Our friendly neighborhood sparrow hawk dropped in to our garden today clutching a huge pigeon. It must have been starving. The pigeon was alive for a while, but as it was sure to die anyway we thought it best to let nature take its course and save the hawk from going hungry and maybe dying too. It spent about an hour shredding the pigeon up like a Peking duck. Then for a display finale the hawk flew off with the carcass, only to deposit it atop our back fence with its wings splayed out like the cop in Silence of the Lambs. By the time we discovered the last bit though I'd already been to take these photos off the camera so dashed upstairs to get it. I came marching back up the garden as proud as a little toy soldier, only to find that the hawk, or the neighbour's cat, had taken it away already. Gutted... it had been.
Monday, 28 November 2011
Saturday, 26 November 2011
CAD: Meter-Board 'Basso Profilo' version
Chopped the LEDs down, they now sit 2mm off the board. The resistors are tilted at 45 degrees and leave ample headroom for the thickness of the faceplate. The ribbon header also leaves some headroom for the faceplate, about 3mm, so moving it to the other side of the PCB is unnecessary, it would nearly double the height of the board.
That's 8mm to the top of the LEDs, so subtract from it the faceplate thickness if they are to sit flush. Probably 2mm for alloy, 3mm for plastic.
Wednesday, 23 November 2011
CAD Model: RAYS TE37 Alloy Wheel
There just doesn't seem to be any guides for car modeling in proper CAD and no full model samples to download, just 2D blocks. I'm fed up of picking apart imported .3ds surface-meshes so, as I get my head around TurboCAD more, I've started to devise some basic ways to make my own. It might take a bit longer, but new solids look so much smoother than the meshes and are infinitely easier to edit and render.
Thought I'd start with something reasonably simple like an alloy wheel, so I've been working on this 1:1 model of the almighty RAYS Racing TE37 [19x10.5], which you will recognise if you're into tuned cars. My work with curved shapes has taken a serious leap forward in this sketch and I've picked up a few rendering skills too, like the decal-wrapping, but I think moving it into formZ or Blender [or Bunkspeed hopefully if I can get it] is needed for a pro finish.
Will post a tutorial soon.
Friday, 18 November 2011
WickOSC VCO Schematic nearly complete
Finally sat down and worked this one out on eagle. It's the setup I have at the minute on breadboard plus a sawtooth output and better PWM (old PWM output was out of phase with others and wrong amplitude). Gonna wire up the modifications on sunday and add the 1V/Oct converter to the Schematic (if it works okay) then it's board design time. Planning to have two of these, Plus a third slightly modified LFO version and a white noise generator all on the one board.
Next stop after that....Moog style filters!
Next stop after that....Moog style filters!
Thursday, 17 November 2011
Master Meter in DJ Controller Case - First Design
A quick render just to show some ribbons and case placement. This first design has the meter-board mounted directly to the back of the faceplate with rods. The LEDs sit flush to the front of the faceplate in a rectangle hole with about 0.1 of a mm around them.
Note: I've put the headers facing in opposite directions so the ribbon runs top-top, bottom-bottom without having to be crossed over, which is needed if the headers are facing the same way above and below one another. The latter would probably be the most efficient way, shortest ribbon routes and all that, but I haven't figured out how to have them cross over in CAD yet. Also, the ribbon routes from the meter/fader combos run front-to-back so it might be better having the logic-board that way round after all... jeez so much to consider.
The next design, coming up coming in, will have the meter-board mounted with rods to its own bespoke faceplate, which will mount onto a bigger aperture in the main faceplate. This way the meter-board can be lifted out separately from the front of the case like the crossfader unit [also on its way, i'm using a Panasonic EWAP1, dunno what yours are]. This might be the best bet for the meter/fader combo units too.
essayyy
Tuesday, 15 November 2011
LED Master Meter CAD Model
Sunday, 13 November 2011
Master LED Meter breakout
Saturday, 12 November 2011
Funk The Matrix : Case Design
Yeah I've probably gone wildly over on depth, but the PCBs stack vertically behind one another.
Friday, 11 November 2011
Funk The Matrix : All Analogue Pattern Sequencer
Control-board and test faceplate, component details to follow. As you can see the slide-switches don't come up as high as the bush-mount on the rotary-switches, any suggestions East on some risers or something?
Sunday, 6 November 2011
Friday, 4 November 2011
Thursday, 3 November 2011
Wednesday, 2 November 2011
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)