dividedzero
New member
So I had a period of hyperfixation on building pedals (AuDHD or whatever) and created over 400 working pedals and eurorack modules. It was fun and the first hobby that lasted more than a few projects (ADHD things really). Anyway, I've just now working to get them all (or try to get all of them at least) into enclosures which has proven to be the worst part but that's not my problem here. I've bought everything from reputable places that everyone else uses like Mouser and lovemyswitches. On one very early attempt I used some random pots from Amazon but they had so much static they basically were worthless so I replaced them all and learned my lesson there and fired Amazon.
I didn't know what else to do with them. Who needs 400 effects units? So I've been selling them. I've been doing ok and not really worried about if they sell or not but of the few that have, I've had a couple returned for my fault.
One return was my fault and I fixed it, another was probably an early misunderstanding I had but I'm not sure until it gets here (worked for me in testing) but the 3rd one is disappointing. I thought I tested thoroughly because at this point I'm thinking I'm delusional and stupid and need to just throw everything in the trash (despite a few pedals out there doing fine and making people happy). I insulated anything that could possibly ground out just to be safe. I plugged it in and blasted the crap out of it on all settings, shake around the wires to make sure that wouldn't change things. Test each knob at different settings and make sure they don't scream when you turn them and they actually make the change you expect. All that. Dude gets it and says he tried it on 2 amps and the first 2 effects are "unusable" and the third is weak. As you probably know, this circuit is designed to be pretty vintage voiced so I'm wondering if maybe he doesn't have experience with that and is expecting something more modern.
Anyway, I'm basically looking for any advice on any of this outside of what's generally repeated on these forums ( caps on back of pots, reflow, etc etc etc), especially as it relates to customers too. Like is it common for people to buy pedals, try them, say they don't work and return them to get around the return policies? What are your testing procedures and equipment? I'm using my own guitar, bass cables and amps. I also sometimes use other common commercial pedals where I think it makes sense (like an overdrive into a homemade preamp to see how the compression, etc handles it). I'm wondering if I'm missing a step or my equipment isn't right. I also follow all the directions for internal trimpots and whatever calibration is recommended.
Sorry for the long post. I'm not trying to scam anyone or get rich. Just trying to get these out of my house and finally have a hobby to help all my mental health issues. Also I want to be better and learn from these mistakes but I'm reading what I think is everything on the subject and I'm not seeing anyone else mentioning any of this. And to make people happy with cool noises more than enjoying. I've been able to find a lot of really neat circuits and can't wait for them to find homes.
Thoughts? Experiences?
Thank you for reading and whatever help I get.
I didn't know what else to do with them. Who needs 400 effects units? So I've been selling them. I've been doing ok and not really worried about if they sell or not but of the few that have, I've had a couple returned for my fault.
One return was my fault and I fixed it, another was probably an early misunderstanding I had but I'm not sure until it gets here (worked for me in testing) but the 3rd one is disappointing. I thought I tested thoroughly because at this point I'm thinking I'm delusional and stupid and need to just throw everything in the trash (despite a few pedals out there doing fine and making people happy). I insulated anything that could possibly ground out just to be safe. I plugged it in and blasted the crap out of it on all settings, shake around the wires to make sure that wouldn't change things. Test each knob at different settings and make sure they don't scream when you turn them and they actually make the change you expect. All that. Dude gets it and says he tried it on 2 amps and the first 2 effects are "unusable" and the third is weak. As you probably know, this circuit is designed to be pretty vintage voiced so I'm wondering if maybe he doesn't have experience with that and is expecting something more modern.
Anyway, I'm basically looking for any advice on any of this outside of what's generally repeated on these forums ( caps on back of pots, reflow, etc etc etc), especially as it relates to customers too. Like is it common for people to buy pedals, try them, say they don't work and return them to get around the return policies? What are your testing procedures and equipment? I'm using my own guitar, bass cables and amps. I also sometimes use other common commercial pedals where I think it makes sense (like an overdrive into a homemade preamp to see how the compression, etc handles it). I'm wondering if I'm missing a step or my equipment isn't right. I also follow all the directions for internal trimpots and whatever calibration is recommended.
Sorry for the long post. I'm not trying to scam anyone or get rich. Just trying to get these out of my house and finally have a hobby to help all my mental health issues. Also I want to be better and learn from these mistakes but I'm reading what I think is everything on the subject and I'm not seeing anyone else mentioning any of this. And to make people happy with cool noises more than enjoying. I've been able to find a lot of really neat circuits and can't wait for them to find homes.
Thoughts? Experiences?
Thank you for reading and whatever help I get.