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Post by solipsistnation on Oct 23, 2020 2:59:59 GMT
At last, I can get clock to EVERYTHING!
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Post by admin on Oct 23, 2020 3:06:24 GMT
PURE GENIUS!!
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Post by lukylutte on Oct 23, 2020 4:52:01 GMT
Why I din't think of this before!!! I'm using at least 2 or more mult for only clocking for my two case....
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Lugia
Wiki Editors
Ridiculously busy...ish.
Posts: 556
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Post by Lugia on Oct 23, 2020 22:36:28 GMT
HMMMMMM! Time to bust out a 1sp blank and some epoxy...! BRILLIANT solution!
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Post by funbun on Oct 23, 2020 23:17:09 GMT
Totally workz!
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Post by rodney on Oct 24, 2020 6:08:52 GMT
Most brilliant DIY!
It's obvious, in retrospect, but took a couple of years for someone to do it!
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Post by rockysmalls on Oct 24, 2020 8:45:28 GMT
Most brilliant DIY!
It's obvious, in retrospect, but took a couple of years for someone to do it! well not exactly: forum.aemodular.com/post/2062/threadand that follows on from some other very adept DIYers, though this particular long breadboard is certainly a very nice fit for a 1u
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Post by solipsistnation on Oct 25, 2020 16:55:44 GMT
well not exactly: forum.aemodular.com/post/2062/threadand that follows on from some other very adept DIYers, though this particular long breadboard is certainly a very nice fit for a 1u
Oh, that's cool. Sticking in a pot or two to for attenuation is a good idea. I mostly wanted a way to get clock to everything without needing to bounce through the little mults on various modules (which is confusing and makes it easy to knock stuff out by accident). Mine is just 4 rows of really long mults-- using a little breadboard instead has to be much more flexible.
This was just the power rails from a cheap breadboard set I found on Amazon-- it arrived and I discovered that the rails could just snap on and off if you wanted to use them separately, so instead of sticking a whole breadboard somewhere I used those.
I don't actually claim this is super innovative or anything. There are lots of people doing much more creative stuff than my endless noodly sequencer nonsense. 8)
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Post by rockysmalls on Oct 26, 2020 1:08:33 GMT
well not exactly: forum.aemodular.com/post/2062/threadand that follows on from some other very adept DIYers, though this particular long breadboard is certainly a very nice fit for a 1u
Oh, that's cool. Sticking in a pot or two to for attenuation is a good idea. I mostly wanted a way to get clock to everything without needing to bounce through the little mults on various modules (which is confusing and makes it easy to knock stuff out by accident). Mine is just 4 rows of really long mults-- using a little breadboard instead has to be much more flexible.
This was just the power rails from a cheap breadboard set I found on Amazon-- it arrived and I discovered that the rails could just snap on and off if you wanted to use them separately, so instead of sticking a whole breadboard somewhere I used those.
I don't actually claim this is super innovative or anything. There are lots of people doing much more creative stuff than my endless noodly sequencer nonsense. 8)
no but,, yours seem a perfect size... and they look lower profile than those mini ones i used ... which you have to file the nodules off the bottom of as they are designed to click into some kind of lego type base board! so an excellent find indeed, didn’t know they could be split up like that. i had to get the Braedboard module in the end, just because it doesn’t stick up and because the 5v and ground connections are all neat and hidden away.
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