Showing posts with label Mutable Instruments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mutable Instruments. Show all posts

24 April 2012

Shruthi-1 Build

Another day, another build. The Shruthi-1 4 Pole Mission kit arrived from Mutable Instruments a few days ago and the remaining parts (resistors, capacitors, etc) turned up yesterday. Too inpatient to wait for the latter, I soldered anything I could as soon as I had the kit.

By the time the remaining parts arrived, it looked like this:

Shruthi-1 PCBs partially populated

A couple of hours later it looked like this:

Analogue board

Digital board (top)

Digital board (bottom)

A quick test before putting it in the enclosure and then the most awkward part - putting the case together.

Done!


A final addition was the LEDs for the dog's eyes. These had to wait until this morning when I found some header connectors. The filters still needs tuning, but other than that, it works.

15 April 2012

Shruthi-1 coming

I have ordered a Shruthi-1 - more precisely the limited edition Shruthi-1 4 Pole Mission. Hopefully I'll get a chance to build it next weekend.

In other news. I now have all the parts for the Gristleizer and Echo Base - except the PCBs. <rant> Deliveries from the US to UK seem to be getting slower - and more expensive what with the post office's "admin fee" for paying import duty that is often several times the cost of the duty itself........ </rant>

09 April 2012

MIDIpal

This wasn't supposed to be my next project, but I am still waiting on parts for the audio effects units.

I have intended to get a MIDIpal for a while now, but was put off by the surface-mount soldering involved. I finally bit the bullet and ordered one and built it over the last few evenings.

The MIDIpal is a tiny MIDI processor, which can serve as an arpeggiator, a simple step sequencer and delay, among other functions. It is Open Source hardware and available as a kit from Mutable Instruments.

This was my first experience of surface-mount soldering and it actually turned out easier than expected, though I applied too much solder to the ATMega328p MCU, resulting in a short between VCC and ground. Solder wick fixed the short, but left rather a lot of burnt flux behind. As for the resistors, LEDs, diodes and capacitors - soldering was actually quicker than with through-hole parts.

The completed MIDIpal in it's transparent case. Despite the mess around the MCU, it works!


Uploading the firmware using a USBtiny ISP.



I'll post a video once I have had a chance to play with it.