Is the tip of the tube cracked? That is such a tight squeeze with the jack!One of my friends dared me to design just the XLR preamp section of Nobelium into a 125B. So I said okay. Kept all film caps in the audio path to keep the sound as close to the original as possible.
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I think it's just a reflection. I don't see a 1/4" plug fitting in there, unless it's an optical illusion, though.Is the tip of the tube cracked? That is such a tight squeeze with the jack!
That's just the border of the getter flash and the clear tip, no cracks.Is the tip of the tube cracked? That is such a tight squeeze with the jack!
It's kind of an optical illusion because you don't see how much room you have in the z-dimension, the jacks absolutely fit in there. I've been doing layouts with exactly that much room for years.I think it's just a reflection. I don't see a 1/4" plug fitting in there, unless it's an optical illusion, though.
Yep, I figured you knew what you were doing.That's just the border of the getter flash and the clear tip, no cracks.
It's kind of an optical illusion because you don't see how much room you have in the z-dimension, the jacks absolutely fit in there. I've been doing layouts with exactly that much room for years.
At this point for any “how to” I go straight to YouTube, which is a lot more reliable.View attachment 76929
Slow learning about woods and finishes. Wish there was more straight forward info online these days and not ai bots talking in circles. Anyone know how to block them?
Started with a stain and a type of boiled linseed oil. But, basswood truly is too soft to call this good enough. It'll never survive. So next up after this cures, dewaxed shellac as a barrier coat then water based polyurethane. It's been hard sourcing this stuff. My hardware store here in Japan is very limited. I'll try my hand at mixing my own shellac. Next time I think I'll stay away from a basswood kit. The maple neck turn out great with just stain and oil.
I would have thought that to be mahogany and not basswood if you didn’t tell us. Never realized how close basswood looks to mahogany. For some reason I expected it to look more like poplar/maple etc.View attachment 76929
Slow learning about woods and finishes. Wish there was more straight forward info online these days and not ai bots talking in circles. Anyone know how to block them?
Started with a stain and a type of boiled linseed oil. But, basswood truly is too soft to call this good enough. It'll never survive. So next up after this cures, dewaxed shellac as a barrier coat then water based polyurethane. It's been hard sourcing this stuff. My hardware store here in Japan is very limited. I'll try my hand at mixing my own shellac. Next time I think I'll stay away from a basswood kit. The maple neck turn out great with just stain and oil.
Came out great. That's a very cute device
It is cute, isn’t it?Came out great. That's a very cute device
That stinks.I don't know about you, but my one-off projects almost always looks like s#!t by the time everything works exactly right... Looks like I desperately need a new pickguard
Lesson learned: don't put something with a headphone amp and lots of gain too close to pickups. EMI produced by the current flowing through the headamp traces couples magnetically into pickups, then goes back to circuit input -> positive feedback -> squeeeaaallll! Unplug the headphones -> squeal gone, since no current is flowing through that path. But where's the fun with no headphones? Can't play while on a floater in the pool! I had to move the whole circuit as far from the pickups as I could. I tried mu-metal shielding before. It helped, but not completely. Nothing beats distance.
I had thought about that, but I want the controls where I can easily get to them and don't want to separate them from the main board. That would require too much wiring. I'm actually happy that I had to move the electronics, the controls ended up in a better place than before. All I need is to start over with a new pickguard and do a neat job the second time around.That stinks.
Route out the back behind the bridge ad drop it in there! Then your headphones plug in just between the strap lock and input. Going behind the bridge should be easy to drill to, then run the wire through the ground wire hole to the main cavity.
Bonus points if you install one of those resistive touch strips for volume control!
That's a nice pink!