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The term solid-state became popular at the beginning of the semiconductor era in the 1960s to distinguish this new technology. A semiconductor device works by controlling an electric current consisting of electrons or holes moving within a solid crystalline piece of semiconducting material such as silicon, while the thermionic vacuum tubes it replaced worked by controlling a current of ...
The McIntosh MC-2300 is a solid-state power amplifier which was built by the American high-end audio company McIntosh Laboratory between 1971 and 1980. [1] Jerry Garcia in 1987 with an MC-2300 in the lower-right corner of the picture. McIntosh produced the MC-2105 (with blue meters) and the MC-2100 (without) between 1969 and 1977.
MC250 solid state power amplifier, MAC1500 receiver 1967 MC2100, MC2105, MC2505 solid state power amplifiers 1968 MX112 solid-state tuner-preamplifier 1968 MC3500 tube amplifier 1970 ML1, ML2, ML4 loudspeaker line 1971 MC2300 power amplifier: 1972 MR78 tuner 1980 MC2500 power amplifier, XRT20 loudspeaker system 1985 MCD7000 CD player 1999-2000
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Vintage Series changed to a solid state pre-amp & a Master Volume (which is the easy way to tell if the amp has 6C10 pre-amp or not without removing the back panel to access the chassis), the solid state preamps and 6L6GC power tubes.
The range included one small tube-driven bass amp, the Bassman 20. There were also some solid-state amplifiers using the II moniker, such as the Harvard Reverb II. Other solid-state amps produced during the Rivera era included the Yale Reverb, Studio Lead, Stage Lead, London Reverb, Montreux, and a solid-state issue of the Showman.
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State Secrets Protection Act, a bill proposed in the U.S. Congress in 2008 Solid State Power Amplifier, a type of RF power amplifier that contains only solid-state (semiconductor) active devices See also