Hacked Gadgets Forum

November 13, 2007

Ghetto BPM Detection

at 5:04 am. Filed under Cool Gadgets, Electronic Hacks

Doktor Andy is back to his crazy designs! When you can’t easily hack out a signal from a controller why not make a circuit that “looks” at it for you. That is exactly what the Ghetto BPM Detection does. :)

“This one is inspired by my experiences with the band and the DJ-Set and…well…you know why =-). Anyway, for already quite a long time I am looking for a way to read out the BPM information from Torq (any DJ-Software) in order to trigger Ableton with that. The aim is to have those things running synchronyzed without my interaction.

I had the DJM800 from Pioneer lying around here for a few days (yes…the one with the MIDI-Clock output) but it wasn’t that good since the BPM detection is a little dull and inaccurate. Furthermore it is a little too expensive.”


 


Related Posts

Scorpion detection using UV LEDs
Automated Turf Management - Robotic Lawn Mower
Mongoose and Robot Landmine Detector
In-Vehicle Blind Spot Detection System
Webcam RangeFinder
RoboCut - Autonomous Lawn Cutting Robotic Platform
PIC Microcontroller Touch Keypad
Remote Controlled Light Bulb

 


 

2 Responses to “Ghetto BPM Detection”

  1. exx Says:

    The two resistor values should be swapped: the 100 Ohm value is too low and the 1K one is too high. That means the current flowing through the phototransistor would be close to 50 mA ((Vcc-junction drop)/R), which is also too much to drive a bc107 base, and would also make the two transistors darlington part useless. That is, if the phototransistor was able alone to sink 50 mA, the darlington sinking 5mA would add nothing and could be eliminated.
    I’d use values from 1 to 10 KOhm for the phototransistor resistor and a lower value for the second one; they probably got swapped during the circuit drawing.

  2. Ghetto BPM Detection - The Tech Blog Says:

    […] post by Alan Parekh Written by admin on November 13th, 2007 with no comments. Read more articles on […]

Leave a Reply

 

Internal Links:


Categories:

Search:

Google
Hacked Gadgets
Web

Site Sponsors:

 

Recent Comments:

simon on Ontario Science Centre Hydraulophone - musical keyboard water fountain

Alan Parekh on Name the Thing Contest - 63

kayne001 on Name the Thing Contest - 63

Berni on Name the Thing Contest - 63

Dom on Top 5 Coil Guns

Lucas Jeorgensen on Top 5 Coil Guns

joey on Air Powered Engines

Alan Parekh on Name the Thing Contest - 63

Alan Parekh on Name the Thing Contest - 63

Lego Motorcycle Model Fat Boy Drives Like a Real One | Walyou on Lego 8291 Fat Boy Motorcycle

ingiltere vizesi on Hacked Gadgets March Comment Contest

Berni on Name the Thing Contest - 63

Jonathan on IR LEDs used to defeat Security Cameras

Curtisbeef on Digital Caliper Serial Interface

Tony on Tachometer made from a Bicycle Computer

Site Rating:

Technology blogs

Technology Blogs - Blog Flare

Technology Blogs - Blog Top Sites

Top Technology blogs

Technology Blogs

Best blogs on Technology and Science

More RSS Feed Options

Most Popular This Month:

Tracking fingers with the Wii Remote
What Will Scientists Do With the World’s Smallest Microwave? - Inventor Spot
VGA Microcontroller Test Box
Foldable Displays and Auto Projection Calibration
Alan Parekh - Hacked Gadgets Author
Four Leg Shadow Avoiding Quadracore
IR Detector Circuit
Ghetto BPM Detection
Picaxe Microcontroller Home Automation
LEGO NXT Fireworks Robot

Site Sponsors:

 

Interesting Sites:

Sony Vaio SZ
ThinkGeek
Apple TV Hacks
Gadget India
Top HDTV Reviews
VoIP Phone
Technology Blog
Free Phone Number Trace
How To Hack
PSP Mods and Hacks

 

Site Videos:

Incoming Links:

Recent Readers:

Forum Activity:

Get this widget!