Could handcrafting hi-fi put food on your table?

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I'm considering small business of making tabletop hi-fi systems and selling them as crafts. What do readers of this forum think? Could handmaking electronics devices be a way to make a living in our day and age of low price mass market? 😕
 
Don't give up your day job until you find you can justify quitting due to demand & dollars flowing in.

I've been working towards hifi vendor self-suffiicency for 10 years now, still depend on part-time computer work, and only getting by because of VERY low overhead.

dave
 
I see some people selling speakers on Etsy.com. I think the hardest part of getting something like that sold is people's resistance to buying something without hearing it or handling it. Dave has posted plans for speakers so that people who want to can build a set of speakers, and sells finished speakers and flat-packs to people less inclined/able to use a table saw. Getting a working model into the hands of people who will talk about it is another way. Simon7000's suggestion is interesting, and certainly a cheap way to gauge interest.

I say put it out there, get your idea out there for people to see and talk about.

KM
 
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A tip my boss once gave me about dealing with regulation of electrical devices is to use an external power supply that is already UL safety rated. That might help?? Others would have more to say I am sure, there are plenty of people in this forum that have built and sold electronics.

KM
 
check out head-fi

there are several highly desired diy project amps for which there is some demand for builders by those who don't diy

of course beating minimum wage could be tough

also check forum rules for soliciting business, abusing PM's advertizing in for sale subforum are all resticted


(you may need to step up your casework though if the following is typical of your work)
 

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I've had several small side businesses. I found the best model is the simplest, very low overhead (expect total loss for at least the first year) make one thing and make it good.
Check out liability insurance, you'll need it. You may organize as an Artisan Sole Proprietor, which in most states will grant you a level of sales without complex taxes to deal with while still allowing you to buy supplies wholesale.
 
Thanks for all suggestions! BoomCase has some great stuff.

Those are battery-operated devices, no a/c required.

JCX: the case is made of heat shrink tube around copper rod frame. It's easy to apply and gives nice soft feel to end product. Problem is it's too thin and several layers are needed. I want to try some office supplies next for augmentation, maybe wood planks.
 
It's probably possible, but not entirely legally. If the product has anything digital, technically you'll need FCC testing. You probably can't afford UL (or CE if you want to sell overseas). You certainly can't afford liability insurance, so you better hope nobody sues you. You probably couldn't even afford to mount a defense. If you have no assets, go for it- people with no assets and no insurance don't get sued. IMO, if a product had moderate low volume, you might make a buck selling it, but the time required to hand build things on a one-off basis, given what they could possible sell for, will have you making about $1 per hour on a good day. I hate to be this pessimistic, but the day of making good in a garage shop (like HP, Apple and many others) is probably over. Keep an enjoyable hobby enjoyable and a hobby.
 
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