spugnoid wrote:Are the traces on these boards large enough to carry the input signals without noise or corruption?
Traces on these boards are 0.8 mm large.
spugnoid wrote:Are the traces on these boards large enough to carry the input signals without noise or corruption?
Synthex wrote:I started the two PCBs for 32 inputs :
slayer666 wrote:How do you plan on connecting the boards?
On the All-in-one pcb there's one 40pin connector, On the input boards there's two of them.
Synthex wrote:slayer666 wrote:How do you plan on connecting the boards?
On the All-in-one pcb there's one 40pin connector, On the input boards there's two of them.
I use a simple 40pin ribboncable, with 3 connectors on it ...
Like IDE cable to connect 2 IDE drive on one port.
Juze wrote:Synthex, you are GENIUS!
Juze wrote:Only minuses I can say are that:
1.You have to buy/get certain jacks
2.You have to etch/make more PCB's.
3.Standard "ready" IDE-cables have only 39 pins. There is no pin nr 20. (I haven't seen any 40 pin IDE-cable.)
I could say so much good things about that, so I don't mind to do that.
Hope you keep "engineering" on MegaDrum.
-Juze aka Ghroath
elrules wrote:If you cannot use the common IDE cable, is it possible to modify it with little effort to be usable for megadrum allinone kit?
Juze wrote:Synthex, you are GENIUS!
Only minuses I can say are that:
1.You have to buy/get certain jacks
2.You have to etch/make more PCB's.
3.Standard "ready" IDE-cables have only 39 pins. There is no pin nr 20. (I haven't seen any 40 pin IDE-cable.)
jerzy wrote:4. with IDE cable there will be no electromagnetic shielding between channels
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