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 (24)
- DIY Audio (13)
- DIY Computation (7)
- DIY Misc (5)
- Uncategorized (1)
Random Posts
-
Pedal progression: 2 Suhr Riot
This another one that was pulled out of the drawers, a “amp in a box”, decent rock-box at least 15years ago, still today. Horrid drilling, […]
-
Headphone repair
When headphones wear out it’s not unusual to effect the soft fabric parts only, so can eb saved by replacement, or you can prevent failure […]
-
Dumble Overdrive Special: 1 Head & circuit
The Dumble amplifiers are clearly the highest priced guitar amplifiers ever to exist, and with good, or at least understandable, reason. These amplifiers fetch more […]
-
Splitter pedal: Two guitar amps at once
Splitting the output of your guitar/pedalboard to two separate Guitar Amps is one of the most powerful way in shaping your tone and ‘broaden’ the […]
-
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 […]
TrainWreck Rockette: 2 Headshell
A good find this old, 70’s VOX transistor amp, from my old music teacher no less, seems the perfect candidate for a Trainwreck build (a VOX AC30 top boost with EF86). Non functioning and quite dusty first step’s in making room and restoration.
First, removing the internals, but then housing a hot tube amp in such close quarters is not something the box was designed for. So second, I paint it in high temperature automotive paint and then cover it in aluminium foil to reflect any heat.
Then to bend the chassis, I use thick aluminium into a U, and cut down the original back to make up a top cover, but ventilation is more than necessary, so a nice stretch metal mesh for the back and a slim 120 mm fan in front where originally there was a speaker. The power for this fan is run through a capacitor and diode from the amps heater supply, plenty to run this as well, but wanting to fine tune it I first go through a little PCB allowing me to vary voltage anywhere from input voltage to 0V.
Still some way to go, but that’s the casing basically done, next last bits need to go on the actual circuit in the chassis and I have transformers to order, then it is done.
TrainWreck Rockette: 1 Redesigned