To make an instrument ...
A new instrument is something that you are going to be spending serious time with, perhaps more than you do with your girlfriend/boyfriend. So it's not a bad idea to check it out, to see if it will hold out for the years that it will be your close friend.
Also consider: there's a lot more expected in a modern instrument. A classical instrument really is just a few strings, some wood and some metal contrived to make a bit of sound.
A modern musical instrument does more; a lot more.
Carefully, carefully
I very gently took apart my Dualo (not without a lot of trepidation) and took a peek.
There's really a lot in there; circuit boards for:
- Two different keyboards, each with variable-touch membrane buttons for sensing finger-touch
- I didn't even know such buttons could be made! - A slide sensor, like a simpler (perhaps) version of the Vmeter .
- 3D motion sensors
- A visual display
- A motherboard with a lot on it: a powerful computer, interfaces of several kinds and lots of other functions.
Impressive: five computer-design-aided multiple-layer PCB boards,. The complex circuitry looks clean, with indications that it is very much a work in progress; several revision numbers, and lots of test points for checking the various components are correctly functioning.
<< looks simple? au contraire!
Each of these represents a blink'n lot of work (with perhaps the exception of the display which they may have been able to source from stock{but probably didn't!}), a lot of money, and rarest of all, a lot of expertise in this most highly specialized field.
This is eyebrow-lifting: my opinion of the French investment/manufacturing industry has jumped. This seemingly casual group of people that developed the Dualo du-touch are not as they seem. This "modest" little device packs a lot of smarts, ingenuity and not a little state-of the art high-tech.
<< the shell that holds the many sensors
These guys have access to some serious expertise, more than a little money (!), and somehow have been able to avoid the many sneaky traps that ambush innovators like the inventors of the Axis-49 and the Thummer. I did not think the French innovation culture was as progressive as this; I'm pretty sure the Canadian culture would not permit projects like this to go forward.
OK, OK, MusicScienceGuy likes it - but will it work reliably?
Yes, each device should work just about forever, provided care is taken with the connectors (and these are cleverly placed in a protective alcove): these instruments have basically no moving parts (the bubble/membrane switches only move a tiny bit and are probably silicon-rubber).
What else did they do? So who are these guys?
Next we look at the other work needed to create the Dualo du-touch.
Recent Comments