This past weekend, I followed Alex Kung's tutorial for combining a ThinkGeek Personal Soundtrack Shirt and a 12-channel remote into a budget sound system for R2. A CF-III system (click here for a link to the commercial module and here for a link to an R2 builder's tutorial showing how to combine it with a remote) would be nice and appears to be getting to be fairly common in the R2-D2 Builders Club, but I wanted to first put a project such as this together and second save on the cost of a high-end system. CF-III or its successor will go into the someday/maybe heading of my to-do list.
Chris James, of the R2 Builder's Group, has posted some advanced ideas about the CF-III system.
Back to my own ThinkGeek sound system project.
Upsides
- Easy to put together.
- Pretty cheap (about $20 for the T-shirt, down from $40, I think, and another $25 or so for the remote, plus miscellaneous wires, connectors and so forth).
- Uses mp3 sound files and a card, which makes changing the sounds easy.
Downsides
- The provided speaker isn't very loud.
- The single-remote setup allows only 10 R2 sounds.
- As Alex points out in his tutorial, there is a slight delay between pressing a button on the remote and hearing the sound.
- The remote receiver assembly uses relays to close and open circuits, and each click is audible and distracting, at least without an enclosure
Off:
And on:
I also checked the remote receiver's relay using a multimeter.
A measurement of infinite resistance:
and one of little resistance once the relay closed the circuit:
This was the arrangement after I finished putting together the wires. I also replaced the ThinkGeek speaker with a 75-cent 8-ohm speaker from AllElectronics and thought the volume was better.
Next steps
- I stripped far too much insulation off the wires I connected to the remote receiver's terminal blocks and am concerned about the possibility of exposed leads touching; I'll cut and strip new wires.
- I'll put the arrangement into an enclosure.
- Fairly soon, I'll need to decide on batteries for the droid and settle on a power system. The remote receiver uses 12 volts for the relays. The ThinkGeek part of the sound system is set up with four AAA batteries, which I'll want to replace.
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