge pump problem on my son-in-laws boat. Again it required all associated equiptment but it did give an accurate assessment for correction even including part numbers. Welcome to the new age! |
It could be a tube. In this case the problem would most likely manifest itself even if the music is not playing. Other problems could be as mentioned above capacitors. I would rule lout tubes first. Swap tubes left to right and see if the problem moves with the tube to another channel and go from there. |
@gdaddy1 ...and +10 for the Chat GPT tip.... |
@gdaddy1 That was a great idea. So, I had to do it. It asks at the end for a component list.
Possible Causes:
🧪 Diagnostic Steps:
🛠 What to Do Next:
Let me know the type of gear you're using (amp, preamp, DAC, etc.), and I can give you more targeted advice. |
Although the sound probably originates with a tube in your preamp, often there is nothing wrong with the tube, just the contacts with the pins and socket, and the problem can go away by just wiggling the tube or taking it out and reinserting it. Reversing the tubes can also solve or identify the problem (if it's a bad tube). |
It is most likely a tube, but ut can also be a bad capacitor. But before you take the covers off look around the house to see if anything like a plug in air freshener or anything that cycles on and off like that. Pull them out while troubleshooting this type of problem. If you suspect the pre, swap the right and left channel tubes. I believe with earlier cj preamps the channels each had their own tubes, not sharing a twin triode for both channels like more recent ones. |