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112 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
112 lines
8.5 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2893
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Title: HPR2893: Whats in the box! Part 2
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2893/hpr2893.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 12:51:35
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---
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This is HPR episode 2008193 entitled What's in the Box. Part 2 and is part of the series,
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hobby electronics, it is hosted by NY Wheel and is about 12 minutes long and carries a clean
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flag. The summer is, and it will finish in a guitar pedal kit to present him.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org. Support universal access to all knowledge
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by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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Hello this is NY Bill and a few weeks ago I ordered electronics kit and it just came
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yesterday and I brought the box upstairs and today I was going to open up the box and
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maybe start messing around with it on the bench and I looked over and the bench is
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trashed as always and right in the middle of the bench is that tremolo pep pedal that
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Tim Timmy gave me way the heck back when it's still sitting here in the same state it
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was the last time I recorded it. So I figured I better fool around with this first before
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I get into another project so I looked at the board closer to see what was going on and
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I overlook something back when I first built this. If anybody gets this and I could take
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a picture of the instructions as well. I was looking at the board for dry solder joints
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and while I'm on the back of it I realized there's two unpopulated pads. So I start looking
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at the drawing here and it's pad. What is that? PWB and PWC we're not populated so I keep
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looking around the instructions and I realize what these are. If you have a guitar pedal
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and you plug the input in that closes the connection to the ground loop, the negative
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in the pedal and turns the pedal on. That's why sometimes, well not sometimes, if you
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got a boss pedal and you leave them plugged in with batteries and you just kill the batteries
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because you're leaving the pedal on all the time. So this PWC comes out of the input jack
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so when you plug the tip of the guitar in the negative of the circuit gets closed between
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you. If you look down inside the jack you got the one tip that goes to the one pin that
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goes to the tip of the guitar that's where your signal is going to go in and then you have
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the long negative ground shaft of your guitar cord. That's what's going to make a connection
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to two other pieces there and that's going to close the negative to the battery into the
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board. I did all that and I go and I start testing around and I have zero volts and I go
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up to my battery and I have zero volts and I realize something shorted. So I made a little
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progress and then I found a second problem. I omitted the battery and I kept looking at the
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instructions. There's these instructions, I don't know if I mentioned this in the previous one,
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it's just like a zero copy of a, there's no instructions on it. There's no, you know, do this,
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do that, do this, you just got to figure things out. So I keep looking around and I realize
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on the DC jack there is also a PWC connection. So that's if you don't have a battery and you plug
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this in with a power supply there you're making that negative connection to turn on the board.
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So both in the input jack and the DC jack and as I looked closer I had the positive
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and the PWC, you know, reversed on that jack. So that's where my short was. So I fixed that as well
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and I just put a battery in it and I had burned out the original LED messing around with it before.
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I think I had a bad LED and I put it on too much voltage and I popped it. It happens. It's fun
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to do sometimes. You can get these so cheap. But anyways, I found another LED after making these
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modifications and I'm playing with an LED right now just with my fingers. I gotta figure out which
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way is what. And there it's lit up green. I'm not going to use a green LED in a green case but
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there's a picture of a green LED. So now I'm wondering if we have signal. So I got to get a
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guitar and well first I got a solder this LED up permanent. So I'll do that. Let me find another color.
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Maybe blue would be cool. It would be blue and green. Let me get some LEDs.
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I found a blue. I got a solder this in here. Let me make sure I get it the correct way.
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All right, the blue LED is in and it's going on and off.
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Now let's see if we have any sound. Let me turn on the amp.
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I got to get another cord, a guitar.
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Let's try a good old S-Paul this time. I don't really plug in that much anymore.
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I misplaced these the quarter inch jacks.
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I don't know if you just...
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If you just start all that racket, I'm looking for the jack. I can't find it.
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And it's because it's on a hook that's on my door and my door is always open and I like hang
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my belts there and some other things. When I open the door to go look in the other room,
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they all made a racket. All right, maybe that was a head to beat there. All right, let's see.
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The amp is on. Let me go in. Oh, I can hear something already.
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A little bit closer. Can you hear that?
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Yep, it's... we got a tremolo. There's volume working.
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We'll see the other one. Volume, depth, and speed.
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That all that buzz is because it's not in a guitar yet. Hang on.
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It should be... I hope it clears up. There we go.
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Oh, it's working.
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There's volume.
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There's depth.
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And there's the speed.
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Awesome. All right, so it pays to double check your work or I didn't even double check work
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there because I didn't do the work in the first place. Let me turn this off and try and get it
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all in this case. Okay, I'm just starting to put it together and I realize if anybody builds one
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of these, you have to solder the wall wart, the plug-in for the battery pack. You have to solder
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that after it's in the case. There's no way for me to get it in the case the way it is. The nut
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is on the back of it. So I'm going to have to desider this and switch things around. Oh, and I need
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a battery in my... I have no battery left in this recorder. I think it drains the battery as it
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sits in the off position because it was a fresh battery last time I recorded. It just sat there
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for a month. All right, well, I'm rambling. Okay, so there it is all in one piece and let me try it
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that I hope I didn't get anything shorted together while I was closing the case up. Put the input in.
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Okay, I still see a blue light. That's good.
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I think it chords everywhere.
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This uh, let's call humbuckers really make this. This is a little uh, I don't know who makes this.
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It comes out of China, but it's a little like five watt one watt two band. These humbuckers make
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this thing scream. Let me turn the game down. Okay, and uh, turn to a reverb. And let's see what this sounds
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like. We have a tremble.
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It's too much bass. I think I was playing a telecaster in this last, so I had it... I had it
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bassy. Let's balls are bassy.
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Well, I'm sure you don't want to sit there and hear me noodle around this thing, but uh, okay,
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it's back. It's in one piece. The uh, the problems that I had with it were all because of me.
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I think I was just rushing it. I was building it too fast last time. I needed to slow down and
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taking a little break from it for a little while actually did help because I came back with fresh
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eyes and immediately saw that, you know, I didn't immediately see the problem, but I immediately
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saw that there was unpopulated pads and it got me thinking, why would they have those pads there
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if they don't do anything? So that got me down the, the path of getting this thing going. So I
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thank you again Marshall. It was a fun project and we got two HPRs out of it. I know this is a
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short one, but it's just like a follow up to that first one just to get a little closure that
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if you order one of these things, I still don't know where he got this. So I don't know if you
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want to leave a, in the uh, comment section, Marshall, if you want to just leave a URL where you
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found these other people might be interested, but uh, no, I'm not going to play the HPR or the
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join us now and share this off with you. See you later.
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