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iPhone 7 lightning usb and earphone dongle splitter review



Review of this 2 in1 Lightning to 3.5mm Earphone Jack Adapter Charge Cable for iPhone 7

I bought this iPhone 7 splitter lightning and 3.5 mm jack adapter on eBay in hopes that it will work faith my Focusrite iTrack Pocket but it didn’t. The idea was I really wanted to my iPhone 7 to be my portable recording station. so I can plug lots of stuff to it hence a bought a splitter. To be fair, it worked according to what the description says that it is for charging whilst listening to music.

Oh another downside was the first time I put the earphones in, it was too hard and it broke immediately the silver cover. I superglued it and it’s fine. Such a shame that my plan didn’t work.

       

G1xOn Hack on how to make footswitch for looper and home button

DIY footswitch home and looper button


An inexpensive and simple way of fixing the home and looper switch button where you won't have to bend down and press to switch but instead you can improvise and use your foot. Here are the things that you need:
Adhesive Felt Pads 
Cutter
Scissors
Pen
Ruler
Self-healing cutting mat
Cardboard or thick paper



First, I did an outline on a piece of paper what shape and size to use. So I did trial and error method to know which one will fit and what to use. So I did few trials and it did work. However, there was a bit of challenges encountered. One was it got stuck so I had to put paper underneath so it won't stick. But it doesn't look nice. It was raised and really not pleasing if you look at it. Although it works, I had to improvised again. So this time, I just doubled the felt pad. Stuck it together and used the cutter to cut it into shapes. Two circles and two triangles. Just small ones that will fit the buttons. The two circles were used to the Looper/Rhythm button and Home button. Then the triangles were use on the up and down buttons to switch between banks from A through J. It's looking better than the previous and works well. So happy with this improvisation to my effects pedal.



How to lower the action of your acoustic guitar

Lower the action of dreadnought guitar



Things you needed:
Pencil
Pentel Pen or Marker
Ruler
Sandpaper
File
Clean cloth or paper towel
Brush


The first thing you need to do is either you remove the strings if you intend to clean your guitar and put on a new set of strings or if you just put new strings on and forgot to adjust the height of your strings, all you need to do is loosen the strings as much as you can then carefully remove the bridge saddle.

Once the saddle is removed, use the ruler to mark it as to how much you're going to sand it down. Put a line using the pencil as your guide as to how far you're going to sand it down. Then use the marker or Pentel Pen to mark the bottom of the saddle to know if you're sanding it evenly. And when you're doing it, do it gently and keep on checking how far you're going. Then use a file to smoothen the area.

Once you're happy or near your target line as to how much centimetre you want to remove, brush the area off or wipe with a clean cloth and put it back. Then check if you're happy with the height of your strings. Note that it is not advisable to sand it down too far and make the strings too low because it will be prone to buzzing and you wont be able to reverse it. So it's better to just sand it down little by little. Also the string pull is great when it's a bit high. So, limit it to 1 cm or less when you lower the action of your guitar.

Put saddle back and try to tune it and play the guitar. Even though you lowered it a centimetre or less, you will still feel the difference. Hope this helps.