szukalski
Well-known member
Apart from blind copy-paste, I can only think it's an inside joke to perpetuate the idiocy.This is the one little snippet that I see quite often and it throws me for a loop every time.
Apart from blind copy-paste, I can only think it's an inside joke to perpetuate the idiocy.This is the one little snippet that I see quite often and it throws me for a loop every time.
Sort of topical since they're being reissued ... I used to see this a lot when people would poorly copy elements of the Marshall pedals with the "fx loop"In a lot of cases quirky things like that are because they were present in the pedal they cloned (*were inspired by) and it blindly made it's way into the new design despite other circuit changes nulling their purpose.
This is the one little snippet that I see quite often and it throws me for a loop every time.
Capacitor > Resistor > Capacitor with no other connections in between. I've also seen the inverse of this, Resistor > Capacitor > Resistor.
I can't wrap my head around why this is done... Chuck says it's probably a copy/paste job, and I certainly can't come up with a better explanation.
What bothers me is that I've seen this done by reputable builders, one who I believe is an EE... If anyone has an explanation I'd love to hear it.
View attachment 43103
It's like... the electronics version of "the lick." It's become such a common joke that people sneak it in to their solos to see if you're paying attention.Apart from blind copy-paste, I can only think it's an inside joke to perpetuate the idiocy.
The amount of money I've been "sinking" into this pedal stuff is considerable. It'd be nice to make some back. However it requires doing really good and reliable work and I still feel I'm not here yet.View attachment 43042
I saw this in r/woodworkingconfessions in Reddit today and it kinda hit home. No matter what hobby I start, and believe me I have way too many, part of me always thinks, “hey, I could probably make some money doing this.”
I’ve taken a different approach to pedal building than I have with woodworking, watch making, cast iron and lantern restoration, and others, and build what I want for now. If my friends want one, I’ll either give them to them or they’ll offer to pay for parts and a bit extra, which is always cool.
But now, word of mouth is starting to spread, “Hey, Kenny makes pedals now, you should get one.” And the messages start coming in. I’m not actively pursuing them. So I sell one or two a month which covers the cost of other builds which is nice. But I’m suppressing the urge to start a micro-brewery so to speak, because for one, I don’t have the time, and two, there are so many out there (IPAs taking over!) that already have and own that space.
Anyway, just thinking out loud. What are your thoughts or approaches to this?
The amount of money I've been "sinking" into this pedal stuff is considerable. It'd be nice to make some back. However it requires doing really good and reliable work and I still feel I'm not here yet.
A former bandmate was over buying a bass from me and I let him play through my diy fuzz collection. When I told him how much I wanted for one of them he bought zero haha. Things is I almost spent more money in parts to build my two-footswitch Fuzzrite than I sold him the bass for (used Harley Benton).
I mean a Switchcraft jack now costs more than a 3pdt footswitch here.
If I was able to order printed enclosures I'd consider building PCB based pedals but as it stands I don't think anybody would buy my blank pedals.
No printer available unfortunately. I have an old inkjet printer that probably won't even start because i used non original ink.I think that having some kind of design, even if it's rather basic knob labeling, is pretty much needed if you're going to be selling them. Have you tried the Sunnyscopa film-free waterslides? If you have access to a laserjet printer it's one of the best ways to easily and inexpensively create pedal designs. the biggest cost for them is the time and care it takes to apply them, but that's just kind of what we do when building pedals anyways.
Ciabatta means slipper so more like a fuzz foot than a facePut a fuzz face in a ciabatta loaf…
just make sure you have a good system for taxes and the world is your oyster.
Everything is a write-off…
Everything is a write-off…
I write off nearly everything you post...Everything is a write-off…
This is exactly what I tend to do also. I get excited, look for the domain name, start thinking logistics, then I just end up forgetting about it when I see all the competition and how much better they are and how much more they have invested in it.I definitely have to fight the urge to turn any hobby into a job. This comic is me exactly. I go from "This is fun and enjoyable!" to "I'm filing articles of incorporation!" in matter of hours
In this case I'm years away from having the skills/knowledge/following to consider launching a real business, so that keep it light.