Dear Quickie Fans,
I moved to a new home office arrangement and was rummaging about in my closet as I was thinking how to set up music and discovered that I still have a Quickie kit that I never built, including the PJCCS. I have a Quickie that I did build that I'm using and loving in the new setup (runs into a S.E.X. amp which powers credenza Zu Druids at plenty wonderful volume for baroque delights and acoustic jazz), but I will confess that staring at the batteries is not compelling. I have had fun in the past building things like DACs and headphone amps into unusual enclosures (a Duplo lego brick with a lego Bob the Builder sitting on top wearing a set of tiny headphones, a very tight aluminum enclosure, &c.). So I was thinking of finding an attractive enclosure that I could build into where the tubes would be on top but the batteries would be hidden inside, and I might place the switches and RCA plugs on the back or sides or...
So the question: if I mess around with the distances on the point-to-point wiring, do I need to worry? I'm not talking anything crazy here, but you can imagine a couple centimeters of point-to-point connections extending to, say, 6 or 8 centimeters, mostly for the power and switches and plugs. I get that I might need to insulate some of the wires if they risk hitting each other, but are the wiring lengths critical for things like resistance or noise or "impedence" (whatever that is -- Dammit, Jim, I'm a writer, not an electrical engineer.)
Thanks in advance for any advice.
__Roy
Berkeley, USA