It's been a while since I've posted any progress on the D-Lev "Pro", which is my cross between a mostly digital D-Lev innards and an Etherwave Pro-style cabinet that I started to build a long time ago. I've been getting tired of working on this copycat cabinet that was started as more of a personal woodworking challenge than it was a good idea, but I do need to finish it. There are other more interesting and original cabinets to make once this thing is done.
Cabinet
After trial fitting and disassembling the cabinet a bunch of times I thought it would be safe to start finishing it, so I removed all of the decorative brass parts, and polished and then nickle plated them. One batch of parts that I forgot to electro-clean started showing adhesion problems, so I had to strip and re-plate them, which is something I try to avoid because of the effort involved. Here are all of the custom machined parts after plating:
The Peruvian walnut cabinet and flame-maple front panel were finished in semi-gloss lacquer and the front sanded and rubbed to a high gloss. The walnut came out darker than I would have liked, but lighter black walnut was in short supply around here when I made this. I also should have applied the graphics and lettering prior to applying any finish, but I had originally planned to screen-print black ink on a lacquer base coat and then overcoat it with more clear. Instead at the last minute I decided to do toner transfer graphics, which required application of many more finish coats than I had planned, but the results were worth it.
Electronics
Besides taking care of some springtime household duties and trying to get some work done on my other Melodia theremin project, the push has been to get some pc boards made for the D-Lev. I was new to Diptrace software for schematic capture/pwb layout and took my sweet time getting things together so that all of the boards could be ordered at once to save on shipping. The idea here was to test out a more optimized line and signal routing for the main board with an eye on EMI/EMC considerations, at least to the extent possible under the constraint of having only two board layers. A modular, interconnected board approach was deemed the safest route for this second pass, since potential mistakes would be isolated. My cabinet needs to have the layout flexibility that a single large board would not offer, and while any cabling to connect individual boards adds to the cost and labor, it was planned so that easy-to-assemble ribbon cables could be used in most cases.
I was having a problem getting answers out of the board vendor that I had intended to use for fabrication, and just by chance I happened to watch an EEVBlog video where Dave Jones was talking some boards that he received from JLCPCB, which is where I ended up going. But as I was preparing to post this today I noticed that tinkeringdude had suggested the same vendor a while back and I had completely forgotten about it. Anyway, even though my memory failed, luck prevailed and it all worked out. I couldn't be happier with the results from JLCPCB. They had the boards processed within 24 hours from the time I sent the gerbers (with online updates of every process milestone throughout fabrication), and I received everything six days after ordering!
This shipment consisted of 5 each main FPGA, encoder, and tuner boards, and 10 each discrete AFE3 (Analog Front End) and AFE3 smd boards. The encoder boards are small and were panelized 12 per 4" x 4" board for a total of 60 individual boards. With $17 for 3-4 day DHL shipping the grand total for 90 usable boards was about $53. And they look very good under inspection as well. I don't think I be etching my own pcbs anymore. Here are the boards, minus a set that was populated:
This is the back of the D-Lev Pro front panel with the Main FPGA board mounted directly to the back of the LCD. The encoders are mounted on individual interconnect boards to fit the curved panel, and the ribbon cables are soldered directly to the boards (they could use 4-pin connectors as well):
The volume AFE board that will be located at the base of the antenna connects to the Main FPGA board through an 8-conductor ribbon cable. This cable will end up being quite short with a longer one on the pitch side to travel the length of the extension arm. You can see one of my boo-boos on the main board - the alternate LCD connector footprint falls under the overhang of the FPGA demo board (I never made a new component for the demo board that would show the correct outline and I forgot about the overhang):
In this shot you can see the interconnect between the Main FPGA board and the LCD. I have a pin extender in between to allow the main board to stand higher to allow for tuner and optical cable clearance:
This is an individual AFE3 board. One is located at the base of or near each antenna:
And this is the SMD version of the same board, necessary only for my Pro cabinet design:
The remote tuner, front and back. I used green and red because I wanted to trim leads only on LEDs that I don't intend to use later on the real thing. I am a big fan of the remote tuner placed in the field of view while gazing past the pitch antenna, but it will probably be offered as part of the main board in later designs.
And giving credit where credit is due to the inventor, Dewster:
The really good news is that everything is working so far. All the boards have been tested, and the reassignment of all the FPGA pins to fit the new optimized layout went off without a hitch (except for one error that I have made before and will make again). No cuts or blue-wire jumpers, although the main board has some clearance issues that will get fixed on the next pass. We'll see if it all works when put together...