I've been mulling this one over for a bit and meant to post before Thanksgiving but that clearly did not happen.



Right now I'm working on the enclosure which I intend to make out of wood (still mulling over the RF shielding issues there) and recycled PCB from scrapped electronics. Here are a couple of the pieces I'm going to be using for the top and one of the sides of the enclosure. I'll be cutting holes for the digital display (powered by an arduino and SI5351 clock circuit), a rotary encoder scavenged from an old home theater receiver, the volume and power pot, and the various ins and outs. I've got a drawing that I'll be using to mark out where everything goes and then will make some attempts at cutting the board without destroying it.
To salvage the PCBs I removed all the old components with a heat gun and a flat head screwdriver. It was a bit tedious but it gave me a couple of nice pieces of PCB to use for other projects as well as an assortment of salvaged components. The trouble is getting PCB that more or less matches. One major lesson learned in the component removal process was that it seems to work best with PCBs that have a large ground plane to distribute the heat from the gun as opposed to those with only a few copper traces across the board. Boards with only a few scattered traces tended to warp and burn. I had to stop the process on a couple pieces as smoke began to pour off of them. Nothing ignited, thankfully, but I can't image the smoke from burning PCB is terribly good for you.
OK, I've gone on more than long enough. Your turn! What are you working on?
73 de KB1VNA