[sdiy] new guy - how did you start - Science Fair kits
Oren Leavitt
oleavitt at ix.netcom.com
Tue Feb 10 01:15:43 CET 2004
>What actually was that IC, anyway?
In the 1972 Science Fair 100 in 1 kit with the 'Space Age Integrated Circuit', it was a thick film hybrid circuit that had a ceramic cap, 3 resistors, a germanium diode, and an NPN silicon transistor on it. There were ten connections to it that let access all of the components on it individually.
I fried the little white NPN transistor on mine - I had to scrape it off and solder a regular TO-92 one in its place.
The 150-in-1 that came out later had a monolithic IC in a plastic SIP package that contained three transistors and some resistors connected as a class A amplifier building block (surplus hearing-aid amps?).
-----Original Message-----
From: "Cornutt, David K" <david.k.cornutt at boeing.com>
Sent: Feb 9, 2004 2:55 PM
To: synth-diy at dropmix.xs4all.nl
Subject: RE: [sdiy] new guy - how did you start
I had one of those Science Fair things too. My dad got
me one when the first Shack opened here, I think in 1969.
Mine was a 50-in-1 box and the "feature" items in the
center were a galvometer and a solar cell. (I don't think
they were putting ICs into any of them at this point. I
do remember seeing the newer 100-in-1 ones several years
later and being jealous because they had an INTEGRATED
CIRCUIT! What actually was that IC, anyway? A 555?)
In college I got more seriously interested in circuits.
One of my required courses was a class in digital logic
design. Because the 300-level class wasn't offered the
quarter that I wanted to take it, I took the 500-level
graduate class instead. The instructor was an old pro
from a local NASA contractor and the class rocked. We
got to play with 6809 proto kits and we built
all kinds of stuff out of TTL logic. At that same time
I was working for a local company that built video equipment,
and that was where I learned to use a scope. That encouraged
me to buy one of those Shack reverb kits with the SAD1024s.
Unfortunately, school eventually got to be a lot of work
and I never finished it. (Several years later, as I was cleaning
stuff out in preparation for moving from Florida to New Jersey,
I found that board. Five years of exposure to salt air had
corroded the PC board and the part leads badly. I pitched the
whole thing, including the 1024s. Sigh.)
After college I moved to Florida and for a while I
was playing keyboards in a bar band. (The Juno-106
I bought for that was my first keyboard; I still have
it and play it frequently.) I also played a bit of
guitar and I wanted a way to make weird noises. I
came up with the idea of using a logic inverter with
a Shottky input to wave-shape a guitar signal into a
square wave. I rigged it up on a proto board with
C-cells for the power, a 741, TTL logic (!), voltage
dividing resistors to center the signal around the TTL
turn voltage, and non-polar caps to isolate the inputs
and outputs. The thing had no business actually
working, but incredibly it did; it tracked the guitar
fairly well (notwithstanding the tendency to want to
jump to a harmonic as the note faded away, which was
actually kind of cool). It lacked an envelope follower,
but when the guitar was silent the output went to a
constant logic state and the caps kept the DC out of
the output, so it would stay silent as long as one
didn't brush the strings. By adding a binary counter
to the inverter's output, I could make it a sub-harmonic
generator (I selected the desired harmonic by moving a
wire on the proto board). I ran the output through a
volume pedal so I could control the mix of direct and
synthesized signal. It was actually fun to play, and
it produced effects kind of like a ring mod if you
played chords into it in just a certain way. This was
the first really interesting and successful circuit I
ever came up with on my own. In fact, lately I've been
thinking about building another, better one.
(But the band wouldn't let me bring it to a gig, lest
we get PBR bottles thrown at us. :-)
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