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Wood finish enclosures

Started by jez79, November 10, 2015, 09:19:36 PM

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duck_arse

nice IN label. also, extra point for the post joke.

was it much work? can we see the workings? wood I mean, I've seen phaser guts before.
" I will say no more "

aleks_tedstone

The IN label was an accident, hopefully Mantic Effects are unlikely to hunt me down and sue me...

Unfortunately I don't have any photos/videos of the process, but everything is glued to a standard 1590B to make sure its all shielded and grounded. I think this project would be a lot more work without a table saw, as I used mine with the blade set to 45 degrees for the mitre edges. I still found it hard to get everything to mm accuracy, so some of the vertical joins are a bit gappy. Sanding took quite a while, as I don't have a router for the rounded edges.

Things I learned:
-Thin wood (2mm) is required to make sure all the hardware can still be screwed on, once its thickness is added to the metal case. I had to recess some of the hardware (jacks, potentiometer) which adds a lot of work, as my boards were more like 5mm.
-Letter punches are great
-Superglue is your friend until its not

duck_arse

#122
yeah, except for the superglue, I pretty much repeat all those issues with every build. don't talk to me about sanding.

superglue < - > sillicone

the "in" is subtle enough that you need to look twice to see if, and then you can pass it as done on purpose.

[edit:] I use my router to thin the planks. double stick it in a channel and buzz them thin. then sand. and I usually sand rounded edges, cause the router is too big and difficult on those tiny thin panels. boy, the fingers I could cut w/ a table saw! [I've just been gifted a lectric scroll saw, haven't turned it on yet.]
" I will say no more "

aleks_tedstone

I only recently got a table saw and I am being very careful with it... Just getting into the rabbit-hole of jigs, sleds, etc. I stick to old fashioned hand tools unless I am 100% sure I can do something safely with the saw. Router sounds like a good tactic in the absence of a planer/thicknesser (which I don't have either).

What kind of silicon adhesive do you use? That sounds like a very good idea with it being flexible and all... Superglue is a bit brittle for this purpose so I am banking on 3 of 5 panels being held on by the jacks, pots and switch nuts! Doubt it would survive a gig.


duck_arse

sillicone - I found a half size cartridge thing at bunnings, so I end up throwing out much less. I don't glue wood with it, just all the other stuff, like non-skids. pva all the way for the wood.
" I will say no more "

duck_arse

#125
scuse me, here's my P45 build, finally finished after 7 or more years by side. guess what I call it ......





a long list of dumb build ideas evident. push buttons for one. acrylic panel for another. tank-style build one more.
no gut shots because yukk. haywired veroboard, who wants to see that? also, the screws were in before I thought of it.





external bias control. phase/vibe switch. caps 1:1 or 10:1. two range oscillator - but with way wrong pot taper, all bunched at fast end. wood is from an old lounge, made locally, I say it's Brazilian Teak from the smell. quite why it's in an australian made lounge, I don't know. knobs from an old old Roland AS1. vintage.

and yes, the purple phase. and the camera barfed on the purple, it's not that blueish.
" I will say no more "

ThePracticalPeasant

#126
Quote from: aleks_tedstone on October 19, 2021, 10:26:04 AMRouter sounds like a good tactic <snip>

What kind of silicon adhesive do you use? <snip>

Quote from: duck_arse on October 19, 2021, 09:42:52 AM
yeah, except for the superglue, I pretty much repeat all those issues with every build. don't talk to me about sanding.

I know this is a year old but I thought I'd weigh in as I have just a bit of experience. For wood to wood bonds I'd highly recommend switching to a wood glue like TiteBond II. It is the fastest setting wood glue that I've used; joints hold together within 15 minutes and are almost impossible to pull apart within an hour (I regularly pull clamps at 15 mins and send laminated cutting boards through the planer at the 60 minute mark).

For bonds between wood and plastic/metal, I prefer mechanical fasteners due to the propensity inflexible adhesives like superglue to release as the wood component expands and contracts with humidity. Silicone is an option but I hate the smell and long cure time. I've had good results with a quality two part epoxy: My experience with epoxy is that cheap means brittle, while the higher quality options offer more flexibility/elasticity in the cured product which in turn better accommodates the movement of the wood.

As for routers, the big names all carry cordless trim routers: De Walt, Makita, etc. I personally use the (corded) Makita RT0701C with a 3/16" round-over bit for this type of work, and it works an absolute treat; far easier and quicker than a full sized routers or any of the inexpensive router tables when working on small projects.

Edit: Fixed the [broken] links
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Toy Sun

It's old, but still kicking (the thread and this spring reverb)....






Kipper4

Quote from: duck_arse on November 24, 2022, 08:39:34 AM









I've come over all Billy Gibbons.... :icon_razz: Holier than thou.  :icon_mrgreen: :icon_mrgreen: :icon_mrgreen:

Absolutely stunning mate.
Ma throats as dry as an overcooked kipper.


Smoke me a Kipper. I'll be back for breakfast.

Grey Paper.
http://www.aronnelson.com/DIYFiles/up/

bluebunny

I wonder if it's had to visit the groomer in the meantime, to get a haircut?
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Ohm's Law - much like Coles Law, but with less cabbage...

duck_arse

#130
back in '17, I had it in mind to build a Tonebender III/buzzaround in a half-perspex case, built on a scaffold of telescopic aerial sections. can't imagine why I didn't finish it - here is one of the layout diagrams I did for it, it all seems to be quite straightforward.



so, anyway, I messed about with the buzzaround recently, didn't have the transistors to make it grab me. so I grafted in a Sziklai Bazzfuss I found in an old schem, and that did the trick. well, a few tricks, it has a strange envelope - ramps and humps aand ramps again. anyway, it looks like this:







has a 2SA538 > MP37 > D18 and 2N404. multicultural. inverter supply w/ 4093, the wood external is Beefwood, a casurina, has been linseeded and beeswaxed, is still sticky. internal woods are pines and gums and callistemons, cause why not.

carry on.

more pics, guts, layouts, circuit can be see here:
https://imgur.com/a/PcY7FlO
" I will say no more "

Kipper4

Fantastic work Stephen. I'm impressed and jelous.
The beefwood looks stunning, for a start I thought you had painted it with hammerite paint which also displays the wavey finish.
Ma throats as dry as an overcooked kipper.


Smoke me a Kipper. I'll be back for breakfast.

Grey Paper.
http://www.aronnelson.com/DIYFiles/up/

duck_arse

I felt like a goose sanding it, Rich. it's hard to find a grain direction, so I went in swirls.
" I will say no more "

Phend

#133
The guts, I looked, runuts.
Very cool, very difficult, very 3d.
Great layouts, klingon type circuit ?
Haven't seen anything like it here (except yer cordwood) !.
Nice work Stephen.
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Do you know what you're doing?

Kipper4

Quote from: duck_arse on June 06, 2023, 10:13:52 AM
I felt like a goose sanding it, Rich. it's hard to find a grain direction, so I went in swirls.

Mate It is the muts nuts.
I'm so proud of you and your devotion to craftsmanship. And a little jealous .
Ma throats as dry as an overcooked kipper.


Smoke me a Kipper. I'll be back for breakfast.

Grey Paper.
http://www.aronnelson.com/DIYFiles/up/

Cspig19

Lacewood veneered BYOC Large Beaver....




duck_arse

a three times ex member of this forum showed me some his guitar builds. one was --ahem-- teevee yellow with heavy shell scratchplate. I still haven't recovered from the sight of that colour, we had to discuss it. anyway, he then asked me to build him an all in my way percolator. alright, any style pointers? no, none, whatever you want to do.

I wasn't being grabbed by any schemes at the time, had to go looking and thinking ..... result is the Dr. Sturdy.







oiled Huon pine. old lady disco pants for the "shell" - not sure it worked. and he can change the knobs, like he did on his guit. I'm the worst person in the world to be tuning a build, but there you go, has Phend's bass blend, a 2SB324 and FPN3566, diode lift switch and pin header to select the top feedback resistor. 820k for mine, up around 3M3 it was wanting to start to howling.

all built mad free soldered over perf style. I dunno how these things get so messy inside.


" I will say no more "

duck_arse


everyone remembers Anotherjim's thread, 4007 Chopper-Trem (who needs another trem design?)
https://www.diystompboxes.com/smfforum/index.php?topic=114965.0

well, mine's finally done.







has two range oscillator and top boost. rate and bypass flash in the knob wells. gold knobs! oiled Blackwood. those tiny black lines are the cracks that won't ever appear until it's too late to chuck it out. rustoleum paint I don't think will ever dry unsticky.


guts and circuit can be seen in the bukket.
https://imgur.com/a/xwVhzKx
" I will say no more "

bluebunny

Quite gorgeous.  But unless these are the gut shots, I'm detecting a toothed washer.  :-X
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Ohm's Law - much like Coles Law, but with less cabbage...

duck_arse

thank you, blue, but you are slipping, there is three toothed's to be seen.

if I may - re: the toggles, if you EVER see an anti-rotate washer on the outerside of one my front panels, please feel free to point it out. when it comes to a choice of locator pip or tooths, tooths every time. also, wood equals special dispensation.

as for the footswitch - the stylemeisters hereabouts [historic, they don't seem to come round no more] are/were forever complaining about the sight of the dreadful white washer. also, as I recall it was R.G. hisself on this very forum that said the plastic washer should be on the inside. and, also, wood; means I get special dispensation for toothy fronts.


thank you.

https://www.diystompboxes.com/smfforum/index.php?topic=118650.0
" I will say no more "