![]() ![]() Fortunately for my Mastercard, but unfortunately for the voice inside screaming “Buy It!!!” I just can’t. So…still in the ‘justify the purchase’ mode, I am trying to justify why Crossover Symmetry is worth $300. 3 pairs of Crossover Cords – Choose Novice, Competitor, or Elite resistance package.So, if the Crossover Symmetry package was even $150, it would likely be in my gym right now.Īfter looking at what you get for the money (taken directly from the website): I am fine to pay extra for cool factor, for brand, or even if it is a company that I want to support. Sitting at my laptop looking at a cool piece of fitness equipment, I can easily convince myself that this is the one thing between me and a 300 pound snatch…even if it is simply a new pair of shorts. I am highly skilled at justifying any purchase of exercise equipment. It is important to point out that I am not averse to overpaying for things that I like especially when they relate to working out. With all this in mind, I was ready to pull the trigger the moment I saw Crossover Symmetry until I clicked to shop and saw the novice package started at $240 while the Elite and Competitor Packages bumped the price tag up to $280. While I am acutely aware of the “little things” I should be doing to maintain healthy shoulders, many of those things are simply not as fun as lifting heavy weight overhead. If you go to their website, you will quickly recognize that they have done an excellent job at packaging and positioning this product.Īs someone who has struggled with a cranky right shoulder for over 25 years, I am always open to anything that will keep my shoulders in a better mood. But to ship it to Brilon and back would cost over three hundred dollars.Many of you have probably see or heard of Crossover Symmetry and their promise to build bullet proof shoulders through their combination of exercise bands and exercise protocols. Thanks for any help you could provide, Kevin. I choose to preserve the works of electronic art made in the USA in the 70's and eighties. In a world where the choice is to have throwaway electronic trash or extremely expensive new equipment. It's round, black and domed, about the size of a pencil eraser. The voltage across this part is different for channel 2 low pass than the others. Is it logical that the problem is in the channel 2 low pass section? If that is so, might I simply acquire the parts for that section, if possible, and replace them all? And do you still have any of them you could sell me? I suspect the small black part between the power supply trace and the large IC. Meanwhile could I ask a couple easy questions? If I'm seeing DC in the audio input on channel 2 and the low pass output on channel 2. Someone with whom you have a relationship. If you have a technician in mind out there in Berkley that might be best. ![]() But he was averse to committing to repair it without a schematic or part numbers to work with. ![]() I took the crossover to a tech here in Toledo. Could that 'cap' be the problem? or somewhere else in the circuit? Also the numbers are gone so how can I identify this part? and the voltage 'across' that first cap is different, and different by about the voltage I'm seeing at the RCA jacks. The question is this, The power supply is the same. There are two "orange drop" 'caps' on each channel across which I read near identical voltages. These power sources then feed into some IC's, on which I'm truly lost. The third component on each channel may be a cap? Two leads, cylindrical with a dome shaped top? Across these 'caps' I read 16.04 on the good channel and 9.75 VDC on the bad channel. I have supply voltages to three components for each channel. So the voltage must be leaking through from the power supply. This is with the crossover powered up but not connected to anything in the way of an input or output. On the low pass output for channel 2 I read 12vdc. Problem is on the channel 2 + input I read 6 VDC. I measured the voltages out of the power supply and they seem fine. I have one of these crossovers with a problem. ![]() I'm an expert with racing engines in sports cars. Hello, If anyone is listening might they answer a question? I'm a real amateur at this so pardon if my descriptions are a bit unprofessional. ![]()
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