I've been looking at those $150-300 pedalboards from SBD, et al, and I really didn't need anything that complicated- with power supplies and loops.
While some guitarists want to wire up all of their pedals, just in case another world war breaks out, I just like to grab a few different pedals to use with the particular guitar and amp I'll be using. I always like to have my Boss tuner pedal but everything else usually changes from night to night.
I had picked up a fancy leather IBM ThinkPad briefcase for a few bucks at a thrift store and figured I'd build a pedal board that would fit inside (roughly 11" x 14").
Ace Hardware is selling a 2" x 15' box of Industrial Strength velcro this month for $25 (p/n 90197)- $5 off the regular price. I cut off a piece of that and brought it over to Home Depot to find some indoor/outdoor carpet that it would adhere to very well and got a 100 year supply for about $13 (2' x 12'). For the board itself I got a 2' x 4' piece of 5.2mm Luan plywood for about $5 and had them cut it into a few pieces so I could started on this right away. I already had a 16oz can of contact cement and oversized acid brushes to apply it.
For the velcro they recommend waiting 24 hours for maximum strength. I contemplated adding some epoxy when sticking the velcro to the bottom of my pedals but decided against it- at least for now. If I find the velcro peeling off from the bottom of the pedals I may add the epoxy.
BTW this idea would work well if you had an SBD pedalboard with a trashed power supply- just cut it out to fit the carry bag. I was going to make one a bit bigger and mount a power strip on the top.
And the velcro does not stick as well to the indoor/outdoor carpet as it does to the strips of "loops" that comes with it- the idea is just for the pedals to stay in place when the pedalboard is on the floor- not that they would stick to pedalboard if you were to hold it upside down.
Steve Ahola
P.S. 10 years ago I swore that my lips would never touch another effects pedal ("if it ain't alltube, it ain't allright!" ) but they can be handy- why buy or design a guitar amp with 4 channels if you can get the same sounds with one or two channels and a few pedals?
EDIT: I forgot to staple the carpet down and it looks like I do need to epoxy the velcro on to the back of my Visual Sound Route 66 pedal (it has a weird rubber backing). BTW RG Keen is evidently involved with the engineering for this company and does great work- offering boutique quality at less-than-boutique prices. I like it how all of the controls and switches are very usable- it's not like you have to fine-tune the controls "just right" to get decent sounds...
I mentioned adding a power strip to one of my pedalboards. I was thinking of using screws to mount it securely- but why not attach it with velcro when I need it? As they say when you have a hammer everything looks like a nail...
EDIT: I've already put the velcro on 6 different overdrive and distortion pedals so I'm ready to rock! Some of these pedals were a bit unwieldy to use in conjunction with other pedals (like a tuner) because of differences in size and weight but it looks like this will work great.
As for the pedals I'm not using at the time I had also picked up a few leather briefcases, but everything would bang around inside. So I figured why not put the indoor/outdoor carpet inside the briefcases to hold the pedals in place? If needed I'll line the bottom of the briefcase with the 5.2mm plywood and then secure the carpeting to that... Another thought: since I'm using staples, too, Scotch 357 spray adhesive might be better than contact cement. Also, my scissors got pretty crapped up cutting the self-adhesive velcro but they cleaned right up with my TechSpray Label & Adhesive Remover Pen (with heavy naptha and d-Limonene).
Woohoo- I'm finally getting these suckers organized!
Seymour Duncan Tweak Fuzz
Barber Small Fry
Damage Control Liquid Blues
Fulltone 2 FET
Visual Sound Route 66
Seymour Duncan Twin Triode Classic
While some guitarists want to wire up all of their pedals, just in case another world war breaks out, I just like to grab a few different pedals to use with the particular guitar and amp I'll be using. I always like to have my Boss tuner pedal but everything else usually changes from night to night.
I had picked up a fancy leather IBM ThinkPad briefcase for a few bucks at a thrift store and figured I'd build a pedal board that would fit inside (roughly 11" x 14").
Ace Hardware is selling a 2" x 15' box of Industrial Strength velcro this month for $25 (p/n 90197)- $5 off the regular price. I cut off a piece of that and brought it over to Home Depot to find some indoor/outdoor carpet that it would adhere to very well and got a 100 year supply for about $13 (2' x 12'). For the board itself I got a 2' x 4' piece of 5.2mm Luan plywood for about $5 and had them cut it into a few pieces so I could started on this right away. I already had a 16oz can of contact cement and oversized acid brushes to apply it.
For the velcro they recommend waiting 24 hours for maximum strength. I contemplated adding some epoxy when sticking the velcro to the bottom of my pedals but decided against it- at least for now. If I find the velcro peeling off from the bottom of the pedals I may add the epoxy.
BTW this idea would work well if you had an SBD pedalboard with a trashed power supply- just cut it out to fit the carry bag. I was going to make one a bit bigger and mount a power strip on the top.
And the velcro does not stick as well to the indoor/outdoor carpet as it does to the strips of "loops" that comes with it- the idea is just for the pedals to stay in place when the pedalboard is on the floor- not that they would stick to pedalboard if you were to hold it upside down.
Steve Ahola
P.S. 10 years ago I swore that my lips would never touch another effects pedal ("if it ain't alltube, it ain't allright!" ) but they can be handy- why buy or design a guitar amp with 4 channels if you can get the same sounds with one or two channels and a few pedals?
EDIT: I forgot to staple the carpet down and it looks like I do need to epoxy the velcro on to the back of my Visual Sound Route 66 pedal (it has a weird rubber backing). BTW RG Keen is evidently involved with the engineering for this company and does great work- offering boutique quality at less-than-boutique prices. I like it how all of the controls and switches are very usable- it's not like you have to fine-tune the controls "just right" to get decent sounds...
I mentioned adding a power strip to one of my pedalboards. I was thinking of using screws to mount it securely- but why not attach it with velcro when I need it? As they say when you have a hammer everything looks like a nail...
EDIT: I've already put the velcro on 6 different overdrive and distortion pedals so I'm ready to rock! Some of these pedals were a bit unwieldy to use in conjunction with other pedals (like a tuner) because of differences in size and weight but it looks like this will work great.
As for the pedals I'm not using at the time I had also picked up a few leather briefcases, but everything would bang around inside. So I figured why not put the indoor/outdoor carpet inside the briefcases to hold the pedals in place? If needed I'll line the bottom of the briefcase with the 5.2mm plywood and then secure the carpeting to that... Another thought: since I'm using staples, too, Scotch 357 spray adhesive might be better than contact cement. Also, my scissors got pretty crapped up cutting the self-adhesive velcro but they cleaned right up with my TechSpray Label & Adhesive Remover Pen (with heavy naptha and d-Limonene).
Woohoo- I'm finally getting these suckers organized!
Seymour Duncan Tweak Fuzz
Barber Small Fry
Damage Control Liquid Blues
Fulltone 2 FET
Visual Sound Route 66
Seymour Duncan Twin Triode Classic
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