Interesting project. This way you can offer every musician control over their own monitor level with a tiny and cheap device mounted to the mic stands or tighten up to the belts of the musicians. Would be nice if it could work with a wifi shield. I’m just wondering how many members of this forum have ever heard of Arduino based solutions, the miracles that have been designed based on this small piece of hardware and the whole idea of open source software. Perhaps a dB measuring sensor can open the door to more sophisticated features.
This way you can offer every musician control over their own monitor level with a tiny and cheap device mounted to the mic stands or tighten up to the belts of the musicians.
That’s exactly what I want to do
The dB measure may be quite fun, true! but your component “sound impact sensor” does not seem to help to measure sound volume…
I’m seriously interested but not geeky (in the positive sense of the word) enough to contribute. If the moment is there I would love to do some testing irl. The wifi shields are much more expensive then the ethernet shields so I guess placing a router next to the stageblock will be, from a cost perspective, the best solution. Thanks for giving it a shot
If the Arduino can send a request to the Qu-16 for the actual levels of the different ranges of the equalizer of a specific mix/monitor group and, if the received info indicates that, at a certain frequency, thinks start to run out of control because of feedback it might be great if the Arduino could send a message to lower the level of the frequency that is causing trouble. That way you should build yourself a 50 dollar feed back suppression device for that monitor group.
my problem with incoming midi messges is just solved
we have a small concert saturday, i’ll try irl ! but only one arduino box yet… the qu 16 as a limitation to the number of devices connected. However, it should be quite easy to connect/disconnect when needed, and try some seconds later if occupied. Or maybe a “master arduino” running as a “router” for the slaves arduinos.
for your “feedback destroyer”: yes, the arduino can ask the qu 16 how are the settings (faders, eq, comp,… everything!)
and yes, we can also change all these settings.
but… to detect a feedback accurately, we need more computing power than a simple arduino. it won’t be accurate nor fast enought.
This is a great creation. - Great work! The only sad thing is that it would be unnecessary if A&H had designed designed the firmware to support multiple ipads or iphone apps just like Mackie, Behringer, Presonus & Soundcraft have done. Hopefully they will sort this in the next firmware update.
@GR-PDX : this offer a musician a way to modify 4 (on my device, more if you want to) channel volumes to his “return-mix”. But you can assign the potentiometers to anything you want (FX, EQ, …).
@JimmyDrummer : thanks for your comment. I hope to get a multiple device support in next update too! But my Arduino device has 2 advantages over the ipad: it costs ± 20€ (±500 for an ipad); and it has physical buttons, wich are sometimes easier to manipulate quickly, in dark light, between 2 chords