Here you’ll find a collection of things that I do, make, say and think. A collection of projects I publshare on other sites online. Including; custom built and designed guitar or Hi-Fi amplifiers and effects, custom PC servers, and rescued, upcycled hardware. Simply a central place to collect what I’m doing with some of my a creative rest at any given time.
If you are in search for my professional information go to >JohannesJohansson.com<
For multiple ways to contact me this >linktree< makes it easy.
Categories
- DIY (29)
- DIY Audio (17)
- DIY Computation (8)
- DIY Misc (5)
- Uncategorized (1)
Random Posts
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Dumble Overdrive Special: 2 Headshell
Head, strange word for this but is what it’s called, a head being the amplifier, presumably sitting on the ‘body’ represented by the stacks of […]
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Custom DDC: 1 Digital to Digital Converter; USB to l2s over HDMI; S/PDIF; AES
Digital to Digital Converter, this little DIY utility box provides a way to escape a number of digital issues impacting sound quality in hi-fi. It […]
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PC water cooling: Maintenance
When watercooling a computer the goal is lower temperature and/or better noise to performance ratio, while also allowing for much smaller footprint with quite high […]
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Pedal Progression: 3 Zendrive
This is another pedal from almost two decades ago, a Hermida zen drive, repairing and rebuilding with better parts. A great overdrive more body and […]
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Silence your Guitar Amp – Variable Voltage Regulator
Guitarists often find themselves in love with their amps, playing an electric guitar a lot of the time what’s making up your sound is found […]
Pedal: fixing a Temu digital delay
A Temu guitar pedal… Well 5 euro (or usd) is not a lot for a pedal that is for sure, so I tried this out, yet arrived broken. So got a refund but lets try and fix it anyway I thought.
Interesting design, it’s made on two pcb’s the thinnest and flomsiest pcbs I ever saw, and they come with a fix from factory due to a built in error. The red wire, jumping power to the right spot
The error turned out to be several misstages in a voltage devider so the opamp could not function. But could retrieve the neccesary voltage from another chip the pt2399 surface mount equivalent.
Not bad though, theese pedals, cost next to nothing, in essence same price as the footswitch alone (if it wasn’t a cheap copy). And for that you get a robust metal enclosure, true bypass switching and a decent circuit, if it wasn’t broken that is. I suppose the thin pcb might flex and cause a trace or two to brake down the line but as is, not too much to complain about. There is also a blog post I noted about nodding theese, so some inexpensive fun experimentation can be had, although you need a steady hand, and the right tools to work on the scale of theese tiny parts.