#portableaudiohacks

2023-10-23
2022-01-09

Adding An Audio Jack To Classic Headphones Is a Nifty Upgrade

One of the most common ways to junk a pair of headphones is to damage the cord. Obviously, the lead can be repaired, but it involves busting out the soldering iron and can be tedious when dealing with the tiny little coated wires.

It does involve soldering, but ideally, you only have to do it once.

[mauriziomiscio.mm] has a way of dealing with the problem in a once-and-done fashion, by installing a female audio jack into his vintage headphones. The benefit is that if the cable is damaged, it can simply be unplugged and replaced with a new one, and is commonly seen on headphones from companies like KRK.

The hack is simple when applied to a classic pair of AKG K141 headphones. The little plastic casing on one earpiece is popped off, and replaced with a 3D-printed version that stoutly holds a female TRS jack in place. This can then be soldered up to the wiring inside the headphones.

With everything assembled, the headphones can now use an easily-replaceable cable, and one needn't worry about having to bust out the soldering iron if the lead is damaged in future. It's a particularly useful hack for those who use their headphones on the road, always throwing them into backpacks between gigs.

If that's not hardcore enough, consider attaching a headphone jack to an old 8-track player for the most ridiculous Walkman you can imagine. If you've been working on your own portable audio hacks, be sure to drop us a line!

#portableaudiohacks #repairhacks #headphones #trs #trsjack

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2021-11-20

iPod Mod Puts Pi Zero in New Bod

We sure love to see nicely designed products get a new lease on life. Just as the new Raspberry Pi Zero 2 was being announced, [production] was stuffing an original RPi Zero into an old iPod’s case.

[production] cites several previous, similar projects that showed how to interface with the click-wheel, a perfectly fitting color display from Waveshare, and open-source software called Rockbox to run on the pi. We all stand on the shoulders of giants.

Some nice innovations to look for are the Pi Zero’s micro-SD card and a micro-USB charging port aligned to the large slot left from the iPod’s original 40 pin connector. Having access for charging and reflashing the card without opening the case seems quite handy. There’s a nice sized battery too, though we wonder if a smaller battery and a Qi charger could fit in the same space. Check the project’s Hackaday.io for the parts list, and GitHub for the software side of things, and all the reference links you’ll need to build your own. It looks like [production] has plans to turn old iPods into Gameboy clones, you may want to check back for progress on that.

If you just want to rock like it’s 2004, there are options to just upgrade the battery and capacity but keep your vintage iPod too.

#ipodhacks #portableaudiohacks #raspberrypi #github #hackadayio #ipod #portableraspberrypi #raspberrypicase #raspberrypizerow #rasperrypizero #rockbox #waveshare

imageiPodRPi by production interior wiring
2021-10-09

Drive High-Impedance Headphones With This Stylish USB DAC

For anyone with an interest in building audio projects, it's likely that an early project will be a headphone amplifier. They're relatively easy to build from transistors, ICs, or tubes, and it's possible to build one to a decent quality without being an electronic engineering genius. It's not often though that we see one as miniaturized as [daumemo]'s USB-C DAC and headphone amplifier combo, that fits within a slightly elongated 3.5 mm jack cover as part of a small USB-to-headphone cable.

The DAC is an off-the-shelf board featuring an ALC4042 IC, it has a line-level output and a handy place to tap off a 5 volt line for the amplifier. This final part is a tiny PCB with two chips, a TPS65135 that produces clean +5 and -5 volt rails, and an INA1620 which is a high-quality audio amplifier set up for 2x gain. All this has been designed onto a very small PCB, which sits inside a 3D-printed housing along with the 3.5 mm earphone socket. The result is a very neat unit far better able do drive high-impedance headphones than the output from an unmodified DAC, but still looking as svelte as any commercial product. We like it.

This may be one of the most compact USB-to-headphone amplifiers we've seen, but it's by no means the first.

#homeentertainmenthacks #portableaudiohacks #dac #headphoneamplifier #usbaudio

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