crazytechno Posted June 23, 2010 Report Posted June 23, 2010 Hi i was wondering if you could send me the details of the encoders and push buttons on your huge midi controller, the one with all the led's. From the images the encoders look very high quality, are they non indented? It would be great if you could give me some info on were to purchase or the manufacturer of these parts, also would these both work in a midibox64e setup without much hastle? Great Controller aswell! Thanks. Quote
phunk Posted June 23, 2010 Report Posted June 23, 2010 Absolutely awesome! Great build. Would be interesting to see more of the case work and the interior. Cheers, Alex Quote
wackazong Posted June 24, 2010 Report Posted June 24, 2010 Hi i was wondering if you could send me the details of the encoders and push buttons on your huge midi controller, the one with all the led's. From the images the encoders look very high quality, are they non indented? It would be great if you could give me some info on were to purchase or the manufacturer of these parts, also would these both work in a midibox64e setup without much hastle? The encoders are standard Bourns PEC11, no special quality there. I did not find any suitable SMD encoders, so for theses parts I had to put some holes into the PCB. This makes it more rugged, so maybe it was a good decision after all. The push buttons are standard SMD pushbuttons, I needed some with very low actuation force, therefore I took the DTSM-65K-V-B from Diptronics. No surprises here, theses parts would work in a normal midibox without problems. Quote
crazytechno Posted June 25, 2010 Report Posted June 25, 2010 The encoders are standard Bourns PEC11, no special quality there. I did not find any suitable SMD encoders, so for theses parts I had to put some holes into the PCB. This makes it more rugged, so maybe it was a good decision after all. The push buttons are standard SMD pushbuttons, I needed some with very low actuation force, therefore I took the DTSM-65K-V-B from Diptronics. No surprises here, theses parts would work in a normal midibox without problems. Thanks!! very helpful :D Quote
Smithy Posted June 28, 2010 Report Posted June 28, 2010 MMMMMMMOOOOOOOOAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRRR!!! :frantics: 1 Quote
latigid on Posted June 28, 2010 Report Posted June 28, 2010 (edited) :) I just love how the camera usually changes angles right on beat at the end of a section. Must be some camera tricks or lots of filmographers. P.S. I can't talk, but "lol" at Smithy's post count ranking :wink: Edited June 28, 2010 by latigid on Quote
wackazong Posted June 29, 2010 Report Posted June 29, 2010 Thanks :) Was not really easy... 1) Record video and audio 2) sync both in Ableton live 3) render snippets which are multiples of 8 or four bars, add some overhead on both sides 4) manually do the camera changes in iMovie using the "precision" editor :) I just love how the camera usually changes angles right on beat at the end of a section. Must be some camera tricks or lots of filmographers. P.S. I can't talk, but "lol" at Smithy's post count ranking :wink: Quote
phunk Posted June 29, 2010 Report Posted June 29, 2010 Great, Ander! Absolutely brilliant. Could you explain a little how it works? Quote
stuartm Posted July 5, 2012 Report Posted July 5, 2012 Here's a nice, not too short interview with Ander: 1 Quote
TAGAPAW Posted February 16, 2013 Report Posted February 16, 2013 Hi Ander, It's really Nice DIY Midi controller, can you give Me The instructables how to make the Button arcylic pad and its mechanism ? I know that's a lot to ask, but i really want to made it on my own, Thank You So Much 1 Quote
engineer Posted March 11, 2013 Report Posted March 11, 2013 Hello, since I just joined, I did not have the time so far to go through all the details of the functions of this device so far, but this is impressing. I wonder in which way you make use of all the illumination. I started a similar project years ago (well much smaller for the first step) but finally dropped these tries and changed to virtual feedback of the controller values in generating VGA based screens in realtime (FPGA based). Honestly I did not have the time and the power to follow this way :-) Again, this is impressing and somehow it inspires me to create something similar. For the moment I am busy with a project dealing with rotary encoders and RGB-based feedback of the values and also the controlled values in the device. Quote
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