Let there be rock (or more noise at least)!

Long time no press, I’ve been busy finding a job and again noticed that doing things is generally much more fun than documenting the doings, but here we go again.
I’ve been planning for a sort of home studio for a long time. This is what I’ve come up with during past few weeks and well, studio is a bit too hi-fi expression for the current state, but it’s a start and it works. Equipment now includes couple of nice dynamic microphones for vocals, Korg D4 multitracker, basic mixing abilities, power amplifier and close-range monitor speakers. This can now serve for singing, synth (or multitrack) backings, karaoke – whatever the need.

T-Bone mic
T-Bone

And it wouldn’t be mine if it wasn’t something home-made. I built the amplifier enclosure from what was once a cd-tower, so it’s recycled! Amplifier is a Tripath chip based ”Class-T” module with stated power of 2 x 100W @ 4ohms. I bought it for testing earlier this year and it surprised me with both being quite clean and quiet sound-wise but also by delivering almost the specified wattage to a load. So I made a power supply for it and put it to good use. It’s actually impressively efficient too. Amp delivers pretty much the promised wattage per channel to 4ohms with very nice THD figures and generates very little heat, shoebox has no air-holes at the moment and I can still keep the volume cranked up for several hours with no problems.
This is how it looks.
AMP front panel
"Shoebox"

Amp backpanel
Back panel

No extra bells and whistles. Switch to turn it on, power and audio in and speakers out. All you really need 🙂
Audio processing is now only done with a small Behringer mixer I purchased second hand. It still needs some nicer preamp for mics and perhaps a dsp for mix-out, more on those later when I’ll find suitable device(s) to fill the needs.
Behringer mixer
Behringer mixer

Mixer has seen it’s better days for sure, but nothing a little cleaning up wouldn’t take care of. All the channels and features work and the best part is – no noticeable humm or hiss at the output – it’s quiet!
And the microphones. Bought them based on some reviews to try them out. T-Bone MB-85Beta (Shure imitation) and Beyerdynamic Opus 29-S. I like them both for what they are, affordable dynamic microphones with solid build quality and natural sound reproduction (in my case the singer will be the main problem anyway 🙂
Microphones
T-Bone & Beyerdynamic

Last (and least) the speakers. They’re small Behringer passive close-range monitors I removed from my surround setup couple of years ago. I’ll propably upgrade these soon-ish, but as the room is quite small and they handle the available power well, result is actually quite good. Overall when considering how little money I spent on these components, this is a superb solution.
Behringer monitor
Behringer monitor 1C

Tested this also as a karaoke setup last night, works very well indeed!