orange_hand Posted August 1, 2011 Report Posted August 1, 2011 Hi, I have almost completed my green control surface for the MB6582 and I am looking for some green ALBS "waldorf" style knobs. I would be able to swap against white or transparent ALBS knobs. Cheers orange
jojjelito Posted August 1, 2011 Report Posted August 1, 2011 Hiya, Hate to rain on your parade but ALBS doesn't carry the DK16-190V3 in green. You can have any color as long as it's white, red, gray or transparent clear/blue/red. A lot of us have used the transparent clear knobs with green LED backlights. Your other alternatives would be to either use acrylic paint on some white ones or order a large amount of custom green knobs - say 1000 or so provided ALBS would listen to you then. Cheers, J
rosch Posted August 1, 2011 Report Posted August 1, 2011 hehe you just rained on my parade! i had the same idea, that colour seems really unpopular.
Hawkeye Posted August 1, 2011 Report Posted August 1, 2011 +1 on transparent waldorf knob backlighting - they look awesome and come in all colors. :-) Especially recommended shades of color: Emerald City Green and Lava Red.
jojjelito Posted August 1, 2011 Report Posted August 1, 2011 Hmm, if I ever source moar SIDs and feel like making another I'll tack on some Hello Kitty gfx on the panel and use pink LEDs just for kicks Mr Hawkeye maded you (cookies?) an excellent tutorial to peruse while adding the LEDs. Get some gullwing LEDs or something with legs though - the pure SMD LEDs take forever to solder and give you nasty^H^H^H^H^Hsevere coffee withdrawal syndromes.
orange_hand Posted August 2, 2011 Author Report Posted August 2, 2011 Hi Guys, I think I will simply stick to the white knobs instead. I don't want to spent the effort to solder the SMD LED's together.... It looks great, but this is really too much effort for me. Cheers orange
Hawkeye Posted August 5, 2011 Report Posted August 5, 2011 (edited) Ah, jojjelitos trick is awesome and would have saved me some hours - use axial LEDs instead of SMD LEDs - not much soldering effort. Or use small "standard" LEDs soldered to the encoder ground pin with one leg (Wilbas method). Greets, Peter Edited August 5, 2011 by Hawkeye
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