Adding Kitchen Speakers and Volume Control – Part 1 of whole house wiring

About a year ago I finished my home theatre in the basement. When this happened, I left my wife stranded with an old bookshelf stereo and some ‘lame’ speakers in the kitchen for her to listen to. For her birthday I told her I would make sure she had good music back in the kitchen and living room and make it better than ever! What this meant was getting her good speakers, allow flexibility between rooms and also giving volume control in this added zone.

Years before I had run speakers to the kitchen, but they ran off of the master volume control, not convenient if you got a phone call, or needed to listen to something else.

Project Stats: Kitchen Speaker Run
Time: 3 hours, but I took my time.
Cost: Low (but I had most of the items already)
Difficulty: Hard
Value for cost: High
Tools Needed: Wire Snake, Utility Knife, Torpedo Level, Tape Measure, Volume Controller, Low Voltage Mounting Bracket, High Quality Speaker Wire, Cordless Drill, Stud Sensor, Wire staples

The first step is to understand how all of this works and understand how the signals travel. I’ve made a small flow chart to show how this works.

Untitled drawing

Click for full size.

As you can see this is just like setting up regular speakers, but there is an addition of the volume controller. Check out the gallery for details on how I installed everything!

By working with a wire snake and choosing your runs and drilling points properly you can acheive a professional quality job with little effort. To hire someone to do this would most likely cost you several hundred dollars. Out of pocket for this project was under $30, not counting speakers, or stereo equipment.

Now everything works and the ability to adjust the volume is great! I highly recommend a project like this to enhance your house. Continuing this throughout your entire house is an easy project that can raise the value a lot.

Makeshift Closet Recording Studio

A few weeks ago I traveled to Indiana to go visit the Delta Faucet world HQ. This was a three day event for bloggers. I attended this event for the Handyguys Podcast as their correspondent. I will write in detail about this event in a future post.

Part of the agreement was that I would report back to the Handyguys about my experiences at this event. Podcasting is much different than blogging as you have to do editing with sound, voices, background noises, etc…  As someone who used to do a lot of live sound I felt that I had a reputation to live up to. Additionally, the week before the Handyguys did a podcast on how they record their show, going over all of the equipment they use and how they do it…

No problem I thought, I will just contact the music department, or IT Department, or Video Department of the University I work at, and I can put together a decent rig to have professional level sound.  Guess what, no one answered when I contacted all of these departments… I also had a looming deadline ahead (tonight) to get everything set.

Now I will say quite clearly that the Handyguys never pressured me to do anything fancy, I’m sure they would have been fine with me calling in on Skype through my cell phone, however I am one to never take a shortcut and I wanted this to be one of their best episodes ever :) So I looked around my resources and came up with a decent rig (or at least I hope I did!)

Project: Recording Studio
Difficulty: High
Time: 20 Minutes
Cost: None for me, $15 if I started from scratch
Satisfaction Level: Awesome

From experience, I knew that the closet would be the best place to record. With the “Dead” sound level (no echo) it would help record my voice and not the outside sounds that were going around me. So I moved a small dresser where I could setup the equipment.

The setup. I made the mess. My wife keeps an organized closet!

Quite simple looking, however a lot of thought went into the way this was setup.

The microphone I had was purchased years ago when AIM was still Social Media King and voice chat was something groundbreaking. However it was still better than my laptop mic. When I tested this mic out I noticed that there was a lot of hiss and pop from my voice.

The microphone had lost its stand years ago and had no wind protection.

After a little trial and error I found that a thick ply microfiber cloth was the best windscreen I could come up with on the spot. Thankfully my wife sells these and has a lot of them in the house!

To help with hissing, I wrapped the mic in a thick microfiber cloth.

Next step was to make a “Mic Stand” that I could use to keep the microphone at the right spot. I happened to have some piping and flanges that I could use as a holder. Combined with a rubber coated stick and an inexpensive clip I had my mic stand all set!

To make the microphone the right height for recording, I put a rubber coated stick in the pipe.

I found that the stick wobbled, so I put a lens cleaning cloth between the pipe and stick so it would stay put.

I clamped the mic and cloth to the stick. Making sure it was the appropriate height.

 

My fancy "Mic Stand"

Because I like to run cables hidden and out of the way, I ran the cables through the pipe and out the bottom. To help level the stand I used another cloth to help keep it from tipping around during the interview.

I used a microfiber cloth under the flange and pipe stand to stop the mic from tipping.

The mic and headphones are ready to be plugged in!

All of the equipment was simple and inexpensive. As this was my first podcast I felt there was no reason to purchase anything special.

I used a set of headphones I got on Woot years ago for $2

The whole setup all ready to go. With my phone as backup.

The podcast was recorded through skype. If you want to hear about their recording process and equipment you can listen to this podcast.

Connecting with the Handyguys through Skype was easy.

Once we were all set, they checked the levels and I sounded good on their end. Now all we have to do is wait for the episode to be released.

I setup a small workstation with just a few parts to make the call. Here they are all laid out.

A simple microphone I bought 10 years ago for a few dollars

Microphone, headphone and a computer. All you really need.

After years of listening to the Handyguys it was surreal to talk to them in real life. It was a great honor to represent them at this Delta event and I hope we continue to have a great friendship!

That is how I setup my recording studio. It was a combination of knowledge, resources and planning to have a successful session.