
you can just vote .... or feel free expound on your experience if you would

Moderator: Moderators
Donner wrote:Im curious though not completely suprised by the response to this project and Id like some feedback as guidance for future projects/directions.........![]()
you can just vote .... or feel free expound on your experience if you would
mills wrote:I'm somewhere between it was good and I expected more teaching/learning.
There really wasn't a ton of discussion, but the more knowledgeable members jumping in to help out was good to read when there was. I dunno if i was too paint by numbers and too easy for much discussion to be needed...
Otherwise, I'm probably part of the problem by not talking about it much... life/school got busy and I haven't built a final version. I made a positive ground germanium version that worked for a bit on breadboard, but that was out of frustration because I was having a terrible time getting the Si one biased up properly with different transistors. Got a box painted, and probably an unmoded version put in it just to have something done in the near future. Actually, I'm pretty stoked about the box painting. First one I've ever done, and its not horrible all things considered, so there was some stuff learned there too.
jfromel wrote:I think if you read through the posts by Bjorn, NOC3 and myself regarding what does what I think you will learn a lot. What I think happened is people just took their kits, slammed it together and called it good.
I tried to take some of the paint by numbers feel out of it by refrencing only the part ID on the schematic instead of the value on the board. This forced everyone to at least glance at the schematic.
Another good excercise would be looking at schems from different vintage fuzz circuits starting with the Fuzz Face, then note the similarities and the differences.
I am a bit torn on the parts kits. In one regard by supplying the kits I know that the thing will work and all the parts will fit and the cost is less than it would be for an individual to buy all the goods from Small Bear or Mouser. But it does make it a bit paint by numbers, for the newbie this is more of a learning experience than getting a BYOC, but it's not exactly a scratch build either.
jfromel wrote:You are correct. Should I leave that off on future projects? When I do my own builds I always print out the schem and the parts list and cross them off as I go. But then the current pedal I am building has almost 200 components on the board.
Return to Folk Forum (DIY projects)
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests