It’s covered in depth on Make Magazine, and you can read about it here (it’s a very complicated system that’s not for beginners). The inspiration for Olav was seeing a local guitar player and realising he could play like a ‘machine’, so why not build a machine – a prosthesis to help him get sounds from his guitar despite a poor sense of rhythm.
Why didn’t he just use MIDI instruments? Because he wanted hear, he says, the sound of guitar strings vibrating in air under the influence of their fingers. Enter the Pimoroni Servo 2040…
This is also cool. Using a @pimoroni Servo 2040 board to play a guitar!https://t.co/jFqznLQ3Oi
— Mike Horne (@recantha) May 26, 2023
The guitar in question, you ask? A Squier (Fender) Telecaster.
You can read the project’s full details online and see it in action in the video below:
Guitar
Hey, it seems guitars have been an underlying theme of Gadget Master…
Check out the number of times we’ve entered into this territory:
- While my guitar gently senses
- Build your own slide guitar from scrap
- Synth-guitar strums keyboard sounds
- Building a Raspberry Pi-based accessible Smart Guitar – DroidconUK
- Raspberry Pi guitar tuner gets you ready to rock
- ACPAD wireless MIDI controller for your acoustic guitar
See also: RP2040-powered Pimoroni Badger badge flashes E Ink display
Electronics Weekly Electronics Design & Components Tech News


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