jessenator
Well-known member
*fruitlessly plots to fit a Troglodyte into a 1590B*
Meanwhile, I'm laying out boost circuits for 1590XX enclosures.*fruitlessly plots to fit a Troglodyte into a 1590B*
Is this from JLC? That solder mask looks a bit sloppy over some of those pads. Take C11 for example. It’ll work, but not the best finish.Got my wires crossed and replied to the wrong thread! I'm planning a twelve string tele build. Boot Strap pickups makes an alnico 3 set they call "original recipe".
This is what's actually on the workbench right now.
View attachment 109419
It's a JLC board. I'd agree, their tolerances are usually adequate if not tight. If you have any suggestions for design rules/tolerances/constraint settings in CAD, I'd love to hear them. I've got most things set to be twice what their stated minimum is.Is this from JLC? That solder mask looks a bit sloppy over some of those pads. Take C11 for example. It’ll work, but not the best finish.
I’d check the Gerbers and see what that solder mask is doing. It may something to do with the teardrop plugin. I don’t do them so I’m not sure if this is a known issue.It's a JLC board. I'd agree, their tolerances are usually adequate if not tight. If you have any suggestions for design rules/tolerances/constraint settings in CAD, I'd love to hear them. I've got most things set to be twice what their stated minimum is.
I ended up bending the legs of a 500k and it actually fit perfectly.At first I thought you were talking about the jacks being plastic, then I looked closer…
Have you considered using ATmedium1616 or maybe even ATbig16161? I think AThuge1616 would be overkill for sure.ATtiny1616 love! These things are tiny. Here's a dual relay board for combo soft switch action!
View attachment 109423
All rocking. No boxing.
View attachment 109425
Some relay code to go along with your tea and scones.
![]()
GitHub - szukalski/sheepylove-mcu: Code for a MCU based relay
Code for a MCU based relay. Contribute to szukalski/sheepylove-mcu development by creating an account on GitHub.github.com
"Eyo, chaina, we need a part that no one can service"I ended up bending the legs of a 500k and it actually fit perfectly.
Looking again at the boards more closely, I think it was just a trick of the light. All the pads and keep-outs look fine to me. That said, I will be double checking my design rules.I’d check the Gerbers and see what that solder mask is doing. It may something to do with the teardrop plugin. I don’t do them so I’m not sure if this is a known issue.
Do you run the clean up tracks and vias tool before generating prod files?
Ekzachary."Eyo, chaina, we need a part that no one can service"
"Say no more, fam"
"Also it needs to be so cheap so they buy a whole new product when it breaks"
"We gotchu, fam"
"Thanks chaina."
~every conversation for products made in the last 10–30 years
Looking sweet!ATtiny1616 love! These things are tiny. Here's a dual relay board for combo soft switch action!
View attachment 109423
All rocking. No boxing.
View attachment 109425
Some relay code to go along with your tea and scones.
![]()
GitHub - szukalski/sheepylove-mcu: Code for a MCU based relay
Code for a MCU based relay. Contribute to szukalski/sheepylove-mcu development by creating an account on GitHub.github.com
Awesomeness.ATtiny1616 love! These things are tiny. Here's a dual relay board for combo soft switch action!
View attachment 109423
All rocking. No boxing.
View attachment 109425
Some relay code to go along with your tea and scones.
![]()
GitHub - szukalski/sheepylove-mcu: Code for a MCU based relay
Code for a MCU based relay. Contribute to szukalski/sheepylove-mcu development by creating an account on GitHub.github.com
Actually, I did find a small collet from something that helped fill the gap from the larger hole. Just handed it back to him today and he’s totally happy with it. Even gave him a nicer knob with a brass fitting in it.Seriously, though @KR Sound, for a customer of course keep the thing as stock as possible.
For myself, there's room either side of the single-pot for the top-jacks, and I'd put in a small collet or similar to adapt an Alpha pot to the board/enclosure.
Looks awesome. What I like to do when text overlays an image is to cur out that part of the image itself. I expand the text a millimeter or so, then use that to chop out the image instead of just relying on an outline.View attachment 109471
The Octoking is done! An Octavia with extra controls, it seems, DIP switches and all. It fixes my #1 complaint with some other octave fuzzes, which is that they're too thin for my taste. Also stacks really nicely with other drives, as long as vol and drive are low enough to not make cause too much gain or noise.
I didn't hear a huge difference between Vintage and Glass, but I think there is a small difference so it's probably working fine. Fat is clearly more bass though. I did have an issue on first boxing where both the clean and drive signals were cutting out when I wiggled the toggle switch, but instead of a bad switch it turned out that two different 1uF film caps had a cold solder joint. Thankfully the scientific process of "poke it with my finger" helped me find the culprits, and after resoldering those it seems to work without issues.
I wish I would have used a bigger white outline since some of the text is hard to read, but to be fair it's easy to guess and not that important in the end.
I do more or less the same thing, because I duplicate the text, expand the one that is "behind" a bit, turn it into white, and merge all the color layer parts into one layer. That layer is then duplicated and turned into the white spot color (more or less - if there's pure black then that gets removed before turning it all into the spot color.Looks awesome. What I like to do when text overlays an image is to cur out that part of the image itself. I expand the text a millimeter or so, then use that to chop out the image instead of just relying on an outline.
Then you have the background color showing through or you can put a layer of white behind it. Here’s an example with “Volume” and “Tone”
View attachment 109473