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  • great work on that!! :)
  • @Altitude those are highly switches part no. PB6149L-13-102
  • Really nice design!!


  • @Altitude those are highly switches part no. PB6149L-13-102



    Is it completely balls-hat crazy to fit those on the LXR board, i can see the the dimensions is 5,00 mm. vs. 5,08 in the pin spacing. And long the long legs on the higly switches could perhaps bent to fit in the other direction.
  • edited January 2015
    Definitely getting one or two. Looks nice! 

  • looks great! i could use a quantizer again and will get one of those.
  • @Altitude those are highly switches part no. PB6149L-13-102



    Is it completely balls-hat crazy to fit those on the LXR board, i can see the the dimensions is 5,00 mm. vs. 5,08 in the pin spacing. And long the long legs on the higly switches could perhaps bent to fit in the other direction.
    yeah those switches are really nice. but for the LXR you should use another cap since the quantizer button caps are only ~5.3mm diameter opposed to the 8.6mm from the LXR buttons.
  • My last DIY experience was an LXR and I was waiting for the next one. I've never build an eurorack module before, I'm impatient to try. Thanks, It's very nice to begin the year with this. 


  • Ok, you can count me in, This is exactly something i need !
  • Really excited to see what other modules you guys will make, I am definitely into this one.  Will the firmware also be opensource for this?
  • A quick Penrose test using the Braids module as a sound source:


    The first part is a quick LFO going into the Penrose, which is triggered by a Sequencer (which of course is not synced to the LFO).
    This way you can create some continuously evolving sequences around a predefined scale.
    In the second part I use an LFO to play a scale up and down, and change the active notes making it iterate through various scales.

    Sound path: LFO > Penrose > Mutable Instruments Braids

  • edited January 2015
    I know its a long long shot but it would be great to get a panel PCB designed for 1/4" jacks with appropriate spacing for larger buttons. (as found on the LXR)  This PCB could be an additional item in the shop.

    I know the biggest modular market is euro, but the rest of the audio world uses 1/4" cables!

    ~Steve


  • the quantizer is now available in the shop
    http://shop.sonic-potions.com/index.php?route=product/product&path=63&product_id=67

    But I just found out I 'm missing some stupid 16 pin ribbon cable connectors for the power chords and have only 32 left in stock :(

    So when the quantizer should be sold out I'll probably have more units ready around tuesday ;)
  • I know its a long long shot but it would be great to get a panel PCB designed for 1/4" jacks with appropriate spacing for larger buttons. (as found on the LXR)  This PCB could be an additional item in the shop
    I think an additional PCB is less trouble than an additional Frontpanel. I'd say this really depends on demand. Not too much work to do a bigger PCB. I'm just completely clueless about which type of jack to use there...
  • Very nice!  Any plans to sell PCB's + Panel only?
  • Yes. should also be available in the shop soon ;)

  • That's awesome Julian. Thanks
  • I was right for the eurorack ;) !

  • @Altitude You want to split an order of the switches? They are pretty cheap from TME.eu
  • @sammy123 I might join in on the switches also! (CA, USA)
  • edited January 2015
    inspired by papernoizes demo i did a little demo of my own today:







    might be a little out of tune because i added the penrose output with a cv sequence in a module that is not very precise.
  • ahem is the code open source?
  • yes it is. I will upload it to github over the next days when had time to clean it up a little bit ;)
  • Any idea how much the PCB+Panel only option will be? Thanks :)
  • edited January 2015
    following papernoise and loderbast here is my take on a short demo video

  • Julian, It's only 4 jacks so if there was an alternate PCB available, with the larger LXR buttons you could just leave solder pads on the PCB for the connections to the jacks.  This way users / DIYers could adapt the circuit for whatever format jacks they needed! (1/4", Banana, etc.)  As long as it connected down to the Main Penrose PCB.

    ~Steve


  • Just finished the Penrose module. Very easy to build with very good instructions.
    Thank you, Julian, for the fast shipping and the nice extra!
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