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Episode: 1817
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Title: HPR1817: Gathering Parts
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1817/hpr1817.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 09:40:44
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---
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This in HPR episode 1,817 entitled Gathering Parts.
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It is hosted by Enneville and in about 23 minutes long.
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The summary is Enneville talks about the process he goes through while starting an electronic
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project.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello, this is Enneville and today I talked to you guys about how I approach an electronics
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project.
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What got me started on this one is I was clicking around on the internet as you do and ended
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up going down the rabbit hole.
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I stumbled across this site called Gilmourish and it was everything to do with David Gilmour,
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the guitarist for Pink Floyd.
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It's all about his gear and his guitars and what amps used and then there was what pedals
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he used and I'm looking through all of this stuff and I see the Big Muff Pi.
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Now I had heard of this guitar pedal before, I knew it was around but I never used one
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or had one or even heard one clean.
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I'm sure I'm hearing them in songs of course on Pink Floyd and I'm sure a lot of other
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people use them but I don't really know what this pedal sounds like.
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It got me curious and I didn't really want to go to the store and spend a hundred bucks
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on something just to see how it sounds for a minute and then never use it again.
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I just started researching this Big Muff Pi, it's an overdrive pedal, it's all solid
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state and it uses four transits, I believe it was four and we'll get up to this schematic
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in a minute.
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As I'm researching this Big Muff Pi and who made it and when it was available, where
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it was available, I stumbled across another site that is completely devoted to this pedal.
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People are really geeking out on it and actually reverse engineering them and drawing schematics
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and showing the changes from version 1 and version 2 as the years went by all the different
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the capacitors that changed and the transistors that changed and it was really quite a lot
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of information but on that site there's the schematics.
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So it got me thinking why don't I just see if I got enough parts or I'll just get a few
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parts and I'll build up one of these pedals and then I'll be able to see what it sounds
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like for, I don't know, ten bucks, five bucks.
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So the first thing that I do when I'm going to start an electronics project is of course
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you get the schematic, I mean if you can design it yourself kudos for you but I'm going
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to go off this schematic here, I'll link all this stuff in the show notes these, let's
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say four, this would be like four or six links of the things I'm talking about today.
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So on this, it's actually www.BigMuffPage.com so that shows all the different versions,
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let's see which one I used, I'm scrolling down the page now, I keep, oh yeah they even
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go into people that license the technology and put it out as another name, people that
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blatantly ripped off the technology and put it out as a different name but anyways, here's
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the one I can build any of these now but this is the one, here's the one I started going
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off of, I know I'm fathom about here because I'm scrolling up and down a web page, good
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fun for you, V1 standard was it, V1 green cap, I think it was the V1 standard triangle
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BigMuff circa 1971, yeah because David Gilmore started using these in the early 70s so
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if you want to look at the show notes you can check out the schematics and you can follow
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along with what I'm going to say here but the first step that I do with an electronics
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project is I have to start seeing what parts I have, seeing what parts I need, the easiest
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way I found to do that is of course you get the schematic and then I get a piece paper
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and I look for R1, that's resistor one and just write down what the value is and then
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R2, R3, R4 go right through all the R's and have a nice list of them and I go on to the
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capacitors which would be C1, write down what that is and then make a note if it's an
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electrolytic capacitor or a regular ceramic cap or something, just make a distinction between
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electrolytic and not, so you're going to want to go through all the C's, I forget how many
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there were in this one, there's R18, R21, I don't know, just getting up around maybe 25, 30
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resistors, I probably should have wrote this down before I started blabbing into the microphone
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but yeah, it's looking like about 15 or 20 caps. The next thing I write down are D which
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is diode, so you've got to look for a diode one, diode two, diode three, depending on how
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many they are, again, write down the values of these components. Next one I'll do is Q which
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is transistor, I don't know where they got Q for transistor but that's the way it is,
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so in this particular schematic there's four transistors, Q1, Q2, Q3, Q4 and this is
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where I'll go on to what I was going to say next but I'll just say this before I leave
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this subject, then you might go to IC which is integrated circuit, your schematic might
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have that, IC1, IC2, IC3, you're going to have, oh back in the resistors, here's R26,
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let's see, R26, R25, so at the end of the resistor list, R24, R25, R26, they go into very
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wars just this, so this would be your volume controls and your tone knobs and so make
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a note if the resistor you're looking for is a linear taper pot or an audio taper pot,
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what type it is, you're just getting your parts list together basically. Then what I'll
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do is go through that list and let's see, which one's R1? I just did what I did a couple
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weeks ago, looking all through this schematic for R1 like I had previously and there is no R1,
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for some reason this schematic starts with R2, I don't know if they left something out at a late
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stage or someone overlooked something or maybe I'm just not seeing it right now but I don't believe
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that this schematic has a resistor one, anyways, resistor two is a 33K, you're going to go down
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your list now or this is how I do it and I'll go down the resistor list and see is there any more
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33Ks, so you know you're going to need multiple of these things and if there are, I'll market some
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way, like put a star next to it and then you know down on let's say R12 is also a 33K, put a star
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next to that or you can use colors or highlighters or however you want to do it, go through your
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capacitor list, you're going to do the same thing, see if you have duplicates because you might,
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you might need 30 resistors but you only need four types or five types and when it comes up to
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ordering this list that you're creating is going to help you so and then on this case I need four
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diodes, they're all the same so I know I'm going to get four of those, actually I always order
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double, when it comes to components you're buying something that might be 10 cents or less and
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the shipping is going to be $6 anyways so I just like buy double what I need or you know a whole
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handful of them just to stock up my personal components drawers as well, okay so once I have the
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list of all the parts I'm going to need, I go to the well the components drawers I was just
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talking about, I don't know why I'm calling them drawers, they're on the floor in the blue
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hacker bag, they are a bunch of plastic like tupperware cases that I got from somewhere that have
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compartments in them so I I sort all the resistors that start with one like all the brown
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resistors will be in one and then you know all the two red lip that yeah two red lip that's
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something I learned you have two red lips so you know that two with the resistor is a two it's
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just that just popped up right out of my head anyways I have all my components sorted and I'll take
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the list that I just generated and go through my components and see what I have what I don't
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so what I have I'll put a check mark that's good and then what I don't this is where you are going
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to have to do some ordering places like spark fun and out of fruit does you know you can get kits on
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there and you can get you know neat projects to build up and things like that and sometimes you can
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get the odd resistor or cap but when you get into a project like this you're going to have so
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many different variables you're going to have to go to the big guys and the big guys for me is
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digikey or mouse or electronics so okay let me click over to digikey here I think it's mouse
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sir MOUSER it's one of those things I've only read and I've never heard so mouse or mouse or one of
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those oh let me just jump back for one second what I ran into personally was I I had a bunch of
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the resistors I needed I had a bunch of the caps I needed but and I had all the diodes I needed
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what I did not have is these transistors and the transistors that are in this schematic are the
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transistors that were used in 1971 and they no longer have those transistors if you could find
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them at a geez I should have checked over at children there is a place that has new old stock near
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me I should have drove over and checked but anyways in this big moth page they say on the schematics
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if there are modern equivalents so on to digikey now here's the thing digikey is a big huge you'd be
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surprised I'd like to see what their warehouse looks like because they just have like you look up
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100 ohm resistor and it'll come back with 74,000 results and you have to weed through this
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all right let's do it let's type in resistor I'm okay I'm on the resistor page
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and the results are 72,697 different components so you can see how that's pretty overwhelming to
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start with but what you're going to need to do is they have I don't even know what you call this
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it's like a menu system so you can choose your manufacturer you can start narrowing the search
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results down you can choose a series so we're going to want through hole so you can go over
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to resistance and go to 33k just scrolling up and down to the amount of ohms here I mean there's
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I finally got to 33 and then there's 33.2 and 33.3 and 33.33 and 33.33 and 33.33 and 33.389 and
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these are intolerances of plus 0 1% I can't imagine who's building something that needs this
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precision but there there they all are so let's just click on 33k and apply filters we've
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gone now going down to 703 items then another good place to go is wattage this is just a little
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pedal it's going to run off of nine volt battery so a quarter watt or a half watt half watt
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plenty and then apply filters again we've now gone down to well 76 again features
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anyways you get the point you're going to go through this menu system and narrow your selection
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down until you're just down to about three or four parts and then it can just come to price I mean
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this is see what I mean here's this one 33 ohm oh I want it 33k ohm you can see how confusing this
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is like can be so 33k ohm we can hit apply filter now we've gone down to 360 separate items which
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is still quite a bit for one particular component another thing you can choose of course we choose
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through hole it is in the power so this is a little pedal that's just going to run off a nine volt
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battery a quarter watt quarter watts fine so click on quarter watt and apply filters now we're
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down to 82 separate devices packaging there's bulk just you get them in a bag tape cut which is
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those resistors that come with like a piece of masking tape on the top and the bottom which
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that keeps them orderly if you're going to keep these things in drawers or you're going to want
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little zip lock bags for everything or like a compartmentalized box like I said uh tape box
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and tape reel these are things that go out to manufacturers and automated machines are
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pick and place taking things off of a reel or out of a box it's rolling out like kind of like
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ammunition on one of those belt fed gun type things so we either want bulk or cut tape or just
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single device so I'll hit bulk we are still at 28 devices now we come down to manufacturers which I
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have no idea let me close my window my neighbor just decided to weed whack her lawn doesn't she know I'm
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busy yeah so manufacturers I don't know which ones are better than the others or I mean at this
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point I'll just scroll in and just find one just go by price or and again we're talking
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I mean this first page here is between one cent a piece and like 39 cents so I'm definitely not
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going to want 39 cent pieces I'll stay with just like this is hobby stuff so one cent a piece
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that sounds fine there's a ceramic 33k quarter watt axial 5 percent tolerance 5 plus or minus 5
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percent tolerance and it's a penny a piece so if like I said earlier if you're going to be paying
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six or seven dollars for shipping and I don't even know if I imagine they ship international or
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some of you guys that are listening from another country you probably have you know the equivalent
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of Mauser or Digike over there but in any case it's going to be the same thing you're going to want
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to get this stuff shipped to you and it's a penny a piece so you know why not buy 50 of these you know
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and then you then you have these resistors in a drawer another way to go about if this is your
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first project or just starting your first project and you don't have a lot of parts hanging around
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I mean you could you could get old computers and copiers and you can start tearing them apart and
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desottering things and build up a collection that way or there is another way go to Amazon or
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whatever search engine search engine you go for and look for kits you can get there's one that I
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actually purchased so it's Joe Joe nose so Joe nose and then whatever it is you're looking for Joe
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nose resistors and it comes up here's Joe nose resistors quarter watt 86 value 860 pieces
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they come in a box they're all individually in their little envelopes with the markings on them
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and that's only 18 bucks and so you got 860 resistors just to start your collection with or have
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on the shelf I once I saw these I was on Amazon looking for knobs I'll get into that in a minute
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and that's how I stumbled across these these Joe nose kits there's someone else that's
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doing something very similar but it seemed like price-wise you got the most from this Joe nose guy
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and they have he has oh I got him in front of me so I bought the Joe nose resistor kit there's
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a capacitor kit I have two mice on the table and I keep grabbing the wrong one and that's not
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very helpful so Joe nose capacitors it is a 33 value 645 piece kit then and again it was 20 dollars
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and then he has I keep saying he like it's actually a dude I mean I'm sure it's just some company
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but then I saw Joe nose electronics semiconductor kit so this will have a lot of transistors
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mosfets got NPNs and PNPs and zener dials and shocking I mean if you if you get this thing
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and the resistors and the caps you're looking at maybe spending 60 bucks and you could do so
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many projects with this stuff so I found the prices of some things on digike a bit prohibitive like
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I ordered the transistors there I ordered the diodes there I had all the resistor and then I
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ordered the the pots the volume tone and then I went to look for knobs to go on top of the pots
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and the knobs ended up being they had like one knob was like eight dollars I mean that's
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that seems a little excessive so I started looking around and I ended up on Amazon that's how I found
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out all that Joe nose stuff anyways I'm over on Amazon and I type in knob and I found
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the metal style knob that would be on a fender telecaster and they're only like two bucks
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piece so I got four of those well they were I needed three but they came in packages of two
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and then I started typing around for a project box to put this stuff all in and these nice aluminum
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cases came up and I noticed them from looking at other you know DIY petal pages that a lot of people
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are using these I didn't know what they were called or what they were but and then when I brought
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them to our 20s hundred meeting a buddy goes oh did you get a Hammond box so apparently these are
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commonly called a Hammond box I ordered the CUT234 and it came in and it was a little big it's
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I don't know if anybody is familiar with a boss pedal that's kind of a standard size pedal
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this is even bigger than that this would be good for if you were going to do a pedal and a pedal
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let's say you were going to do a distortion pedal with a switch and then maybe a second reverb and
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stick it all in one box another switch for the reverb so then I went and got let's see oh yeah
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this one says Hammond on it so aluminum die cast case Hammond 1590B this will be the case I'll
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use for this big muff it's two thirds the size of a boss pedal this this seems to be very popular
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this is the one I'm seeing on all these DIY petal pages also while I was on Amazon I found the
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quarter inch jacks and the switches you need uh oh I forget what it was triple pole double throw
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this this is uh some of the contacts on here are gonna engage your guitar to the pedal and some of
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the other contacts are going to engage the power to the board so triple pole double throw so
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I found those on Amazon too so anyway you can scrounge around look around get your parts together
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and get them all in front of you and then you're ready to start your project so that's the point
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where I'm at I have everything that I need for this pedal in a box and I thought I'd just talk to
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you guys about how I go through the process of assembling you know gathering everything and
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it might help you to have some of these resources if you're interested in making your old pedal there
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pages on making your own amps there are people that reverse engineered
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and you almost every amp I could think of I could find the schematics for be careful with amps if
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you start messing around with tubes and stuff you get into plate voltage which is like
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400 500 volts I mean it'll you know tequila voltage but uh these little
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a DIY pedal thing nine volts this would be great for a beginner maybe well maybe beginner I'd
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go intermediate with this because you are starting to have to break down a schematic and you know
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think through how you're going to lay out your board and things like that so now all this stuff
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for a big muff pie is in a box next to me and whenever I get the further motivation I will start
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putting it together and maybe that can be another hpr I'll put the thing together and I can go through
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you know what I found out about the schematic or some pitfalls or helpful tips along the way or
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maybe I could even do a uh just like a quick little sound demo of a clean guitar and how the
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overdrive sounds two other things I should mention before I go about digikey sure mouse or does
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this as well but I tend to use digikey more once you're signed in and you start gathering your
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components this can take you know a little while to narrow your things you know narrow in each
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individual part down and put it in the basket a handy thing they have is you can go to that basket
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or shopping cart whenever you want to call it and you can name it so you can name it after whatever
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project you're working on and it will save all those components for you for the next time
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then let's say you're you have two projects going you can have two shopping carts and have them both
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named and saved you know as many as you need it's it's handy to be able to not have to worry about
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getting all your components right now spending 20 minutes getting a shopping cart together and
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placing your order you can gather everything you need and then you know maybe you want to shop
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like I said you're not I found some things cheaper on Amazon so if you find them cheaper over there
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leave your digikey basket to the last thing you order and if you're finding things elsewhere that
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are cheaper go back to the basket and pull them out and when you're ready you have your saved basket
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and you can place your order the other thing is just using digikey as a resource it's amazing I
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they have so many components and none of all of the components have a data sheet I've never I
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haven't found one yet that doesn't have a data sheet for it so let's say a schematic calls for
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a certain component and you have one that's similar or very close you can pull up both components
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and look at the data sheets and see if you can swap one for the other in your project or
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there's an integrated circuit in your project and you're wondering you know what the actual
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circuit does you want to see inside the circuit you pull up the the data sheet and it will have all
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the information you need right there so two more handy things about digikey okay so go find
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a project and go get some parts and tell us what you're doing because we need more hpr episodes
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so if anybody wants to contact me you can leave comments on the hpr web page or you can email me
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at nmy bill at gunmonkeynet.net or I am still on status net I guess we're it's GNU social but I'm
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still on a status net instance it's the whole thing just stays and fucks over there but I'm
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nmy bill at sn.gunmonkeynet.net okay until next time guys we'll see you later
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bye
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