My friend that was so nice. I’ve learned how to bent by my own and that was the worst way since I’ve burned many rare boards… anyway I would appreciate very much if you could share how to make your tester. It was so cool to see
This is one of my personal favorite projects from you! So cool how you documented all of this (including the blow up 😁) and had a lil build up on Patreon and Instagram too! The rats from LRW were really looking forward to this video and you really freaking came through man! 🙌 And yes, It is certainly hard to find these! lol I have the 3014 added to my search list to keep an eye out on! If you get any more of these to bend and sell... LRW wants to be first on the list!! 😎🤘🐀
Thanks man! These were made for the EU market, so they won't be found easily in the US, and run on PAL rather than NTSC, though you can get converter box thingies.
@@StephenMcLeod Yes, I was thinking I'd need a RGB to Composite adapter type thing if I did. I've read that RGB provides better video quality for retro gaming as well, so it's something I've been looking into recently haha
Yes, with a maybe, and a but. You can run this into any display device which takes composite input. If you don't have composite input, you would need a convertor box. The other caveat is that circuit bent video devices display best on analogue outputs because they can handle the scrambled signal far better. Digital devices often drop out when the input is outside their expected parameters, which means you need to stabilise the signal somehow, often through the use of something called a time base corrector. These are tricky to find for a good price, and also mean the effects aren't as nice. Finally, CRT TVs or other analogue output devices are part of the FX chain, in that they will display different inputs/glitches in sometimes radically different ways. The results are often waaay better as a result.
I don't unfortunately! That series are slightly different in that they have a slimmed down case, which I don't have any experience with sadly. Let me know if you get it off!
Unfortunately not. I've had to scour around the Internet and things to find the bits and pieces and mod them myself. Most of it is consumer gear that folk have lying around in cupboards etc. There will be some cool switchers etc at Universities and things I'd imagine, but they have probably chucked most of it out by now and moved to HDMI.
Hi! Which type of photosensitive resistor did you use for the audio reactive glitching? I tried a 5506, the lowest I could find, and the led still doesn’t get bright enough to resist low enough to show anything.
Hey! I unfortunately can't remember which one I used in this particular bend. I bought a big box of different values and experimented with them to see which one worked, and I think that's the best approach, as each device will be a bit different. Sorry I can't help more!
p.s. pay attention to the colour spectrum of the LDR and the LED, as not all of them react the same to different colours. As in, they may be more sensitive to particular LEDs.
True, thank you so much! I’ve been experimenting a bit and found a spot that glitches the way I want with the resistance I’m able to get, now it’s just trying to figure out how to make the LED get just a tiny bit brighter
Go for it! Find a cheap one that runs off of a DC power supply (wall wart, etc.) and just follow the advice here about mapping out where the power and ground points are. After that, you can go nuts with resistors, pots, and very small value capacitors. If you roast a 20€£$ video mixer, it barely matters. A unit that is running from a DC supply will likely never hurt you or even blow itself up.
@@KentBuchla Great advice! I've blown up a few £20 mixers. I refuse to pay more than that for them because I know I'll end up destroying them. Plus, most of them are destined to be chucked out anyway unless somebody buys them for cheap on eBay. Though now they are getting more expensive...
Awesome work here, i am about to jump into my first attempt at modifying a video mixer. Is there anywhere i can go for more info on how to identify the power and ground lines? I am new to working with circuit boards.
Good luck! There's a few ways. Outside of reading the actual schematic, you can take the boards out, identify the chips, look up their data sheets and see what pins correspond to power and ground. You can then trace them back that way. You can also identify the transformer and avoid anything that comes from that. They are fairly easy to find, and the traces on the PCB are usually bigger. Be warned though: Don't do this on anything that's not DC power or above like 12v if you're not experienced! It's wise to look up safety precautions elsewhere as I am no engineer. One thing though is that ground isn't always bad. Sometimes you want to pull things to ground to get crazy effects - it's just that that is a bit more risky when it comes to chips potentially blowing, depending on the circuit... From my understanding.
You could use a MIDI to CV output module/device which would run into analogue devices like this. If you're talking about software, the closest thing I know of is Lumen, which I've done a video on a while back! But digital glitches are very different to analogue gear.
@@StephenMcLeod thank you for the reply! JUST fell down this rabbit hole as of two days ago 😂 a lot to learn just wanted to see if I could use some gear I already have. I’ll check out your other video too
@@megan8494 Cathodemer is an interesting CRT emulator/digital art thing you can check out. If you want software-esque glitches, check out Waaave Pool from Andrei Jay. I use their stuff a lot when playing live. There's lots of options there - though folks often run them on Raspberry Pis.
@@drinkinouttacups2665 I haven't, but it seems a bit out of my mental league. I don't love getting stuck into the technical weeds of that kind of software much any more. Music is part of my escape from that world!
Nice job. 100% with trying to recreate a magical moments with video. I just buy smaller affordable boxes from stateside folks since I don't want to blow up any old gear :)
I haven't bent a Sisma yet, so wouldn't want to take it on and then risk blowing it up. If I do end up making one I might sell it in my shop though - shop.allmyfriendsaresynths.com
These effects would go hard in a hostage tape
This legitimately made me laugh out loud.
To anyone who lived through the 1970's, this was what telly looked like anyway! Great work. Might fish out my soldering iron...
What a time to be alive! Thanks for watching. I accept no responsibility for damage or death.
Got here from r/Videobending -- we only just started experimenting with bending, this is so helpful! Thank you for making this!
Glad it was of use!!
Takes me back to the days when Ch4 first broadcasted.
Haha not sure if that's good or bad.
Love all your video stuff that you are sharing on Muff’s.
Thanks a lot Kent!
Very cool
why thank you!
My friend that was so nice. I’ve learned how to bent by my own and that was the worst way since I’ve burned many rare boards… anyway I would appreciate very much if you could share how to make your tester. It was so cool to see
The tester is just a breadboard with a bunch of different values of pots and some caps already on it, with pin outs for crocodile clips!
@@StephenMcLeod Amazing bro! Whats the values did you use?
@@vifx1 I used 500ohm, 1k, 2k, 5k, 10k, 100k, 500k :)
This is one of my personal favorite projects from you! So cool how you documented all of this (including the blow up 😁) and had a lil build up on Patreon and Instagram too! The rats from LRW were really looking forward to this video and you really freaking came through man! 🙌 And yes, It is certainly hard to find these! lol I have the 3014 added to my search list to keep an eye out on! If you get any more of these to bend and sell... LRW wants to be first on the list!! 😎🤘🐀
Thanks man! These were made for the EU market, so they won't be found easily in the US, and run on PAL rather than NTSC, though you can get converter box thingies.
@@StephenMcLeod Yes, I was thinking I'd need a RGB to Composite adapter type thing if I did. I've read that RGB provides better video quality for retro gaming as well, so it's something I've been looking into recently haha
would be possible to get the PCB for the bending point ?
I would be to scared to circuit bend with electricy running, how is not batterie.
I have pictures somewhere but if you're not confident in bending I would not recommend doing mains powered devices!
Great vid, thanks for sharing your learning journey.
Another modwiggler here 👋
Thanks a lot for commenting!
loved this
Thanks!!
Dude! I am new at this shit and I love it! Strictly CRTs Keep making these videos!
Thanks for the kind words! I shall.
I notice everything goes to old school tv’s.. I know it’s a stupid question but can this be run to a more modern wide flatscreen?
Yes, with a maybe, and a but. You can run this into any display device which takes composite input. If you don't have composite input, you would need a convertor box.
The other caveat is that circuit bent video devices display best on analogue outputs because they can handle the scrambled signal far better. Digital devices often drop out when the input is outside their expected parameters, which means you need to stabilise the signal somehow, often through the use of something called a time base corrector. These are tricky to find for a good price, and also mean the effects aren't as nice.
Finally, CRT TVs or other analogue output devices are part of the FX chain, in that they will display different inputs/glitches in sometimes radically different ways. The results are often waaay better as a result.
Do you have any idea how to take levers (?) out? I have another Vivianco model (3044) and I can't take faceplate :(
I don't unfortunately! That series are slightly different in that they have a slimmed down case, which I don't have any experience with sadly. Let me know if you get it off!
highly enjoyable content man
Unfortunately not. I've had to scour around the Internet and things to find the bits and pieces and mod them myself. Most of it is consumer gear that folk have lying around in cupboards etc. There will be some cool switchers etc at Universities and things I'd imagine, but they have probably chucked most of it out by now and moved to HDMI.
Hi, I’m interested in buying stuff but noticed your shop is all out of stock, anything coming in the future ?
I don't have anything at the mo, but will do in the coming months!
I have a similar device, how do I know how to make a glitch machine? are there any tutorials ?
Check out Pushkar Brand on UA-cam
@@StephenMcLeod thanks
Love you!
Why thank you!
Amazing video my friend 😍
Thanks for watching and your encouraging words!!
@@StephenMcLeod These videos are gold for the people who want to start videobending. Keep the art alive 🤘
@@pushkarbrand There's not many of them around!!
@@StephenMcLeod not at all! That's why it's important :))
Hi! Which type of photosensitive resistor did you use for the audio reactive glitching? I tried a 5506, the lowest I could find, and the led still doesn’t get bright enough to resist low enough to show anything.
Hey! I unfortunately can't remember which one I used in this particular bend. I bought a big box of different values and experimented with them to see which one worked, and I think that's the best approach, as each device will be a bit different. Sorry I can't help more!
p.s. pay attention to the colour spectrum of the LDR and the LED, as not all of them react the same to different colours. As in, they may be more sensitive to particular LEDs.
True, thank you so much! I’ve been experimenting a bit and found a spot that glitches the way I want with the resistance I’m able to get, now it’s just trying to figure out how to make the LED get just a tiny bit brighter
@@circuitbent1 Try experimenting with different coloured LEDs in that case. Brightness may not be the issue.
Love the aesthetics, but I'll never be brave enough to try and bend something like this myself lol
Go onnn. In fact, no. Don't. If you blow up I don't want the blame!!
Go for it! Find a cheap one that runs off of a DC power supply (wall wart, etc.) and just follow the advice here about mapping out where the power and ground points are. After that, you can go nuts with resistors, pots, and very small value capacitors. If you roast a 20€£$ video mixer, it barely matters. A unit that is running from a DC supply will likely never hurt you or even blow itself up.
@@KentBuchla Great advice! I've blown up a few £20 mixers. I refuse to pay more than that for them because I know I'll end up destroying them. Plus, most of them are destined to be chucked out anyway unless somebody buys them for cheap on eBay. Though now they are getting more expensive...
YEAH !!!!! :) super cool!
Thanks man!!
Thanks for sharing this amazing insights! Which range of potentiometers you are using for the modifications?
Thanks for watching! 500ohm to 10k usually :) Often on the lower end of the scale.
Awesome work here, i am about to jump into my first attempt at modifying a video mixer. Is there anywhere i can go for more info on how to identify the power and ground lines? I am new to working with circuit boards.
Good luck! There's a few ways. Outside of reading the actual schematic, you can take the boards out, identify the chips, look up their data sheets and see what pins correspond to power and ground. You can then trace them back that way. You can also identify the transformer and avoid anything that comes from that. They are fairly easy to find, and the traces on the PCB are usually bigger. Be warned though: Don't do this on anything that's not DC power or above like 12v if you're not experienced! It's wise to look up safety precautions elsewhere as I am no engineer.
One thing though is that ground isn't always bad. Sometimes you want to pull things to ground to get crazy effects - it's just that that is a bit more risky when it comes to chips potentially blowing, depending on the circuit... From my understanding.
@@StephenMcLeod Cool thanks for the help! I will do some more research before getting hands on with it.
@@cade5422 Best of luck!
Next time you are bending when you find a bend point, insert a pocket circuit rather than a component, and that fart maker will become a muug
I am not sure I follow...
cant you just use a multimeter on the IC chips to find the the power so you know what pins to stay away from?
Probably aye!
Any way to just program a midi controller with a program that codes in glitches?
You could use a MIDI to CV output module/device which would run into analogue devices like this. If you're talking about software, the closest thing I know of is Lumen, which I've done a video on a while back! But digital glitches are very different to analogue gear.
@@StephenMcLeod thank you for the reply! JUST fell down this rabbit hole as of two days ago 😂 a lot to learn just wanted to see if I could use some gear I already have. I’ll check out your other video too
@@megan8494 Cathodemer is an interesting CRT emulator/digital art thing you can check out. If you want software-esque glitches, check out Waaave Pool from Andrei Jay. I use their stuff a lot when playing live. There's lots of options there - though folks often run them on Raspberry Pis.
@@StephenMcLeod ever try it with touch designer?
@@drinkinouttacups2665 I haven't, but it seems a bit out of my mental league. I don't love getting stuck into the technical weeds of that kind of software much any more. Music is part of my escape from that world!
Cv effects very greatly
It does!
😍 How much man, how much?
This one ain't fit for anybody but me! I might build more in future if people are interested though.
Nice job. 100% with trying to recreate a magical moments with video. I just buy smaller affordable boxes from stateside folks since I don't want to blow up any old gear :)
Your precious moments, ruined forever by me.
Would you be willing to work on mine if I sent it to you? I have a sima sfx11, I can pay you of course, let me kno!
I haven't bent a Sisma yet, so wouldn't want to take it on and then risk blowing it up. If I do end up making one I might sell it in my shop though - shop.allmyfriendsaresynths.com
Trim your beard son! (Mine is far worse) lol
Never!! I actually did trim it recently haha.
@@StephenMcLeod i like it also thank you for an amazing video
Soyboy stuff, but there could be money in it
whit are you on about
@@StephenMcLeod lol