Turntable USB interface

From Organic Design wiki
Revision as of 09:20, 10 February 2007 by Rob (talk | contribs) (Why?)

I would like to retro-fit my 1970's pioneer turntable to be able to record onto a iPod or other USB device.

Pioneer-turntable.jpg

Why?

Because I like to combine technology in unusual ways. And also to bring together analog and digital without a computer getting in the way.

There is a microcomputer involved however.

Operation

  • Indicator light is off
  • Plug in USB stick or iPod
  • Indicator light is green to indicate all is well - iPod or memory stick is detected
  • Place stylus on a chosen track
  • Press button
  • Indicator light is red for record
  • You will also see the activity light on the USB device light
  • Sound file is written onto the device in WAV/AIFF format
  • Press button
  • Recording stops and file is closed
  • Indicator light is green
  • You can press the button to begin recording again to a new file
  • Unplug device (only when light is green - your risk if you unplug on red)
  • Indicator light goes out

Systems

  • Power supply
    • plug pack 12V 100mA
    • Split from it's case and wired in parallel on the AC side of the turntable's main transformer
  • Analogue phono stage (requires ±12V DC)
    • to be build on veroboard
  • ICSP programmer required to completely rewrite the bootloader - AVRISP mkII

Microcontroller

Features

Board

  • 78MO5 voltage regulator
  • FT232R USB to serial driver
  • S16B0016 clock
  • USB D-type connector

Operating system

Main loop

  • boot up
  • USB device?
  • loop
    • yes-mount fs and open file descriptor
    • no-loop
  • set led to Red
  • loop
    • check A to D for signal input
    • check threshhold
      • begin recording
      • or
      • loop
  • begin recording

References