Fractional Module Rack Case (FracRak) The FracRak case holds up to ten 1.5" wide by 5.25" high modules in a standard 19" wide, 3U high rack space. The case shown houses modules up to 7" deep. The case consists of 4 pieces: Mounting Rails, End Pieces, Rack Ears and Covers. The Rack Ears are anodize flat black and the rest of the pieces are natural finish. The Rack Ears and Module Panels are standard 1/8" thick aluminum. Module panels are black anodized and available in widths that are multiples of 1.5". Structural pieces are .050 aluminum. Cover plates are .040 aluminum. files: fracrwhl.gif - FracRak case and example panel components. Shows how the pieces go together with 4-40 Machine screws and nuts and #4 self-tap screws. Also shows a sample system with more or less random controls and connectors, just to give an idea of how much fits on the panel sizes. I've tried a few case designs and this one is strong, versatile, and good looking while still being inexpensiive to fabricate because of symmetrical, identical pieces. It conserves materials and ships easily and inexpensively also. fracrmod.gif - Typical double wide module Circuit boards mount to the panels with "L" brackets (the technical term is "PAiA mounted"). This module is a sketch of a vacuum tube based mixer for single ended or balanced line inputs to 1/4" balanced or unbalanced output. It includes a phantom power mic pre as well. The soft tube technology, pre/post tube mixing and symmetry panel controls produce a flexible processor that provides a complete palette of vacuum tube coloring for any audio source. In a synth, it's the ideal element for a final output driver. fracrdwg.zip - C sized dimensioned drawing of the pieces. This unzips to an HPGL file named . Some viewers may expect .plt or .hpl extensions. This drawing is readable down to a tabloid sized page. fracrak.txt - This file Excerpted from AH Mailing list post 3/21/95: ... I would propose distributing bulk power with a commonly available connector such as the molex connectors that are used for disk drives in PCs, they certainly are common enough and consequently inexpensive for a from-scratch builder as well as a manufacturer. Bulk power in this case would be bipolar unregulated 18V with local regulation at the module down to +/-15V, +5V, or whatever. Bear in mind that some modules (a mixer, for example) will probably not need *regulated* power at all. I've become a big believer in separate signal and power grounds back to an internal star point in equipment and consequently would recommend that the 4 pins of the power connector be: 1) +Vunreg 2) -Vunreg 3) Power ground 4) signal ground. For sure the kind of power distribution found in the 4700 and 2700 synths will never do - I cringe to think that I once did stuff like that. =================================================================== Here are some prices: FracRac Case (includes hardware, 7" deep end pieces, mounting rails and anodized Rack ears)..................... US$16.25 Top/Bottom covers............................ US$ 3.65 / pair Blank (except for mounting holes) black anodized panels single wide blank panel (1.5 X 5.25)......... US$ 3.00 double " " " (3 X 5.25)........... US$ 3.50 triple " " " (4.5 X 5.25)......... US$ 4.00 four " " " (6 X 5.25)........... US$ 4.50 For further information, contact: PAiA Electronics, Inc. 3200 Teakwood Ln. Edmond, OK 73013 phn 405-340-6300 fax 405-340-6478 email paia@aol.com Aloha - John Simonton