I'll be putting cheap deals up there from time to time and pics of new pedals and stuff.
Posted: Wed May 19, 2010 4:23 pm
by matt.dines
absolutely stunning pedals.I really like the new enclosures too, been thinking im happy with all of my dirt boxes right now! not anymore!
can definatly see one of your pedals on my board the next few months.
Posted: Tue May 25, 2010 8:35 am
by timhulio
Cheers Matt.
Here's something else. Demo of the Jehovadrive by the Pineapster FX Militia!
[youtube][/youtube]
Posted: Tue May 25, 2010 8:44 am
by lorez
that sounds pretty cool Tim, love the William Blake graphics. Any more details?
Posted: Wed Jun 02, 2010 12:58 pm
by timhulio
Oh yep, the Jehovahdrives there's details a couple pages back. Loads of tasty stuff in these boxes, so complex I'm glad I only made seven of them!
"This pedal uses exactly the same hard to obtain parts as the originals: 2N404(A) germanium and 3N3565 silicon transistors, with 1N695 germanium clipping diodes"
Never heard of them.
Posted: Wed Jun 02, 2010 1:10 pm
by timhulio
Yuh, 3N- it's one better.
Well spotted, I've edited descriptions.
Posted: Tue Jun 08, 2010 8:05 am
by timhulio
I'm getting sent one of these Lehle-style whopping great mushroom switches as a free sample. Am well excited!
Now I gotta buy a stepped drill bit to make an hole big enough.
Mike Hill (not heard of him until a couple days ago, seems a Cornish kinda guy) uses something very similar in his custom stuff:
Posted: Tue Jun 08, 2010 8:17 am
by Mike
Is it SPST?
Posted: Tue Jun 08, 2010 8:20 am
by timhulio
Mike wrote:Is it SPST?
Momentary contact. I'm gonna use it to drive a latching relay for bypass.
Posted: Tue Jun 08, 2010 8:24 am
by Mike
haha. More than I could ever be arsed in monkeying around with. I'm busy enough just making pedals as it is to experiment with new technology.
Posted: Tue Jun 08, 2010 8:42 am
by timhulio
I was actually excited to build some working flip-flop circuits last week. Girlfriend thought I was nuts.
The chip it needs is CD4069, which costs 30p and latching relays can be had for £1.70 each or much cheaper in bulk. I'm intrigued because it blows open a whole world of sexy switches. Admittedly, that mushroom-headed switch costs £13.00!
Posted: Fri Jun 11, 2010 10:03 pm
by timhulio
After much fiddling and a pointer from a nice chap at Freestompboxes... tested, working and awesome!
This is first prototype from this morning. The board has changed a little above.
Posted: Sat Jun 12, 2010 4:42 am
by Haze
all of that for a switch?
Posted: Sat Jun 12, 2010 9:06 am
by timhulio
Haze wrote:all of that for a switch?
Switch and status indicator. It might seem a lot, but this board is actually pretty small (I should have got my thumb in the photo for comparison) and the cost of parts is less than £2.50. It's also reasonably quick to make, especially if I do them in batches.
Posted: Sat Jun 12, 2010 1:20 pm
by Haze
I can tell it shouldn't be too much bother to stuff one into an enclosure, just used to seeing 7-8 wires coming from a 3pdt. I'm guessing you can still use your millennium bypass dubrees with this?
Posted: Sat Jun 12, 2010 2:04 pm
by timhulio
Nope, this is instead of Millenium Bypass. In this method the board-mounted relay does the actual switching. Planning to use this board in effects which don't seem to get-on with MB, like the Shin-Ei Companion Fuzz.
In 'production' boards I'm certainly not socket-mounting the chip or the relay to save space, and using ceramic caps rather than polybox to save money. It is just a switching circuit, after all, and doesn't touch the audio path.