nuxx.net
Making, baking, and (un-)breaking things in Southeast Michigan.

Rice Pudding

Rice Pudding

Here’s some rice pudding that Daneille and I made based on a recipe from good eats.

It is good. To make it:

Cook one cup of rice in a rice cooker.
Put that rice in a wide pot with one cup of milk.
Bring it all to a boil, stirring regularly.
Add 1/2 a cup of heavy cream, 3/4 of a cup of coconut milk, and around four ounces of sugar.
Stir everything together, letting it boil gently and thicken.
Sprinkle in 1/4 teaspoon of ground cardamom and stir in thoroughly.
Place in a bowl and cover with plastic wrap pressed tightly against the surface.
Put in fridge and allow to cool overnight.
Eat.

The recipe also called for golden raisins and chopped pistachios, but we didn’t feel like putting that in.

It’s thick, almost as solid as Jell-O, but with a creamy texture and amazing flavor. Mmm.

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x0xb0x #496 For Sale

One other thing… I’m going to sell the x0xb0x I finished back in June, #496. Seeing as the last x0xb0x on eBay went for $845, I think it’s worth selling this one now. After all, I basically built it to sell.

If anyone is interested in snatching it up before it hits eBay, please let me know.

Oh, and if I can ask folks for a bit of help, here is the current draft of my x0xb0x auction. I’m pretty certain it’s complete, I’m just curious if some of you could skim it and see if it needs any drastic changes. I’m not looking for perfect grammer, case, or amazing thoroughness, just a decently worded auction that doesn’t scare anyone off.

Thanks!

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‘lektroniks.

Almost-complete… Just needs the top panel fitted.
(Click for huuuuuuge image…)

Two things accomplished tonight… For one, the Millett Hybrid Max headphone amp I’ve been working on seems to be working consistently. I still have to get the top cover fitted and make some custom cables, but that will all come after I’m certain the bias is stable.

As of right now I’ve got it running at 27VDC with each tube biased to 13.5VDC. The bias for the MOSFETs is as close as I can get to 200mV, and it’s all sounding good. I had it hooked to my crappy Yamaha player earlier and it was sounding good, but when I hooked it back up to the Playstation (as seen last night) I couldn’t get the PSX to read discs any more. I think the laser on it has gone, just like they did in so many others.

I’ve only owned it a week, but I sort of expected this. I’ll try and pick up a new transport and at the same time do some work on the audio out circuit. I may even hack up a controller so I can have Play/Pause, Stop, Next, and Previous buttons located on the top of the case.

Tomorrow I’m also going to try and get things set up so I can listen to chiptunes from a MIDIbox SID-NUXX on it.

Oh, and a few more of the decent inside photos showing the wiring for the various connectors and top panel and such can be seen here (photo gallery retired), if you are interested.

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Inrush problems…

1) I should be in bed and sleeping.
2) It appears that I could resolve the inrush current problem by instead throwing a thermistor in place of (or in series with) the fuse. I just need to figure out how to spec out the appropriate part. Let’s see… 24VAC, no more than 1A in…

Now? Sleep.

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Millett Hybrid Max is Working

Guess where this is going…
(Click for much larger version…)

Yep, that’s the (now working) Millett Hybrid Max with recently installed 3.5mm headphone jack, connected to my Sennheiser HD570 headphones and a recently acquired SCPH-1001 Playstation. The amp isn’t set up yet, but I’ve got the problem figured out. Unfortunately I used up ‘s set of MOSFETs in the process due to some misguided advice, so I’ll have to order another set tomorrow.

Want to know what the problem was / is? In short, the designer(s) screwed up. Again. This time it’s with the power supply / fuse requirements.

Click here to read how / why…

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9090 Boards For Sale

Would any of you be interested in buying my 9090 boards (photo gallery retired)?

Asking price is US$550 shipped anywhere within the US. Outside of the US would cost a bit more, but probably not much. This is just slightly more than the cost for all the parts, except the hard work is actually done.

The boards have been professionally assembled and cleaned, then put in storage for a few months as I lost interest in the project. The boards are completely assembled with all parts fitted, it just needs an enclosure.

I’ll grab a few more photos of it tonight, but if you’re reading this you probably know that the work is properly done.

Here is the original page about the 9090.

UPDATE: Sold. :)

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Help with Millet Hybrid Maxed Troubleshooting

(I just posted the following here on the Head-Fi Forums. Hopefully someone there can help me.)

Hey there... This weekend I finished up my Millett Hybrid Max (with MOSFETs) and while it was working great at first (Saturday), I'm now having some problems. I'm hoping that someone here can give me some pointers on where to look.

First off, here are photos of the top and bottom of the PCB: Bottom Low Res, Bottom High Res, Top Low Res, Top High Res.

My soldering is generally pretty good, but please note that all the connections look dull because I'm now using lead-free solder for board work. As can be seen on this page (photo gallery retired) my enclosure is almost exactly the same as cetoole's, including the vent holes for the heatsinks. When it was working the chassis never rose above slightly warm (around 100°F) in a 75°F room, so it seems to be vented well enough.

The power supply is a Jameco-brand 24VAC 1A wall wart. I've used their supplies before and they've been quite good in the past. For fuses I've been using either 800mA or 1A fast-blow fuses. When the amp was working the 800mA was sufficient at levels as high as the maximum I could stand (about 10 o'clock).

Power, audio inputs, and headphone jack are all isolated from the chassis, and their isolation has been confirmed with a continuity meter.

Here's a rough timeline of how the build / testing went and problems I had along the way, which will hopefully help point the way:

- Finished assembling everything, and on powering it on I found only ~2.6VDC from the power supply, regardless of the position of RR3.
- Found that I was bit by the backwards silkscreen on the trimmers, so when I thought I had everything turned down all the way for initial setup it was actually all the way up.
- Properly turned all the trimmers down, powered things on, set the power supply to 27.00 VDC.
- Biased the tubes to 13.50 VDC.
- Biased the MOSFETs to 200mV, which is right in the middle of the range suggested on the MAX Setup and Bias Settings page.
- Hooked up a CD player (random Yamaha changer) and headphones (Sennheiser HD570) and confirmed that I could hear audio.
- Left the CD player playing Radiohead's Kid A on repeat for 4-5 hours with the volume at listening levels.
- Checked the power supply voltage, tube bias, and MOSFET bias and returned them to the settings previously mentioned, as they had drifted slightly.
- Checked the heatsinks with a thermocouple and found them to be around 125°F.
- Listened to a few different CDs and some DVD audio and was happy with the sound.
- The next day I went to hook up my iPod, but I wasn't getting any audio from the left channel. Turned everything off, removed the tubes, looked around, reinserted the tubes, and noted that everything seemed to work.
- Listened to a few more CDs, then found the left channel to be a bit lower than the right. I figured that the MOSFETs needed to be biased again, so I decided to set it aside and open the case the next morning.
- Listening more the left channel started dropping out completely, and during a test while listening to Squarepusher's Tetra-Sync (a 10 minute track) I could hear the left channel fade in and out, and occasionally get a bit static-y / fuzzy.
- The next morning I began thinking the problem might be with the 1/4" to 3.5mm headphone adapter I was using, so I plugged in a different one and turned on the amp. It wasn't working, nor was it warming up.
- Opening up the amp I found that the fuse (800mA) was blown. From this point on it blew every fuse I've inserted.

In testing, I tried the following with no success, with fuses continuing to blow each time:

- Replaced the left tube with a spare NOS 12AE6A.
- Removed the board from the enclosure.
- Replaced both tubes with spare NOS 12FM6 pieces.
- With the tubes in place, VCC to GND is at about 33.8Ω, which just about matches the two tube heaters (~12Ω each) plus R1 (~10Ω). No dead short there.

Any ideas? I'm pretty lost at this point...

Thanks very much...

-Steve

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Headphone Amp

Gur. The headphone amp whice I’ve been working on… isn’t. The damned things just blows fuses. It was working fine one morning, that evening there was crackling fading in/out in the left channel, and the following day it just blew fuses. I didn’t change anything between the days.

It’s not the tubes, as I’ve tried another pair for them.

<sigh>

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Sequentix P3

So, I’m thinking of selling my Sequentix P3.

The main site about it is here.

Strangely, my site talking about mine is the third Google hit when searching for sequentix p3.

I just think the $2k or so that it’ll fetch could do better earning compound interest, or put towards other projects. Maybe a kick-ass second headphone amp or something.

If anyone is interested, please let me know.

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