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Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Tue May 19, 2015 2:34 pm
by Bassus Sanguinis
:love:

Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Sun May 24, 2015 6:48 pm
by Faldoe
dminner wrote:Thanks man!

Here is sneak peak at some new stuff:

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Can you point the way to some etching tutorials? And what software do you use to make the designs? So awesome.

Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Mon May 25, 2015 9:50 am
by resincum
^ have you checked out Jwar's tutorial? it's like a 3 or 4 part series. pretty informative
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8OD0oTORIso[/youtube]

Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Mon May 25, 2015 11:04 am
by dminner
Faldoe wrote:
dminner wrote:Thanks man!

Here is sneak peak at some new stuff:

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Can you point the way to some etching tutorials? And what software do you use to make the designs? So awesome.


Thanks man. This is was the tutorial that got me started:

http://diy-guitar-effects.tumblr.com/etching

Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Tue May 26, 2015 2:09 pm
by LaoWiz
Some new fuzzies:

Foxx Tone Machine
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RAT
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Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Tue May 26, 2015 2:14 pm
by dminner
So awesome! I especially like the Rat

Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Tue May 26, 2015 2:18 pm
by DADGBD
HFS

"DIY projects" my ass. I lobby to have this thread re-titled: THE NEW STANDARD
I wish the big boys were making pedals half as sexy!

:group:

Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Tue May 26, 2015 2:42 pm
by hbombgraphics
that tone machine is the best

laowiz does such sick work

Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Tue May 26, 2015 3:49 pm
by mathias
Taught my brother to solder and he built up an opamp muff:

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(Sadly, the black knobs didn't work on the pot shafts, and when we used the little #1900-style fluted cream knobs, one of the set screws stripped out, so it has this odd knob combo)

I built up a Madbean Flabulanche but I used the wrong JFETs for the gain stages and it doesn't sound very good. Waiting for some 2n5457s and a J201 to get here from my parts place and then it'll get finished up. I should've got some knobs for this one, too.. oh well.
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The Flabulanche was supposed to be in this cool little black sparkle case but it didn't all fit with the 3-way toggle switch, so this will probably become a Foxx Tone Machine (because I have the Madbean PCB laying around) So instead the Flabulanche went into the big box green sparkle blemished case above.
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Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Tue May 26, 2015 9:50 pm
by ran_dizolph
Dammit! I thought I had sworn off acid etching once and for all, but you talented folks have reignited the flame!

Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Tue May 26, 2015 10:18 pm
by KaosCill8r
I'd like to give etching a try. But is it dangerous using them chemicals? I'm a bit clumsy. And also are there pens or markers that I can use to had draw the images I want to etch instead of the laser printed etching tranfer?

Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Tue May 26, 2015 10:33 pm
by bob the r0bot
There are conductive pens that you could theoretically use to draw one out on some insulating board, but I don't think they're intended for use much beyond drawing short jumpers, so I don't know how well they'd hold up.

Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Tue May 26, 2015 10:53 pm
by LaoWiz
Dudes! Acid etching is the shit!

All you need is a 50 dollar laser printer, some HP glossy presentation paper, photoshop or similar, an iron, a good respirator, a sanding block with 220grit wet/dry paper, some nice rubber gloves and some supplies. And it's better to do sober as I have stains all over my place.

I tried to do a vid tutorial awhile back but was too drunk. jwar's is good to check out. Once you get hang of doing transfers with the iron and do some trials you just get better at it like anything else. Do it, I'm sure many of us could chime in for troubleshooting/questions.

Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Wed May 27, 2015 10:18 am
by Jwar
Thanks for the plug. lol

My tutorial is VERY long. I don't like doing acid etching anymore, but admire it from afar. It's too much for me. I am tired of the chemicals. Plus a laser is so much more fun. lol

I do admire the shit out of you guys doing it though. I for one know it's not easy.

I have extra paper too that works magic...;)

Re: Let's see your finished DIY projects!

Posted: Sun May 31, 2015 11:43 pm
by culturejam
It's been a LONG time since I fully boxed up a pedal. I've built a shitload of boards lately, but nothing has made it all the way into a box in quite some time. I also recently got a vinyl plotter, so I wanted to see how it would work as a way to fancy up a pedal. Turns out it works pretty good for some things.

So the circuit is one of my all-time favorites. The good old Bazz Fuss, but with some built-in mods and a board-mounted footswitch. I put in parallel switching input cap and clipping diode selector. This would be a really great beginner project in 125B, as it is very tight for top-mount jacks in a 1590B. Or maybe two in a larger box would be fun (get your octave on). I original did this layout for BLMS, but we sort of dropped the ball on the project a few months back. Maybe it will show up as a product there soon, or maybe not.

So the vinyl worked great for larger text, but I ran into issues when trying to cut the control lettering. Might be that my blade has gotten dull from all the work I've been doing. But either way, I just ran with what worked. To protect the vinyl, I did three light coats of Mod Podge. I'm not crazy about textured look, but I didn't have the proper non-solvent clear coat spray on hand. Regular clear coat melts the vinyl.

The damn diode selector isn't working like it should, so I need to debug a bit. I made some last-minute changes mid-build and didn't have a way to test until it was complete. Input cap switch is great, however. From tight to wooly. Sounds great with humbuckers.


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These guts are not pretty. I don't have much of an excuse except that I'm very, very lazy, and my main focus was testing the graphics. It works and is sturdy, it just isn't artistic. :cool:

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And here you can see the crosshatch strokes of the Mod Podge.

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