OP
jeremy_cherokee
Well-known member
Colorado was great - the drive home, not so much. We got stuck in a nasty snow storm from North Platte to almost Kearney - so that was fun. Other than that, we had a great time!

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Nice bike! You seem to be living up to the old adage about what "HD" really stands for... that says no matter what you want to do to your bike, its going to cost at least a hundred dollars.
Awesome work on your projects!!
I travel every year to Knoxville Iowa for the Sprint Car races so I am familiar with what you say about Iowa "corn and beans".
Enjoyed reading your thread today and look forward to your adventures in the future.
Love what you are doing in your basement, I have a very similar situation I need to address. Gotta start a build thread on my projects!
Basement looks awesome. Please keep sharing pics. Looking forward to seeing the entertainment center come together. Nice work!
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And one last pic:
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Question for the fine readers of GJ here:
What do you guys/gals do to keep or tools and supplies organized during these big projects?? See that poker table full of **** on it?? yeah- that's what I'm using. And it's not nearly as effective as I think something with a little more thought could be.
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Jeremy, several years ago my wife and kids gave me this:
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It sat unused for years... then I had a project like yours, well, not that grand, but one that required more than just a handful of tools. I put all the tools in it I needed and it worked great! Now I keep a certain amount of tools in the pockets all the time and it holds my Stanley short job saw. The main pocket gets emptied and filled for various projects. Right now it's collecting all the tools that were scattered in my garage, but they will be brought back to their correct homes in tool cabinet or my inside job bucket. I have one of those 5 gallon bucket organizers with pockets on the inside and outside. It keeps all of my most commonly used household project tools in it all the time. It tucks under my workbench. Both are great, but I use the Husky tool organizer a lot more.
And awesome job on the basement! I'm very thankful my wife doesn't look over my shoulder when I'm going through threads or yours would have made a lot more work for me.![]()
You’re into Klipsch, wood, sketching wooden furniture, servers and stuff? Freaking subscribed.
Btw, I’m building a house to store 3 cars, a machine room with a 12U rack hosting mostly pfsense, QubeOS and CAT6 structures wiring all over the place to support my paranoid level VPNed ubiquiti waps and cameras.
Also building the furniture for my diy mid-century like record console with modern turntable linked to tube amp, marantz receiver and guess where else? Klipsch bookshelf speakers of course.
Awesome taste in everything buddy!
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Sweet, but Klipsch made his name with his horn speakers... You guys have got to make some room for a set of LaScalas or any other set of his horns.
rodpoa, if you use an OPPO Blu-Ray, you can send each channel output to a monoblock amp so you can have a combination of tube and solid state in a 2-ch/surround sound setup...
Also, keep an eye out for nicer, better built vintage consoles. A lot of them have room for a better TT inside and you can modify them to really decouple the speaker vibrations from the TT Plinth. I drew up plans for a larger MCM inspired console several years ago but never got around to building mine. I may build it in the future, haven't decided if I will or not. At one time I had 4 consoles. I'm down to just one now and it may be going away once the basement is remodeled because it's a cheap Sears Silvertone model. It was the one my wife liked the best and wanted to keep, but sonically, it's too light and made from too much masonite-like material so I'm not using it as a proper audio console. It's just a piece of furniture.
I used to do a LOT of DIYaudio projects... I was doing commissioned builds and restoring/tuning a lot of vintage orthodynamic headphones for guys all over the world... a little too much actually and burned myself out. I'll be getting back to it once my basement remodel and workbench are finished. I have one last commissioned build to do, a TOTL FirstWatt F5 amp for a former customer friend who retired. The F5 amp is a 25w/ch Class A amp. 54w/ch clipping, dissipates 68W of heat. My favorite piece of kit though is an AudioSector Non-Oversampling USB DAC. One of ten kits AudioSector put together with BlackGate caps and TOTL components. FLAC files through it into a great hybrid headphone amp are just amazing. I have two sets of speakers to build for my basement and I can't wait to hear the AS NOS DAC feeding those speakers.
Since you guys are geeks, checkout the diyaudio.com forums. The members there are a lot like GJ'ers, very supportive and helpful. Plenty of info to get started and a lot of guys handle noob questions as long as you have used the search function first but still have questions.
And Jeremy, the bathroom looks great! I love doing tile work, but in our old house, it's a PITA because every wall and every floor isn't square, flat, or level...

Good stuff - I am not too far away over by Iowa City. I have in-laws in Gilbert.
Love the posts - keep it up.
Thanks! I haven't heard of QubeOS before - what does it do? I've got my VPN just isolated to a few VMs at the moment but I'm thinking about expanding it. Can never be too paranoid. I just got my first ubiquity stuff for my birthday. I got one of the cameras. Unfortunately I'm having a networking issue with the VLANs between switches. I'm pretty confident that the issue is the cheap D-Link I have in between the Ubiquity tough switch and my core switch isn't properly transmitting the tagging information. So I've got another switch to try but then the basement happened.
What I've noticed is, if you are like me and like to host your own stuff for the sake of learning, reddit/r/selfhosted is a rabbit hole that you may never come out of. I'll spend an hour or so on there and then all the sudden I need a new VM host because I'm out of resources. Lots of cool stuff on there.
The DIY audio stuff is next on my list of things I want to get into. It's always interested me but I haven't had the time to dive in.
Thanks for reading!!
Thanks for the site - I've been looking for somewhere to go to start getting into this stuff. I remember the first set of Klipsch I heard in that friend's basement and I've been hooked ever since. It was just the most precise set of speakers I've heard. I've really wanted to get into the DIY audio stuff, though. So now that you've thrown a bunch of audio-nerd stuff at me I'm going to be forced to start doing some research so I better understand what all that means [emoji481]
Guys this thread is seriously awesome!
BoilermakerFan,
sorry I don’t know how to use this app decently. I’m replying through Tapatalk and don’t know how to refer you guys to my build thread.
I posted today a pic of the Wren record console which is more or less what I’m trying to replicate.
The problem is that I’d like to craft a low but wide wood cabinet for aesthetics purposes. The thing with this setup is that I can’t fit too much hardware.
The furniture is supposed to please my misses as room decor as well. Therefore it is not supposed to be the main set of the house. The general idea is to hold a project turntable plugged to a yaqin tube phono preamp. From there all the amplification will be done in a modern marantz slim receiver. Two klipsch books will work as stereo set up front but the receiver can go full surround for movies with 2 smaller surrounds, a central and the sub on the floor. The only media source except for the project tt will be my beloved Apple TV plugged with toslink.
That’s all the space - and money - I have now.
In the garage though there will be a full analog set with vintage hardware, mixer, pre, power, ancient turn table, a Cambridge Audio DAC connecting an old MacBook white plugged via toslink playing MQA from Tidal and again tube DAC with headphone amp for grado earsets. Everything from 70’s!
Finally I still have space in the attic to build a proper sound sealed movie room with a nice projector. However no money for that yet.
Individual mono drivers is way out of my league for now while I’m still building the house. OPPO sources are definitely on the list though side by side with my bang olufsen wall mounted CD player.
If you’d like to give me some ideas, may I ask you to search out for my thread and maybe share some pics of your record consoles to not clutter Jeremy’s thread any further if that’s not too much of a trouble?
Jeremy,
Qubes is a totally virtualized Linux distro. For instance, if you open a new tab in your browser you have a new VM. One VM can be Windows, another MacOS, a third Tails. You can VPN your setup by using in one of the VMs the dual network VM distei called Whoonix as gateway connected to a TAILS VM routing everything through ToR and finally plugged to a pfSense router with AES-NI for instant VPN package decryption on hardware level. Not even NSA will break through. Sounds excessive but with the pfSense box and Qubes with pre-installed Woonix you won’t even notice performance degradation. Killer setup with the lightness of windows running on a fresh laptop.
Please check it out: https://www.qubes-os.org/doc/whonix/
It is nothing short of amazing!
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Man you’re in trouble. If you are a bit like me, new research topics can become absolute obsessions.
Last time I wanted to buy a pocket knife I’ve spent literally months researching blade manufacturing process, grades of steel, opening mechanisms and all things knife related. Ended up with a boker kwaiken mini [emoji3]
Regarding the ubiquity stuff, I like everything fro them. I don’t like automation stuff as it makes me feel a bit spoiled and lazy but I do intend to install a smarthings diy automation hub simply to integrate motion detection of your very same ubiquity cameras with door and fibaro motion sensors. With multiple sources of data, you can build perimeter breach scenarios to avoid false alarms and ensure reliability.
The automation will also be used to trigger light and strobe alerts per demand as the intruder progresses through the electronic layers of the perimeter. The last layer though is obviously planned to be the final deterrent of the bad element’s advance and therefore, extremely low tech [emoji3]
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Thanks! I haven't heard of QubeOS before - what does it do? I've got my VPN just isolated to a few VMs at the moment but I'm thinking about expanding it. Can never be too paranoid. I just got my first ubiquity stuff for my birthday. I got one of the cameras. Unfortunately I'm having a networking issue with the VLANs between switches. I'm pretty confident that the issue is the cheap D-Link I have in between the Ubiquity tough switch and my core switch isn't properly transmitting the tagging information. So I've got another switch to try but then the basement happened.
What I've noticed is, if you are like me and like to host your own stuff for the sake of learning, reddit/r/selfhosted is a rabbit hole that you may never come out of. I'll spend an hour or so on there and then all the sudden I need a new VM host because I'm out of resources. Lots of cool stuff on there.
The DIY audio stuff is next on my list of things I want to get into. It's always interested me but I haven't had the time to dive in.
Thanks for reading!!
Thanks for the site - I've been looking for somewhere to go to start getting into this stuff. I remember the first set of Klipsch I heard in that friend's basement and I've been hooked ever since. It was just the most precise set of speakers I've heard. I've really wanted to get into the DIY audio stuff, though. So now that you've thrown a bunch of audio-nerd stuff at me I'm going to be forced to start doing some research so I better understand what all that means![]()
Guys this thread is seriously awesome!
BoilermakerFan,
sorry I don’t know how to use this app decently. I’m replying through Tapatalk and don’t know how to refer you guys to my build thread.
I posted today a pic of the Wren record console which is more or less what I’m trying to replicate.
The problem is that I’d like to craft a low but wide wood cabinet for aesthetics purposes. The thing with this setup is that I can’t fit too much hardware.
The furniture is supposed to please my misses as room decor as well. Therefore it is not supposed to be the main set of the house. The general idea is to hold a project turntable plugged to a yaqin tube phono preamp. From there all the amplification will be done in a modern marantz slim receiver. Two klipsch books will work as stereo set up front but the receiver can go full surround for movies with 2 smaller surrounds, a central and the sub on the floor. The only media source except for the project tt will be my beloved Apple TV plugged with toslink.
That’s all the space - and money - I have now.
In the garage though there will be a full analog set with vintage hardware, mixer, pre, power, ancient turn table, a Cambridge Audio DAC connecting an old MacBook white plugged via toslink playing MQA from Tidal and again tube DAC with headphone amp for grado earsets. Everything from 70’s!
Finally I still have space in the attic to build a proper sound sealed movie room with a nice projector. However no money for that yet.
Individual mono drivers is way out of my league for now while I’m still building the house. OPPO sources are definitely on the list though side by side with my bang olufsen wall mounted CD player.
If you’d like to give me some ideas, may I ask you to search out for my thread and maybe share some pics of your record consoles to not clutter Jeremy’s thread any further if that’s not too much of a trouble?
Jeremy, kudos on the massive basement build! I’m in the midst of the same sort of project, taking a 100yr old basement into the dedicated theater realm. My projector raise project also turned into a beam “flush install” and projector ceiling well to get it more or less flush to my low ceiling. I’m a former IT analyst with a few pfsense builds running thingsBe careful on the automation side as it’s a massive rabbit hole! I’ve been posting a fair bit on my build thread with regard to the theater project and automation...
pfsense is probably my favorite router OS. It allows you to do complicated stuff in the easiest way possible. The automation stuff is going to be ...... expensive. So at least I've got a financial block for a little while to keep me from the rabbit hole.This is a very thorough garage build. Thanks for the ideas.
My username on diyaudio.com is the same as here... Been a member there for years and a site supporter, but I haven't really been back on there in about five years (told ya' I got really burned out)... they're doing a major upgrade soon so the timing will be good. I'm sure all the pics in my threads there are dead. I was using photobucket and deleted everything just before their fees went live... I have non-disclosure agreements with several high end amp builders. I got to do development and torture testing for a few headphone amps. That put me in the Good Ol' Boys network so I scored some really hard to get components for my builds. Rare power and signal transistors for the most part, but I also chased down a set of rare MWT 6V6GT tubes through those connections and found a matched quad in Switzerland.
I have far more components than I need for building my stuff, so when you're ready to build and want to build an amp I have parts for, I'll hook you up with a parts kit. I bought the parts in bulk around 2010 or so in a closed group buy for about a half dozen guys around the world. We took advantage of the huge piece price discounts so I got most of my parts for 1/10-1/20th the cost of a single piece. I just charge what I paid for the parts... back in 2010.
When you're ready to get into DIY audio, shoot me a DM and we'll go from there. I'll send you links to some other good sites of members from diyaudio plus a link to a nice, affordable soldering station. I'll be getting back to my audio builds this winter after my workbench and basement are finished.
rodpoa,
I'm following your build.I'm traveling for work tonight and I'll be back home tomorrow. I'll see what I can dig up. I'm on a crappy hotel WiFi so there is a lot of lag. So give me a few days and watch for a DM.
I have a Project 1.2 TT from 1998. It does a good job, but I'm looking forward to when my son is either in HS or out of the house to upgrade to a Rega. We call my son Crash McDaniels because he tends to break everything accidentally. My Project TT is still running a Grado Green cartridge because I won't put the Grado Gold on it until I figure out a way to keep it safe from Crash.
And guys, DENWOOD is the man when it comes to automation!
I went down that path in 2000, wifey hated the "complicated" lighting so I took it out, but thanks to Denwood I am looking at HUE. I think it will easy for my wife to just flip light switches, but give me additional control when I want it.
. I think that by then I should have my projects caught up and I should be able to focus my attention again on something new. You'll definitely be hearing from me when I'm ready to go that direction!So this post has me doing a whole bunch of Googling to understand all the audio information. I'm still very new to the higher end audio stuff, but you've given me a lot of terms that will inevitably end up with me going down a whole new rabbit hole!
So Qubes is a hypervisor of sorts with a focus on security. Interesting. Definitely going to have to take a look at that AND Whoonix - if it integrates with pfsense then I'm game for that for sure.
Very cool. The home automation is the next step for me. Taking it by baby steps so my wallet can recover from the greatly overblown budget that has been the basement.
Minor Update
Over the weekend i was able to get all the basement wainscoting varnished. Turned out pretty good. I could probably go over it again with a higher grit sandpaper to make it even better, but honestly, I think it's pretty damn good ... and i'm in project burn-out mode right now.
I also got the projector screen moved up into the ceiling. That was more work than I was hoping but ended up looking nice and I think it'll be better in the long run.
Finally, I got all the entertainment center varnished tonight and the quarter round trim - the first coat anyway. Hoping the second coat will be enough tomorrow and then Thursday I'm hoping to get the tile sealer put in. If that all goes to plan, I should be able to start putting the entertainment center in by this weekend and start getting stuff hooked up. VERY excited for that!
My username on diyaudio.com is the same as here... Been a member there for years and a site supporter, but I haven't really been back on there in about five years (told ya' I got really burned out)... they're doing a major upgrade soon so the timing will be good. I'm sure all the pics in my threads there are dead. I was using photobucket and deleted everything just before their fees went live... I have non-disclosure agreements with several high end amp builders. I got to do development and torture testing for a few headphone amps. That put me in the Good Ol' Boys network so I scored some really hard to get components for my builds. Rare power and signal transistors for the most part, but I also chased down a set of rare MWT 6V6GT tubes through those connections and found a matched quad in Switzerland.
I have far more components than I need for building my stuff, so when you're ready to build and want to build an amp I have parts for, I'll hook you up with a parts kit. I bought the parts in bulk around 2010 or so in a closed group buy for about a half dozen guys around the world. We took advantage of the huge piece price discounts so I got most of my parts for 1/10-1/20th the cost of a single piece. I just charge what I paid for the parts... back in 2010.
When you're ready to get into DIY audio, shoot me a DM and we'll go from there. I'll send you links to some other good sites of members from diyaudio plus a link to a nice, affordable soldering station. I'll be getting back to my audio builds this winter after my workbench and basement are finished.
rodpoa,
I'm following your build.I'm traveling for work tonight and I'll be back home tomorrow. I'll see what I can dig up. I'm on a crappy hotel WiFi so there is a lot of lag. So give me a few days and watch for a DM.
I have a Project 1.2 TT from 1998. It does a good job, but I'm looking forward to when my son is either in HS or out of the house to upgrade to a Rega. We call my son Crash McDaniels because he tends to break everything accidentally. My Project TT is still running a Grado Green cartridge because I won't put the Grado Gold on it until I figure out a way to keep it safe from Crash.
And guys, DENWOOD is the man when it comes to automation!
I went down that path in 2000, wifey hated the "complicated" lighting so I took it out, but thanks to Denwood I am looking at HUE. I think it will easy for my wife to just flip light switches, but give me additional control when I want it.
Pics!!!
Man, you're scary. This is too much pro for me. 'A' level game. I'm more in the trying to choose a good cost benefit hardware and plug everything together level I guess.
I mentioned earlier the full vintage analog set I have which is today my current TT setup that I use every week specially when I help the ms. to cookThis one while is stereo only has 4 big speakers from the 70's. You know those horrible wooden boxes with passive membranes. I listen to it, I like the vintage like sound it makes, but quality wise I'm aware it was crappy before, it is crappier today. Maybe these could be candidates to a diy revamp with better crossovers, probably new air vents, twitter, I don't know. At least they are big, very big. Exactly like those old JBL speakers. It means I'm not short of space for improvements.
As Jeremy said about the reddit threads, I don't think it is safe to pursue your tips into the diy amp audio world as we may never find the way out again
Gladly somehow I was never bitten by the automation bug. I'm a computer engineer and probably because I do work with large enterprises business architecture I don't like that much of technology outside of the office. I don't mind walking over the light switch a bit. This is why I'm into analog audio, cigars, whisky and carburetors I think. Security is a different subject. I'm one of those doomsday crazies who think the more the better. I operate with plan b and contingencies for all things in lifeThat's why I'm looking into automation hardware for security purposes.
I will start reading everything from DENWOOD now! Thanks for the tip!
Ha ha ha! There is a reason why I have the tag line Too Many Hobbies, Not Enough Time in my signature.
But I also started DIY audio a complete noob. I asked tons of questions, read 3 or 4 blogs religiously, read thread after thread on the forums, and then asked a lot more questions. I did this for YEARS. And there are a lot of rabbit holes in DIY audio you can fall down... I tried to watch where I stepped, but still inadvertently found a few and fell... The neat thing about audio amps is that there really isn't much new out there. It's just taking different parts of different architectures and tweaking them or recombining them. A company might promote something totally new, but when the circuit is finally leaked, it's just a tweak or mix of something older, which was tweaked from something older yet, and so on... Hell, the latest phase a few years ago in the ultra high end audiophile market was cleaning up circuits designed in the late 1910s and early 1920s for large theaters to work with modern sources in smaller venues, i.e., our houses! These were large SET setups and the vintage tubes cost US$80K-US$130K a piece because they are so rare! This was being done by a small group of guys around the world. The internet makes the Earth a very small place when you find the right place to hang out and discuss things. That was a cool rabbit hole to fall down.
Pics will come tonight I'm hoping as I am going to try and get the entertainment center sitting where it should be finally. I think I'm going to have to tweak my wainscoting a little bit to make this work, but I'm hoping it won't be too bad. I would say my automation focus, right now, is much more on security than anything else. I'm not a big fan of having my information sent out to companies - so I won' do anything until I find something I can host and keep contained. But, knowing myself, once I start going down that path then I'll likely start getting it a little more advanced.
That's what I expect to do. I'll start asking a LOT of questions and then slowly find something that gets me excited and start moving down that path. Hopefully the bank account has at least a few months to recover before I make it that far ...
Well, that's the nice thing about DIY... first you can buy the boards... then the components as budget allows... then an enclosure, or repurpose old radios like I do... then the little stuff you inevitably forget to order...
I didn't buy the power transformer for one of my projects (a phonostage for my turntable) until last year when I needed to order the $3 in parts to fix the free 58" TV... I added it to the order to reach the free shipping requirement. I think I still have two power transformers I need to buy for a couple of amps that I have all of the other parts for. And then there is expensive iron I have to buy for an all tube amp I want to build... I'll break that up into manageable chunks when the time comes to actually build it.
I like your nerd stuff even though I don't understand 90% of what you post. Being exposed to the "language" is an education and I enjoy learning something new.
Jeremy, would you believe I lived in Roland from about 1990 to 1993? Middle school and freshman year of highschool. Really nice little town
Nice work on your projects.
I think just exposing yourself to the environment is the first step. When I'm about to embark on a new project, I go to reddit or some other source and just start looking at what everyone else is doing. That gives me a lot of vocabulary. When I don't understand something, I research it then start looking more in depth at those topics back at my initial source. That is how I've learned much of what I know and I think it gives a deeper understanding of the topic.
What a small world! It's a tiny town but so far we really like it. Really quiet, cheap taxes, affordable housing, and the people have all been nice so far. Thanks for reading!
Nice - it's nice to see that you can break it up and buy it as you need it/can afford it. Excited to start going down that path
Oh, when you get started, DO NOT BUY ANY HEATSINKS. I have hundreds of them! I forget what I paid for them but it was like 25% of what they cost on Mouser or Digi-Key. A friend who has the other one of two amps like mine lived in Dallas and scored the tallest versions of all the common heat sinks used in DIY audio for dirt cheap. I think he bought 500 of each size so I bought at least 100 of each size from him. Honestly, I way over bought, but they were so cheap I couldn't pass it up.
And the walnut top looks great.
That’s just awesome to teach the little one how to clean, handle electronics with care and be gentle around the server equipment. I really liked you assistant!
The rest is very nice as well. You have a very good taste.
I missed a bit your car updates as well
Btw, did you cabled the house or are you mostly relying on wireless? Is there any sort of structured cabling? My box of shielded cat6 just arrived
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One of the first things I did when I moved in was run CAT5e throughout the house. I could have done CAT5, but I had access to free CAT5e so went with that. I have wifi, too, but don't use it when I don't have to. Every room in the house besides the bathrooms has a network jack and I made 5 pulls to the garage.
It's nice to see the little man is getting interested in it. My daughter is usually a great help, too, but she was out with mom that day.
XJ Update
I also forgot to add that after about a MONTH of my XJ being down, I FINALLY got it back running a week and a half ago. Little man and I were driving home one day and it just died on the interstate. I was convinced it was the fuel pump because that fuel pump has about 185k on it and that's what it felt like. We towed it home and I did a fuel pressure check and it still had 50 psi (35-45 is within spec for the XJs). We tried the cam sensor, the crank sensor, the coil pack, and a WHOLE bunch of other random things and nothing would get it to start. It would crank, we had spark, we had fuel, we had air, but we couldn't get it to start.
Finally we were messing with putting the coil pack on or something and we noticed the the oil pump shaft had a scrape mark on it around the little clamp that holds it in. We pulled that out and it was completely seized up. I have no idea how that didn't destroy my cam but it doesn't appear to have done any damage to the engine. I bought a new oil pump shaft (not an easy thing to find, apparently) and that did the trick. Really glad to have the work horse back up and running!