Building an MP3 Boombox
I lucked into an inexpensive MP3 player not so long ago: a 5 GB Archos Jukebox. I was glancing through my email when it caught my eye: outpost.com was dumping 5 GB Jukeboxes at roughly 80 bucks a pop.
I’ve held back on an MP3 player purchase, as I didn’t want to fork over a C note for a wimpy 128 MB player. And I just couldn’t justify spending 300 dollars for an Apple iPod (even though I really, really, really want one). So when I saw the Archos going for just 80 smackaroons, I had to go for it.
The Archos arrives and no sooner do I become bored with the idea of merely using it with headphones. I wanted to use it in the car (a problem easily solved with a SoundFeeder 100) and I wanted to use it as the basis for boom box (a problem which was not so easily solved).
Two seperate trips to two separate Best Buy stores yielded a pair of Sony portable powered speakers and the SoundFeeder. The (under $20) SoundFeeder worked well — sending the Jukebox’s output through the FM band to the car’s receiver. The little $20 Sony speakers, however, were feeble-sounding battery hogs.
A friend of mine suggested that I look for a pair of powered Yamaha speakers.
Lucky for me, I had a set of Yamaha speakers sitting around the studio, collecting dust. I plugged the Archos into the dusty old Yamaha speakers and was rewarded with fabulous sound.
But I wasn’t content with a solution that only plugged into the wall socket. I wanted something to take to soccer practice, and that’s where the challenge came in. I needed a portable power source…
It took a bit of time, but I finally found the mega-battery of my dreams: a sweet, 12-volt rechargeable doodad with an automotive cigarette lighter hookup.
The power supply was purchased from the kind and helpful folks at Creative Energy Technologies. I used a cigarette lighter adapter from Radio Shack to get the juice from the power supply to the Yamaha speakers.
The power supply came in handy when I created my wickedly cool green neon glowing Alien extreme pumpkin…





