Dr Bleep was kind enough to send me a Thingamakit - his build-it-yourself light cell powered noise synth (it's the big brother of the Thingamagoop). The box arrived a couple of months ago and sat in the corner, mocking me. Fear of soldering is a terrible thing, and easily cured by a pair of Velleman crawling micro bugs - £10 from Maplin, 1 hour each to solder together, two happy kids, two parents with soldering fume headaches. So far, the Thingamakit is a joy (being assembled next to an open window and a desk fan). Every component is labelled, the manual is clear and helpful, with useful things like a big colour photo of how the populated board should look. The circuit board
Anyway, what should I build next?
Definitely the Sound Lab Mini Synth.
ReplyDeletemusicfromouterspace.com
I am on my second Thingamakit, which I am installing in an old Roland CS-10 'personal monitor' -- basically computer speakers. The cool things about that:
ReplyDelete1. It runs off 9 Volt DC, just like the thingamakit.
2. Bigger, somewhat full range speakers.
3. It's Roland -- set it up next to yer 909!
Perhaps something from PAiA?
ReplyDeleteTheir kits are relatively simple and well documented.
how thick is the enclosure?
ReplyDeletedrilling through metal is the
only thing putting me off this kit
Drilling metal is easy because it is very soft it is probably aluminium.
ReplyDeleteNext thing to build should be minimum theremin. (Just google minimum theremin if you don't know already about it).
bend something! i know it's not technically building but.. i'm adding midi and a dozen extra knobs to a dr-110. my solder-fear was as big as yours when i started and nothing's gone horribly wrong so far.
ReplyDeleteI finished mine last week and already three friends have asked me to build one for them.
ReplyDeleteI had a minor issue with the knobs in that I didn't get enough lift from the PCB to get them in the housing straight. So I'm going to take them off and wire them. Other than that the speaker does just about nothing. You can nearly hear it in a silent room, but other than that nothing. Thankfully I have a mini Marshall that looks reall cool stood next to the Thing-a-ma-kit.
I´m putting a Thingamakit, together with a Gakken SX-150 and an SHecho from General Guitar Gadgets together. The Thingamakit will then be routed throught the SX and the Echo, and rigth now I,m thinking about doing some more changes. Youcould as a next project get one of the Highly Liquid retrofit kits and midify one of them odler gears.. like a speak and spell or a SK-5... did that and works well!
ReplyDeleteTom Bugs has a kit to make a 2 osc drone machine - I own a completed model and it is great, looking at the PCB it doesn't look like too tough a build either :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the prop Drohn!
ReplyDeleteI would agree (naturally) except that I'm being a right old slow-ass on finishing off the decent documentation... (and have plenty of other things on my plate at the moment so finishing is not very imminent). But, when they're out -- yes, they're an easy build and fun to play.
Tom MT - may be of interest to you that I'll be holding a workshop event in London in November building these WorkshopOscMachines - part of http://www.hokaben.co.uk/ (workshop limited to 10-15 people - booking details to come sometime soon...).
Cheers!
Tom (Bugs)
how about a Monome kit?
ReplyDeletehttp://monome.org/40h/kit
i think that will be my next project.
Wheres the best place to research how to build your own boards? Just basics at the moment, only just learning
ReplyDeleteis there any possibility to get a circuit description and a list of the used parts for the Thingamakit?
ReplyDeleteI really have to build one, but cannot afford so much money.