predue
Member
Hey guys, long time no see 
I am currently working on a project (as a present) for my brother in law. (My last present for him was the N64 Infinite)
He composes music on the PC and I once saw a very cool project that I believe he would really like to own
Sadly this was a project from a student and is not on sale... So I decided to build my own one. With a bit of tuning.
This composer will have an Arduino inside, that uses a Midi-to-USB adapter for communicating with a PC.
It will feature eight rolls with 16 magnetic points, one volume fader and pitch control each. There are also eight drumpads as an enhancement.
Here is my progress so far:
		
		
	
	
		 
	
Lets keep everything nice and tight
		 
	
First tests with the Arduino
		 
	
A hall-sensor and a trimmed LED
		 
	 
		 
	  
		 
	 
		 
	
		 
	 
		 
	
This looks good for the most part, but I actually messed things up because I sprayed a layer of clear coating on the rolls... Very bad idea (luckily I have no pics of this mess )
 )
		 
	
I did the design by myself. It might look messy, but I wanted to have enough space to fit the actual hardware inside and not loose too much stability at the same time. Dimensions are 355 x 183 x 25mm (13.97 x 7.2 x 0.98 inches)
		 
	
My printing order will be from left top - left bottom, middle top....
		 
	
The ports from left to right: PC (USB type b), Arduino (micro USB), power
		 
	
First ideas for the drumpads. But I will have to come up with a better idea.
		 
	
The first part does not look very good... I might end up printing it again
		 
	 
		 
	 
		 
	
I try not to work with glue so much... Most parts are screwed together.
		 
	
Part two is printing with slightly modified settings
		 
	 
As you can see I have to print the ground plate in segments, because my printer is too small >.< ...
But I try my best to hide the slits.
The printing takes rather long... The first part took about 26 hours. The second part (that I am printing right now) will take about 8 hours.
Thats it so far. I will post new pics from time to time
Greetings
				
			
I am currently working on a project (as a present) for my brother in law. (My last present for him was the N64 Infinite)
He composes music on the PC and I once saw a very cool project that I believe he would really like to own

Sadly this was a project from a student and is not on sale... So I decided to build my own one. With a bit of tuning.
This composer will have an Arduino inside, that uses a Midi-to-USB adapter for communicating with a PC.
It will feature eight rolls with 16 magnetic points, one volume fader and pitch control each. There are also eight drumpads as an enhancement.
Here is my progress so far:
 
	Lets keep everything nice and tight

 
	First tests with the Arduino

 
	A hall-sensor and a trimmed LED
 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	This looks good for the most part, but I actually messed things up because I sprayed a layer of clear coating on the rolls... Very bad idea (luckily I have no pics of this mess
 )
 ) 
	I did the design by myself. It might look messy, but I wanted to have enough space to fit the actual hardware inside and not loose too much stability at the same time. Dimensions are 355 x 183 x 25mm (13.97 x 7.2 x 0.98 inches)
 
	My printing order will be from left top - left bottom, middle top....
 
	The ports from left to right: PC (USB type b), Arduino (micro USB), power
 
	First ideas for the drumpads. But I will have to come up with a better idea.
 
	The first part does not look very good... I might end up printing it again

 
	 
	 
	I try not to work with glue so much... Most parts are screwed together.
 
	Part two is printing with slightly modified settings
 
	As you can see I have to print the ground plate in segments, because my printer is too small >.< ...
But I try my best to hide the slits.
The printing takes rather long... The first part took about 26 hours. The second part (that I am printing right now) will take about 8 hours.
Thats it so far. I will post new pics from time to time

Greetings
 
	 
 
		 
 
		 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 . As I am short on time (9 days to go), I think I'll just leave them be.
. As I am short on time (9 days to go), I think I'll just leave them be.  
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	 
	