Well, this is a lot of fun-
(http://i.imgur.com/ZY2Wfs6.jpg)
(http://i.imgur.com/X69oLFm.jpg)
Pretty sure everything is working as it should, doesn't seem as well behaved or refined as the demo online but that may just be the vero over a pcb. Certainly works better than it did for the time spent trouble shooting before realising i was missing a cut on the board (sigh).
Like it so much i think i'll buy a pcb and give it a go with that. This one is perfect for my tupperware noise setup though.
I wonder if the lack of shielding leads to more glitchiness.
Neat looking vero though. Is that silk screened on top?
Quote from: EBK on September 13, 2017, 11:45:20 AM
I wonder if the lack of shielding leads to more glitchiness.
Neat looking vero though. Is that silk screened on top?
I doubt the lack of shielding helps matters, so it may well improve when boxed.
The vero just comes with the white print on it, it's the biggest stuff i could find on ebay (something like 35x96 holes! Still not big enough for the sagan delay layout on tagboardeffects though so i need to find bigger...)
I doubt that the Tupperware company ever imagined this. ;D
No drill needed, just stab the enclosure with the soldering iron :)
Very cool, but I can't imagine those containers cost much less than a regular enclosure.
What does the extra switch do?
Quote from: Matmosphere on September 14, 2017, 04:32:55 AM
Very cool, but I can't imagine those containers cost much less than a regular enclosure.
What does the extra switch do?
If they were genuine Tupperware they'd actually cost a lot more than regular enclosures, you're right. These crappy ones are two for pound so much more economically viable!
The extra switch is the on-off switch. Even a "soft touch" stomp switch seemed unwise :)