DEMO Janky Tape Echo - Indifferent Engine DIY Tape Delay

This post contains an audio or video demo

Waldo_jeffers

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Build Rating
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Well mates, this has been my white whale. I've been tinkering on and off for over a year, taking many months off after a frustrating 3D printing issue, but this one is finally built.

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Indifferent Engine are a punk band from the UK and they've designed this pretty incredible machine. It's a $20 Amazon cassette player hacked up and rewired, with code running on an Arduino, mounted on 3D printed hardware and running real tape. It's entirely open source, from the PCB and STL files down to the Arduino code, and they have written some foolproof instructions for every single step of the way. I was doing a lot of things for the first time with this project and it was all laid out simply and easy to follow.

As far as what it does, it's a janky sounding real tape delay. There's two read heads, Short and Long, one write head and one erase head. Controls are:
Level (from fully dry to fully wet)
Tone
Gain
Jank (controls randomization in the motor speed)
Feedback
Time

I went all in on this. I bought the PCBs in March 2023 and populating them was the easiest part by far. I found a 3D printer on Craigslist. I ordered a bunch of extra tools to do things like make my own JST-XH connectors, and a cheap oscilloscope to make sure the bias was properly set up. I painted the insides with shielding paint, cause this is plastic after all and this thing is pretty noisy at the best of times. I had to redesign the STL files for the knobs because one stupid pot I bought was round shaft instead of D shaft. I bought thick Computape and proper 1/4 inch splicing tape to make the sturdiest, cleanest loops I could after my first few broke quickly and sounded like crap. But it's done. I'm very happy with it.

Here's a link to a video demo. This is also the first time I've made a video demo, so excuse the dodgy camerawork and lo-res text. Not that I didn't respect video demo makers before, but damn, that was harder than it looks. I had a light shining on the pedal because it was kinda hard to see the control labels otherwise. It's still sort of hard to see the knob settings, but you'll get an idea.


And here are some progress pics for those interested:

Gut shot
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The modified cassette player mounted into it's holder. Outer shell taken off, some bits ripped off, a bunch of wires re-wired and moved around.
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Assembling the hardware
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Top shot without the lid. Getting a loop the right tension and spliced cleanly was one of the most difficult parts of the project for me.
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It's a big box. Not really pedalboard appropriate but I'm all rig no gig anyway
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Proud dad moment with it next to my DIY Jazzblaster
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Dude. This is the first one I've seen completed in the wild. Congrats! What an undertaking. I remember when the announcement for these came out. I thought, "F*CK, that's awesome but you gotta be a genius or an idiot to try to build it."
Way to get it done and props on learning all the new skills along the way!
 
That thing is crazy! I’m not really a fan of low-fi effects (not my thing) but I definitely appreciate all the work you put into that, it’s cool to see out of the box type projects that’s so far off the beaten path from a 3 knob over drive. Well done!
 
Thanks everyone! If anyone in the US is interested in building their own, I've got leftover parts that I'm probably never going to use again, and happy to send to along if you cover shipping. I'd have to double check, but off the top of my head I know I've got the cassette player, large bolts, a bunch of m2, m3 and m4 screws and sockets, the tools to make your own JST connections and probably a bunch of other crap.

Dude. This is the first one I've seen completed in the wild. Congrats! What an undertaking. I remember when the announcement for these came out. I thought, "F*CK, that's awesome but you gotta be a genius or an idiot to try to build it."
Way to get it done and props on learning all the new skills along the way!
I'm definitely the latter so good thing the build doc was idiotproof!
 
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