![]() ![]() When this light dims and then cuts off, you flip the CD and repeat the protocol for the other side. After the red power button is pushed and the CD placed inside the well, the white "erase" button lights up green when engaged and triggers the internal voltage that creates the circular magnetic field underneath the disc. Thankfully, the package arrived a few days later so we can leave my hindquarters out of this equation.įurutech's degauss cycle for the RD-1 (patented in Japan, Taiwan and the US) lasts approximately 10 seconds per side while the new RD-2 ( externally identical except for a new silver finish) takes 20. Otherwise - seeing that Stereophile's review of the RD-1 dates back to somewhere in 2000 (missed that one) - I'd be more jack-assed than in. But no, I wasn't.ĭid I want to try his personal unit while he took off on vacation? Seemingly in dire need to up my hipness quotient to levels befitting a jacked-in reviewer, I hastily said yes. I had - a hip, all two of 'em, thank you very much. But, Dave retorted out loud, was I hip to Furutech's CD demagnetizer that now constitutes the second half of his daily CD resurrection ritual? In his opinion, it bettered any comparable libations (what the heck do they drink in the snow?). Today, he agreed that the Walker Audio Vivid optical CD enhancer I had unceremoniously but excitedly dubbed " the shit" worked as described. Dave had followed my reviews over some time. Our kind eventually migrates into even the most idyllic and hitherto unpolluted places). It was Dave Sturdevant, ardent fellow 'phile and music lover in chilly and remote Juneau, Alaska. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |