rwl
Well-known member
I've started making a modest number of pedals for sale at a local guitar store - dropping off 3-4 at a time. I'm doing this to basically try to break even on the hobby, use up spare boards and parts, etc.
I really enjoy soldering, and don't mind placing resistors, capacitors, ICs, transistors or pots. On the other hand, I dislike wiring - measuring, cutting, stripping, and often applying some heatshrink. LEDs that need a lead of wire are the worst. Likewise I don't really like placing knobs onto pots with their fiddly tiny Allan nuts.
For those of you making a number of pedals by hand, do you have any tips? I'll start with two recent ones:
I really enjoy soldering, and don't mind placing resistors, capacitors, ICs, transistors or pots. On the other hand, I dislike wiring - measuring, cutting, stripping, and often applying some heatshrink. LEDs that need a lead of wire are the worst. Likewise I don't really like placing knobs onto pots with their fiddly tiny Allan nuts.
For those of you making a number of pedals by hand, do you have any tips? I'll start with two recent ones:
- I got a 3D printer in December and printed some of these Rocket Socket clones. I've found them to be surprisingly useful, I was very skeptical. Before that I was using a crescent wrench that I needed to adjust by hand, and I always worried about it slipping and ruining my finish. These are faster, easier to use, and have no risk of ruining the paint job.
- Getting the sizing of Tayda drill holes right, and getting all enclosures drilled. I don't know why I tolerated this for so long, but for probably 20 pedals I didn't have the right 3mm bezel size. No problem... I figured I'll just use a step drill bit at home. But the steps were just slightly too large - the bezel would fit but look a little unprofessional. Really bothered me. Even worse was builds with fewer holes I'd drill myself to save time - using a hand drill. The drill would wander a bit and the result looked bad. Typically it was covered by washers so no real problem, but I just hated looking at the beautiful prints with mangled holes before I got the components in. It's great to have pedals come in and not have to worry about drilling at all, just placing components.