pricklyrobot
Well-known member
What about ribbon cables that carry power, audio, control voltages (LFOs and such) to/from a cable-less LED-button patching matrix built in to the pedal board?
If I could change this timeline, I would also make sure there were a lot more cicuit types being used in the past, so people wouldn't be so hung up on the same fucking sounds for decades to come, but that's an opinion for another place. And one that's not limited to guitar effects, but instruments in general.
Great, but unshielded.I know exactly what OP is looking for-
Banana Jacks
Before tonecore, there was Korg PMEView attachment 81644 Before there was Schmorg there was Tonecore.
Or any other use...I think 1/8” is just not sturdy enough for effects use.
Before tonecore, there was Korg PME
View attachment 81647
Hey as long as we're redesigning the wheel, why not just have pedals be wireless networked. No need for patch cords.....
Write for a brochure. How quaint!
I was "working" at the Tacoma Guitar Show a few years back when Fender was debuting their Bluetooth equipped Rumble Studio 800 amp. Our booth was right across from theirs and I managed to find their password and get someone to hack into the amp. We didn't take it any further than that, but the possibilities were pretty delicious!Hey as long as we're redesigning the wheel, why not just have pedals be wireless networked. No need for patch cords.....
All the latest digital sound equipment is using networking, just not at the wireless stage YET. No more bulky snakes; CAT5 cable.
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Nah bruh. Imma stomp this lawn.Switchcraft has entered the chat
Hearing a lot of reasons why this is dumb, which I already admitted from the get go. Not a lot of new ideas though.
I'll add, a 3.5mm has plenty of contact to carry audio and voltage for non-tube pedals. As for solder ability, tons of jacks that are cheap and easy. Here's a familiar looking one. With a right angle connection, you have ~1/4 inch protruding so not easy to shear off.
Here's another idea.
How about a pedal board that directly interfaces with the pedal via a mixed signal dsub. Thinking 9w4 here, like this one.
View attachment 81614
Larger contacts provide audio in and out(including stereo). The other 5 smaller pins are ground, 9v, 12v, 18v and ?¿.
No cables, they directly interface with the pedal via a dsub on the bottom and a movable daubs within the pedalboard.
Let's see some ideas!
Now
View attachment 81615
Well there you go. Pedals come and go. I have reverb first and sometimes last. EtcYou need something stronger guitar-to-board, and maybe board-to-amp, for sure.
Exactly. Too heavy? Too bulky? Too old?For what problem is ditching the 1/4 a solution?