Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Mission Control


Mission Control is a NASA-Grade master volume control. There's a ton of monitor controllers out there, but they all have one major flaw... too many features. Believe it or not, this is a really bad thing when sonic purity or total transparency is desired. Switches degrade sound quality. The more switches you have in the signal chain, the lesser your sound quality. Don't you want to hear exactly what your mixes sound like?

Silver and Gold! Input and output jacks are Neutrik XLR jacks with silver pins. Silver plated, teflon insulated wire with silver solder. Wired point to point.  Expensive 24 position non-shorting Elma rotary attenuator.

Monday, January 11, 2010

The Legendary Lightning Boy Thunder Caps - hand made paper in oil caps.



My hand-made capacitors are paper in oil, with silver plated stranded wire leads that are teflon insulated.

Paper in oil caps have long been held in high esteem by audiophiles, recording engineers, and guitar players for their organic smooth tone and rich detail.  PiO caps are considered some of the most transparent sounding caps in existence.

Lightning Boy Audio (Gallery Acoustics) Fat Caps are used in many early audio creations by Lightning Boy Audio. Most commonly they are found in the EQ circuitry of LBA gear, including Soul Drive, Olympus and the SPEQ-1 passive Equalizer.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Introducing the SPEQ-1 Super Passive Equalizer







Its Super bad ass. Actually the super in its name refers to the fact that it has no active components at all. In other words, there is no power supply or op amp for make up gain. Its passive in the truest sence. This strange fact allows for the user to select any mic preamp at his/her disposal to compensate for insertion loss. As this equalizer does have its own flavor, color is minimal and most of the color will come from the preamp you pair it with. For a pultec-type tone, pair it up with a good tube preamp.


Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Tweaking the EQ

I had planned to paint my Pultec-esque equalizer and put some fancy lettering on it, but decided it needed some tweaking first. After using the eq extensively on a mix and also during Mastering, I decided certain things about it were not practical. ...and so I modified it.

The low band originally had a single rotary switch which selected frequencies for both the low cut and low boost simultaneously. I found this to be a hinder and so installed a second rotary frequency selector so that both sections of the low band can be controlled independently. Also i noticed during Mastering, the low frequency selector was not able to go down to the bottom sub frequencies (20-35Hz area). In my original design, the lowest setting was about 38hz. I'll have to test it to determine the exact frequency, but I believe it now sits around 25-30Hz. Also, I repositioned some of the knobs and switches so they are laid out in a more organized manner.

Tomorrow she gets a nice coat of gray paint. I plan to bake the chassis after painting it in order to make the enamel more durable. I heard baking it also makes it shine a bit more? I'll find out soon enough.
I have some clear avery labels that I could use to label it up. I figure its either that or I sharpie the bitch up. Pictures to come soon!

Friday, January 1, 2010

A different kind of Pultec Clone

My passive equalizer is finished! Its basically the filter section of a Pultec. Unlike a Pultec, there is no op amp for makeup gain. Instead, a preamp is required to compensate for insertion loss. This is pretty cool if you have a few different preamps laying around, as you can change the tone of the eq by selecting a different pre.

The eq is very natural sounding and very transparent. It has a slightly vintage/liquidy tone to it. Only NOS paper in oil capacitors were used throughout, as well as a Jensen input transformer and my home-made pultec inductor. I wanted to stick pretty close to the original pultec filter schematics. The only major difference is mine has 6 selectable frequencies for the high boost section, as the original had 7 frequencies.

I designed my own inductor around the original pultec, matching up the taps/frequencies (mH) to within less than 5% tolerance of the original. In the middle picture, its the square transformer-like thing at the bottom left. The giant metal thing in the center is actually just a capacitor that's being used for the low frequency filter. even though its a 14,000V cap, it still works perfectly in a 1V environment. I used it because it was the only paper in oil cap I had laying around that had the correct farads. If anything, it sounds slightly better than the rest of the caps lol.

Anyway, it sounds amazing! It really makes music come to life. IMHO, words can not describe what this does for audio. it takes mixing to a whole new level.

build cost was under $300, as I had most of the parts laying around and built my own inductor.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

THE SUMINATOR



It's finished! Not only that, but it sounds absolutely transparent! Here's the scoop:

The Suminator is an 8x2 balanced passive summing buss. It essentially takes 4 stereo inputs and sums them into 1 stereo output. All input level and pan controls are done in the DAW, as there are no controls on the unit. The Suminator is totally passive (meaning it has no built in summing amplifier). Gain makeup is necessary due to the nature of the beast, so in order to use the Suminator, one would need to connect its outputs to a stereo preamp for the necessary makeup gain to get the signal back up to line level (-4dBu). Most stereo mic preamps just sit around collecting dust when it comes time to Mix. The Suminator puts your unused mic preamps back to work during Mix time. This need for a preamp is actually a blessing in disguise. The Engineer now has the ability to mix and match any preamps at his disposal to find a tone he likes for the Mix. Another great thing is the fact that its far less expensive to make a summing box without a summing amplifier. Most summing boxes are active and their high cost reflects that.


The Nuts and Bolts:
The Suminator is loaded with NOS military-grade Allen Bradley carbon comp resistors.  The resistors are sorted and matched to within 1% tolerance for the Suminator. The XLR connectors used are Neutrik with silver plated contacts. The internal wires are twisted pairs of silver plated wire terminated with silver solder.



Output loss is about -16dB, which is easy enough for any preamp to handle.
It likes to see a load of about 300 Ohms at the output.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Building a DI box from scratch (part 3)

Finally, its assembled and working. The chassis took 2 days to build - finished it yesterday. Painted it and wired everything up today. Plugged in my bass and took a listen. It actually sounded really round and smooth. I wasn't expecting it to sound like that, but I'm happy it does. The only problem is the output is a bit quiet. The reason is because there aren't enough turns on the secondary coil in the transformer. I plan to rewind the secondary coil tomorrow with a lot more turns to increase the output volume. More to come. Here's the pics from today: