Custom Controllers

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Custom Controllers
Posted on: 04.04.2008 by Adolf Hit
*UPDATE* 1/10/10

The midifighter is now a commercially available controller. For more info please visit http://www.midifighter.com/


Is anybody else working on any custom controllers?
This is a controller I have been working on for the last few months called the "Midifighter". Obviously inspired by Eans arcade button mod each arcade button sends a midi note, and has an LED which can controlled using the midi out put on your software. The group of four buttons on the top right of the box are bank select buttons, each button maps the arcade buttons to a new range of notes. This effectively gives you quick access to 64 notes. The joysticks are raxed from a ps2 controller and send a different CC value on each axis. Eventually I want to tweak this so that it can be configured to send a different pair of CC values in each quadrant turning them into "super-sticks".
Dj Daxsen
06.04.2008
Hi guys.

This is some great things to see, Open Source Hardware Controllers!!!! YAY.
Can anyone point me towards a resource in making Midi controllers/instruments???
Or just any cool sites on this subject you have found.

Thanks in advance.
JUNIOR JUNIMM
06.04.2008
First off nice custom arcade/mpd style midi controller. On a side note I'd like to suggest adding a community section specific to custom controllers it's a good topic of discussion would be great seeing more of these.

06.04.2008
hey midifidler, your design looks great! I believe the simple ideas you have implemented are a great start. Lets keep this conversation going for sure.
Xavier Emanuels
06.04.2008
Originally Posted by Kaon
When can i buy one? looks like you could use that to do some pretty amazing stuff, especially if you were to integrate 'super' effects
Your both in New Zealand ! cheap shipping... err postal
Virginia Ortiz
06.04.2008
When can i buy one? looks like you could use that to do some pretty amazing stuff, especially if you were to integrate 'super' effects
Xavier Emanuels
06.04.2008
The midi fighter is looking cool,

This gives me the idea of having a version that can sit in front of the VCI, thats the same hight as it and width as the VCI, kinda like an extension of Ean Goldens mod. It puts 2 or 3 more rows buttons and a couple of joysticks between the VCI and the DJ for insane cue juggling and sample dropping routines.

Keep up the good work !
Random X
06.04.2008
Hey MidiFidler and ToS, both controllers are looking nice!

What kind of budget are you talking about, when building?
Mister Minsk
05.04.2008
Originally Posted by midifidler
Hey Duelist,
Yeah I have used it with the drum rack in 7, if you want a really natural sound its not quite ideal as the buttons are obviously not velocity sensitive, but you can trigger ridiculously fast with them probably up to 8+ times a second, and you can have a huge array of drum sounds in easy access.
Assigning the joysticks to loop length and compress results in some pretty cool effects.
Cool.
What I Was Thinking You Could Try Is:
'Slicing' Up A Track;
Then Map The Slices/Cuepoints To Drum Rack Pads.
You Could Then Use You Controller To Juggle.
Adolf Hit
05.04.2008
Hey Duelist,
Yeah I have used it with the drum rack in 7, if you want a really natural sound its not quite ideal as the buttons are obviously not velocity sensitive, but you can trigger ridiculously fast with them probably up to 8+ times a second, and you can have a huge array of drum sounds in easy access.
Assigning the joysticks to loop length and compress results in some pretty cool effects.

@Tos
Your controller looks sic, loving the uv reactive marking. Does midi box use a USB interface?
Mister Minsk
05.04.2008
Hi MIDIFidler

Just Wondering If You Are Using Are You Using Ableton7?
If You Are, Have You Tried Using Your Controller With A Drum Rack?

The Duelist
DJ MENSAH
05.04.2008
I'm finishing (finishing since the beginning of the year) a traktor midiBox controller.
You can see some of the buildlog HERE.
If you are building something more than a button matrix or just a few pots I'm recmmending midiBox platform.
Adolf Hit
05.04.2008
@Fatlimey
That was me so if you ever want any advice hit me up. I would be interested in seeing what you have got so far..
@midian
I'm pretty much finished redesigning the PCBs to have them made professionally so that I can get rid of the shit-storm of wires inside the case. I have to order several lots of the circuit boards so will have no issue putting together extra units for any one interested. I just need coin for the parts cost which will probably be between 250-300 NZD, if I was making more than 5 it would probably be more like 200.
The next version will be about the same height as a vci rather than the 45mm in its current state. I'm going to finish my one with a wood veneer on the top as I reckon it will look sweet with the yellow buttons and brushed aluminum but I can have the top laser cut from aluminum and powder coated or anodized for a more modern look.
@rBobz28
I will post a video once i get some skills on it So far I have had a lot of fun using it to control tracks which have been sliced to midi in Ableton.
Jorge Terron
05.04.2008
I'd love to see it in action. Let us know if you put a video on Youtube.
Ryan Morales
05.04.2008
Sweeet. I totally want one!

Would work sweet with a VCI + traktor to trigger cues or to tigger ableton samples perhaps OR! that and a nocturne would be a totally sic ultra portable setup for running ableton. Arcade buttons for tiggering samples, joy sticks for effects and nocturne for eq's and anything else (automap ftw!).

So how much for you to build me one ? ;D
mohammed farhan
04.04.2008
Sweet!! Good job in using an existing idea and making it into a totally different idea.
robert chanda
04.04.2008
In my copious spare time (ha!) I am working on a custom controller kit. More of a tutorial on how to make your own custom controller using an Arduino, based on a flexible description of how to create the four subsystems - keys, knobs, output lights and rotary controllers. You start with your design for the controller (a very teenagery thing to do, but actually the right thing in this case), spec out the component counts and build subsystem modules that you hook into the Arduino. The software after that is a fairly simple matter of polling components and sending MIDI. The only details are how to latch and shift-in your keys, shift-out your lights, how to multiplex your analog readings and how to buffer your rotary controllers with incr/decr counters so you don't miss a fast movement. There are standard parts that do all these things - connect together, write some code to interpret movements into MIDI for your superknobs and you're done.

I recently asked for help with the electrical engineering in the DJTT comments (I'm a software guy, no idea about decoupling capacitors or the analog limitations of digital circuits) and someone offered help, but I never got back to them and I regret that now. Please call in, I'd like to take you up on your offer!

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