LOL finishing off and actually getting the project into a box that doesn't look like a badly mauled biscuit tin... Pet difficulties I'm no good at rectangular openings and can no longer get hold of letraset...
Getting started..
I cant seem to get going until I am able to see a clear path toward a *perfect* end product. Most people just start and change tack as new things pop up.. but I'm too concerned about the frustration of projects stalling and the space needed to store them half-built, so I stall right at the beginning.
Doesn't stop me from accumulating parts of the non-started projects though!
I cant seem to get going until I am able to see a clear path toward a *perfect* end product. Most people just start and change tack as new things pop up.. but I'm too concerned about the frustration of projects stalling and the space needed to store them half-built, so I stall right at the beginning.
Doesn't stop me from accumulating parts of the non-started projects though!
Having completed projects sitting around and not being used. Alas, I can only have one or maybe two audio systems installed and used.
Quoting Pete Millett:
Quoting Pete Millett:
pmillett said:I need another line stage like I need another... well...
A friend gave me this gorgeous cigar box. So I had to do something!
and can no longer get hold of letraset...
There are quite a few sellers of unused old letraset and decadry on Etsy at reasonable prices (ebay prices look more daft). Somewhere there must be a cheaper source they get it from.
There are quite a few sellers of unused old letraset and decadry on Etsy at reasonable prices (ebay prices look more daft). Somewhere there must be a cheaper source they get it from.
That stuff degrades after a few years, it's probably no good.
There is a way to make your own rub-down transfer paper. It is a bit more involved than letraset and has its limitations, but the results are comparable.
Last edited:
Getting thru the dip of a project. That mid point where you want it to just be finished but you have lots of time still to go. In other words finishing.
Also, how one thing leads to another and so on... start with wanting to upgrade a dac and you run dedicated electrical build new speakers buy new amps treat the room... on and on. When it all gets finished one day I’ll upgrade the dac. It’s a little bit of a mental disorder that can, at times, make you hate the hobby.
Also, how one thing leads to another and so on... start with wanting to upgrade a dac and you run dedicated electrical build new speakers buy new amps treat the room... on and on. When it all gets finished one day I’ll upgrade the dac. It’s a little bit of a mental disorder that can, at times, make you hate the hobby.
My dad was a graphic artist, had given me lots of letraset pages, brings back some memories for sure.
I don’t like troubleshooting an expensive build, risking more damage in the process.
I don’t like troubleshooting an expensive build, risking more damage in the process.
Building and debugging SMD.
Need glasses plus magnifying glass for my old eyes.
Had SMD A2D today that didnt work.
Soldered it 3 times before it worked.
Need glasses plus magnifying glass for my old eyes.
Had SMD A2D today that didnt work.
Soldered it 3 times before it worked.
Oh, where do I start?
- Having your flatmate's ba5tard cat decide that your 15" Altecs make a great scratching post.
- Tossing out that turntable you made lovingly by hand 20 years ago because the crappy motor in the obsolete Silcron turntable had failed. Then telling a friend about it, who says "Oh yeah, I have one of those I'm not using - BRAND NEW - and you can have it."
- Several years later realizing that you also threw out the irreplaceable hand-tweaked-by-Rowan-McCombe Decca London Mk VI elliptical cartridge at the same time.
- Giving all your records to your daughter (because hey, you no longer have a turntable, right?) and then finding out that most of those records are never going to be available on CD. Ever.
- Checking if your iron is hot enough by sniffing the resin on the tip and burning your nose in the process.
I love my hobby, really.
- Having your flatmate's ba5tard cat decide that your 15" Altecs make a great scratching post.
- Tossing out that turntable you made lovingly by hand 20 years ago because the crappy motor in the obsolete Silcron turntable had failed. Then telling a friend about it, who says "Oh yeah, I have one of those I'm not using - BRAND NEW - and you can have it."
- Several years later realizing that you also threw out the irreplaceable hand-tweaked-by-Rowan-McCombe Decca London Mk VI elliptical cartridge at the same time.
- Giving all your records to your daughter (because hey, you no longer have a turntable, right?) and then finding out that most of those records are never going to be available on CD. Ever.
- Checking if your iron is hot enough by sniffing the resin on the tip and burning your nose in the process.
I love my hobby, really.
Spending a bunch of money to build something that works perfectly, then making a small change that breaks the project - even after reverting back to the default configuration - and having no idea how (and not enough free time) to make it work again.
That's the only time I have hated this hobby, and it has left a lasting impression because the bloody thing still doesn't work.
That's the only time I have hated this hobby, and it has left a lasting impression because the bloody thing still doesn't work.
Having a few decent ideas but not the hard work ethic proclivity to see them through to fruition.
Hello,
Ordering parts at the shops who focus on audiophiles.
They offer covid-19 discount but when you try to order there are to many hurdles. Put a part on a wishlist asked for a quote because i needed it. It took to much time to get them answer they had them in stock. Wanted to pay with paypal could not finalize my order. Then they send a paypal invoice for just one part while i had more on my last. Send them a print screen so they could send me a new a new paypal invoice. Made the payment right away. Still cannot find it in my order history.
Why these companies cannot work like Mouser?
Greetings, Eduard
Ordering parts at the shops who focus on audiophiles.
They offer covid-19 discount but when you try to order there are to many hurdles. Put a part on a wishlist asked for a quote because i needed it. It took to much time to get them answer they had them in stock. Wanted to pay with paypal could not finalize my order. Then they send a paypal invoice for just one part while i had more on my last. Send them a print screen so they could send me a new a new paypal invoice. Made the payment right away. Still cannot find it in my order history.
Why these companies cannot work like Mouser?
Greetings, Eduard
Finding that your favourite drawing program (Claris Draw, a PC descendant of MacDraw) won't work on Windows 10 (whereas it was fine on Win7 and before) and all the contemporary drawing programs all have a learning curve steeper than NASA's astronaut programme, so I revert to graph paper only to find graph paper is unobtanium, drawing blank stares from stationery shop assistants. How the hell can I lay out a front panel now.
Last edited:
How the hell can I lay out a front panel now.
I learned the Adobe suit 20+ years ago and do my designs in Illustrator 10, but I guess use just some 2-3% of the program's capabilities. I draw boxes, circles, write texts and can even use the layers. Then I line up the boxes and cirles and texts up and print it all out.
Ordered som components from a guy in England 1 1/2 month ago and yesterday he decided that the package was lost and refunded the money ... and today the package arrived.
Paid the guy once again, have to be fair.
But just a few years ago I ordered the stuff from a German company.
OK, good to have a supply of 2K Tempco 3300ppm/K resistors.🙄
So many different applications or tools that only work on certain systems.
I use an older version of Mathcad, and LspCad that work on W2K, so I have a dedicated workstation for those.
But then there are Office programs (Word, Excel, etc.) and the handy little DATS measurement system that run on my laptop with W10.
Often, data files or picture files need to be transferred from one computer to the other. That can be time-consuming and tedious.
Of course, there is probably a collection of current applications and tools that can be used on a single computer. Maybe I'm resistant to change . . . but if something I have already works . . .
🙂
I use an older version of Mathcad, and LspCad that work on W2K, so I have a dedicated workstation for those.
But then there are Office programs (Word, Excel, etc.) and the handy little DATS measurement system that run on my laptop with W10.
Often, data files or picture files need to be transferred from one computer to the other. That can be time-consuming and tedious.
Of course, there is probably a collection of current applications and tools that can be used on a single computer. Maybe I'm resistant to change . . . but if something I have already works . . .
🙂
Throwing out part of an enclosure you're never going to use again, because your mods are better than stock. Then reverting to stock and searching fruitlessly for the thrown out bit, cause you're out of metal and really don't want to make another one.
lack of availability of original spare parts. 🙁
Same. My avatar pic is of a power transistor from an adcom amp (5802) that is less than 18 years old that cannot be repaired. It’s also the look you get when you find out.
- Home
- Member Areas
- The Lounge
- What part of DIY do you HATE?