It would be awesome to be able to couple this up to the USB input on the TC Electronics Flashback delay, and have a box that can tap-tempo two of the pedals at once!! Is there a way to find out if the TC unit will "listen" for tempo signals at the USB input????
I recently stumbled over the Arduino here on youtube and was considering to get one for myself soon. And one of the first ideas i had, being a guitarist, was to make a TapTemp-Unit just like this! Thanks for sharing, man! Hmm... i dont know too much about all this, but i think, it would be possible to use the TAP-circuit and program you made and implement it into some smaller guitar-fx pedals, right...? Or at least to control already present pedals...
Quite ingenious. I have no experience with these things; may I ask a question or two?
Once you've programmed that microcontroller does is have to stay on the green PCB or can you unplug it and put it into a prototyping board along with your LEDs etc? If you can remove it do you have to add lots of components around it make it work or is that stuff on the green PCB just for programming?
It's plugged into your computer, is that 1) first to program the chip and then 2) to provide power?
ok, well in alot of microcontroller cases you can remove it from the pcb, but this is the arduino, and the board comes pre-made, it is soldered into the board so you cant remove it (unless you REALLY wanted to) exept for a power supply circut, most of the stuff on the board there is just for programming it through usb. if you knew the pin setup you can do it with just the chip. to program you use usb, this provides 5v to power the board. you can use 7 or more volts to power the board in non usb.
I'm trying to re-create the tap tempo but I'm having difficulties - can't get the the LEDs to start blinking. Can you post a little more detail on how the bread board should be physically wired up with the Arduino.
Yeah, it doesn't make it seem like the LEDs are flashing with the tempo, the way the video plays back. But I believe you that it works, I really do. ;-)
It would be awesome to be able to couple this up to the USB input on the TC Electronics Flashback delay, and have a box that can tap-tempo two of the pedals at once!! Is there a way to find out if the TC unit will "listen" for tempo signals at the USB input????
amberience 1 month ago
This has been flagged as spam show
this is so cool...
can i just ask if you can post a video
on how to make a HOME MADE TAP TEMPO for boss dd5
thnx and GOD BLESS
clokard 1 year ago
this is so cool .......
can i just ask if you can post a video on how to make a HOME MADE TAP TEMPOfor boss dd5,,,,thnx
and GOD BLESS
clokard 1 year ago
what about it? those were there for other experimentation. :)
yorgle 2 years ago
Hey, cool!
I recently stumbled over the Arduino here on youtube and was considering to get one for myself soon. And one of the first ideas i had, being a guitarist, was to make a TapTemp-Unit just like this! Thanks for sharing, man! Hmm... i dont know too much about all this, but i think, it would be possible to use the TAP-circuit and program you made and implement it into some smaller guitar-fx pedals, right...? Or at least to control already present pedals...
EvilInYourCloset 2 years ago
That's kinda like ***** cool!
jodex96 2 years ago
cool project, I want to see your program.
DennisPl82 3 years ago
As the description says, the program can be downloaded from the url provided.
yorgle 3 years ago
sick dude!
trashlites 3 years ago
Quite ingenious. I have no experience with these things; may I ask a question or two?
Once you've programmed that microcontroller does is have to stay on the green PCB or can you unplug it and put it into a prototyping board along with your LEDs etc? If you can remove it do you have to add lots of components around it make it work or is that stuff on the green PCB just for programming?
It's plugged into your computer, is that 1) first to program the chip and then 2) to provide power?
astronomerroyal 4 years ago
ok, well in alot of microcontroller cases you can remove it from the pcb, but this is the arduino, and the board comes pre-made, it is soldered into the board so you cant remove it (unless you REALLY wanted to) exept for a power supply circut, most of the stuff on the board there is just for programming it through usb. if you knew the pin setup you can do it with just the chip. to program you use usb, this provides 5v to power the board. you can use 7 or more volts to power the board in non usb.
skierplaterandy 2 years ago
An ordinary piezo seems to have done the trick and it works! Nice!
richarsj 4 years ago
Awesome! :D
yorgle 4 years ago
Can you tell me what kind of button you used (make/model etc)? The one i'm using is a little unresponsive at times.
Thanks.
richarsj 4 years ago
(I accidently just deleted my old response. oops)
I'd love to, but i got them from a local place that has oodles of surplus stuff.
yorgle 4 years ago
I'm trying to re-create the tap tempo but I'm having difficulties - can't get the the LEDs to start blinking. Can you post a little more detail on how the bread board should be physically wired up with the Arduino.
Thanks for the clarification!
richarsj 4 years ago
That looks great can you post the program you wrote.
RTourn 4 years ago
Yeah, it doesn't make it seem like the LEDs are flashing with the tempo, the way the video plays back. But I believe you that it works, I really do. ;-)
hoosierillusion 4 years ago
weird. the blink lines up just right with the camera frame rate so that some of the blinks don't show up. heh.
yorgle 5 years ago