Here you’ll find a collection of things that I do, make, say, and think. It collects projects published across my sites, including custom-built guitar and hi-fi amplifiers and effects, custom PC servers, and rescued or upcycled hardware. Simply a central place to collect what I’m doing with some of my creative energy at any given time.
If you are looking for my professional information go to >JohannesJohansson.com<
Categories
- DIY (30)
- DIY Audio (18)
- DIY Computation (8)
- DIY Misc (5)
Random Posts
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Guitar Pedals: 1 Splitter pedal: Two guitar amps at once
A tiny active splitter for running two guitar amps at once, with buffering, ground lift, and phase correction built in.
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Dumble Overdrive Special: 1 Head & Circuit
An introduction to the Dumble Overdrive Special build, why the original amplifiers are legendary, and what makes the project worth chasing.
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Saving Monitors: Leaky capacitors
A quick repair example showing how leaking capacitors can bring old monitors back to life for very little cost.
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Custom DDC: 1 Digital to Digital Converter; USB to I2S over HDMI; S/PDIF; AES
A DIY digital-to-digital converter build with USB input, improved clocks, and outputs including I2S over HDMI, S/PDIF, and AES.
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TrainWreck Rockette: 1 Redesigned
A redesign-focused start to the TrainWreck Rockette project, built around Vox AC30 roots and Johannes's own preferred twists.
Homelab: 1 25 Year old computer as a firewall: 60Mbps throughput
If you have spent some time around a computer-interested individual, you may at one time or another have come across the suggestion that a good use for an old computer is as a firewall and router around your home. The argument, however, is based on the fact that for many years your leftover computers would vastly outperform any consumer-level router in measurable ways, but is this still true, and how old can the hardware be? What is necessary to be able to stream 4K HDR video content locally?
I decided to re-awaken my families first ever x86 PC, a Pentium II 300mhz from 1996. This computer had served a similar task around 15years ago but since then been boxed up due to a lot of moving around. Well, now that I am starting a family of my own, suddenly there are a lot of devices that can make good use of a wired connection. So with a number of leftover parts we have a 6port PFsense very capable little firewall, albeit using an old build of the software to fit it within the capacities of this ancient hardware.
Not enough of a challenge though, I decided to cut down the case to a 4th of its original size, cut apart and reassemble the front, and turn the motherboard sideways to fit on the bottom. Really nice to shrink computers, makes room for more of them… Keeping this cool and quiet are two Scythe fans, a slim 10mm thick, cut down in their speed by a manually adjusted voltage regulator.
Happily, the old thing still manages a throughput of over 60Mbps double what I’d require to have it serve content to a 4k HDR TV, the most taxing thing it ever have to do. However, it still sits downstream from the real Firewall and UTM taking care of the rest of the network, it’ll have to live out what’s rest of its life taking care of some less essential services. Still not bad for a computer that otherwise most probably would have been thrown away over a decade ago.
Homelab: 4 Family & apartment friendly server cabinet
Homelab: 3 Turning laptops into mini-servers
Homelab: 2 Tiny 24 Core virtualization Computation with hacked hardware
Continue in this series
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