Studio Junk Drawer?
Studio Junk Drawer?
Hi all, first time poster, so I hope this is the right place for this thread...if not, please advise where it should be instead!
I recently moved from one city to another in the Metro Detroit area, and in the process of moving my home studio, I came across a surprising amount of "studio junk", which I managed to consolidate to one (rather large) drawer, and I got curious whether anyone else maintained such a collection of seldom-used flotsam and jetsam, and if so, what knick-knacks or curios are likely to appear in your "studio junk drawer"?
The bulk of mine is stuff like old, "outdated" equipment (lots of RCA cables, cheap crappy little dynamic mics from handheld tapecorders, broken cables awaiting a solder job, drum and guitar hardware, spare parts, etc.); but the items which most caught my interest were the less musical ones; stuff I like to keep on hand to make life easier on visiting musicians: chap stick, cigarette lighters and rolling papers (I don't personally smoke anymore, and I don't allow it indoors, but it strikes me as the sort of thing that's just polite to have on hand), kleenex, travel size toiletries, and the one that really caught me off-guard and got my mind rolling on the whole topic: lock de-icer. Here in Michigan, it sees more use than you might think! But it struck me as the type of thing that you're more likely to find in a small independent home-studio type of environment than in a larger commercial studio.
Anyone else have any wacky stuff tucked away in a drawer somewhere? I'm especially interested to hear about unlikely stuff that nevertheless sees a surprising amount of use, like the lock de-icer. I'm always on the lookout for other odds and ends that should be on hand in the studio, especially stuff that can make my life or my clients' lives easier!
I recently moved from one city to another in the Metro Detroit area, and in the process of moving my home studio, I came across a surprising amount of "studio junk", which I managed to consolidate to one (rather large) drawer, and I got curious whether anyone else maintained such a collection of seldom-used flotsam and jetsam, and if so, what knick-knacks or curios are likely to appear in your "studio junk drawer"?
The bulk of mine is stuff like old, "outdated" equipment (lots of RCA cables, cheap crappy little dynamic mics from handheld tapecorders, broken cables awaiting a solder job, drum and guitar hardware, spare parts, etc.); but the items which most caught my interest were the less musical ones; stuff I like to keep on hand to make life easier on visiting musicians: chap stick, cigarette lighters and rolling papers (I don't personally smoke anymore, and I don't allow it indoors, but it strikes me as the sort of thing that's just polite to have on hand), kleenex, travel size toiletries, and the one that really caught me off-guard and got my mind rolling on the whole topic: lock de-icer. Here in Michigan, it sees more use than you might think! But it struck me as the type of thing that you're more likely to find in a small independent home-studio type of environment than in a larger commercial studio.
Anyone else have any wacky stuff tucked away in a drawer somewhere? I'm especially interested to hear about unlikely stuff that nevertheless sees a surprising amount of use, like the lock de-icer. I'm always on the lookout for other odds and ends that should be on hand in the studio, especially stuff that can make my life or my clients' lives easier!
Love and Rhythm.
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I keep a big plastic storage bin in my studio closet that houses small rolls of raw cable, a box of numerous connectors, a box of old bakelite knobs, some miscellaneous computer parts, a couple 10" take-up reels, blank rack panels, patch cords, adapters, power strips, etc. It's the sort of stuff that I hardly ever use, but I know I'd kick myself for throwing out.
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Funny you mention that; I was searching today for a particular power plug.
I came across my old BR8, a Midiverb 2, various cables, back-up CD's, electrical parts (jacks, sockets, alligator clips, screws, etc.), a cassette stereo recorder, a Rocktron Para-Q, a mini compressor and EQ, etc.
All that's in 3 storage tubs in the closet. There are about 5 more in the garage ...
I came across my old BR8, a Midiverb 2, various cables, back-up CD's, electrical parts (jacks, sockets, alligator clips, screws, etc.), a cassette stereo recorder, a Rocktron Para-Q, a mini compressor and EQ, etc.
All that's in 3 storage tubs in the closet. There are about 5 more in the garage ...
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First studio I worked in had many of those things you mention, Hulu. Including a glass pipe, miscellaneous mens magazines, but mostly broken stuff needing to be fixed. Stuff that just didn't work or sound good enough to get fixed. Sort of the survival of the fittest in that drawer.
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MoreSpaceEcho and FRIZEYED, you should post a list of what you got. You never know; someone might make you an offer on something.
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I don't have anything as bad as a hallway or shed full of junk but there's still lots and lots of it. It's mostly broken stuff that I'll get around to fixing someday. At the moment that includes a Baldwin Synth-a-sound analog mono synth, 2 early 1970's era Traynor PAs, a Schaller spring reverb, and a few reel to reels. Also lots and lots and lots of parts.
It's not too bad these days but I do make an effort to purge the junk every year.
It's not too bad these days but I do make an effort to purge the junk every year.
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Junk piled in a back room for me. Which unfortunately also describes my home studio. Nearly all of my stuff probably belongs in a junk drawer. At least compared to you guys.
As far as useful stuff, did anyone mention one of those crank thingies for guitar strings? I have one with a snazzy string cutter that actually cuts strings! Speaking of weird stuff, I just found an unbalanced 1/4 inch patch bay that I don't remember ever acquiring. Somewhere I think I have a small box of oddball transformers that could be interesting to reexamine. I also found several more rolls of the special tape made to secure motion picture film. The stuff sticks over and over but never leaves a residue. Thirty plus years old and it still works! Perfect for marking mixers. I can save it with the tape/HD/CD and put it back on the board for remixes. God... now you got me started. I might as well clean it now... Thanks alot ...Old uncle dino
:roll:
As far as useful stuff, did anyone mention one of those crank thingies for guitar strings? I have one with a snazzy string cutter that actually cuts strings! Speaking of weird stuff, I just found an unbalanced 1/4 inch patch bay that I don't remember ever acquiring. Somewhere I think I have a small box of oddball transformers that could be interesting to reexamine. I also found several more rolls of the special tape made to secure motion picture film. The stuff sticks over and over but never leaves a residue. Thirty plus years old and it still works! Perfect for marking mixers. I can save it with the tape/HD/CD and put it back on the board for remixes. God... now you got me started. I might as well clean it now... Thanks alot ...Old uncle dino
:roll:
I'd gladly trade everything I have now for a nice sounding room and a bucket of 57's
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Two-sided velcro strips for securing cables, candles, harmonicas, drum keys, a 6" speaker, a recorder (the wind instrument), rolling papers, china markers, mic clips, archival tape (no residue!), tubes, guitar picks, soldering iron, flux, solder, an old gooseneck microphone, pens, a notebook, various percussion toys, headphones, adapters of all kinds, loose change, screwdrivers, strings, stompboxes...and especially rabbits!
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I don't really consider spare parts to be "junk". Anything that might come in handy is good to keep around.
If its a cheap, crappy radioshack style mic, yeah I'd never keep that around. I have a few things in my closet, under my bed and in random corners.
1. A broken 80s stereo tape recorder/player. I really like those great quality japanese cassette tape recorders, I'm still harboring hope I can fix it some day.
2. A broken tascam porta 1. Even If I get this fixed I don't know how much use it will be, its so noisy.
3. A 70s solid state guitar combo amp. This thing is pretty quiet, works about 1/2 the time, I'm never sure whether its really working at 100%. It has a broken tremolo which sounds really f'd up. I plan to either try to fix it or scrap it for parts, maybe it has a really cool transformer or something.
4. A broken EV 646. This looks really cool, I have to open it up, and see if I can find what the issue is.
5. A gemini mic preamp. This is pure garbage, but I'm going to use the metal enclosure for something.
6. probably a few other thing I'm forgetting.
If its a cheap, crappy radioshack style mic, yeah I'd never keep that around. I have a few things in my closet, under my bed and in random corners.
1. A broken 80s stereo tape recorder/player. I really like those great quality japanese cassette tape recorders, I'm still harboring hope I can fix it some day.
2. A broken tascam porta 1. Even If I get this fixed I don't know how much use it will be, its so noisy.
3. A 70s solid state guitar combo amp. This thing is pretty quiet, works about 1/2 the time, I'm never sure whether its really working at 100%. It has a broken tremolo which sounds really f'd up. I plan to either try to fix it or scrap it for parts, maybe it has a really cool transformer or something.
4. A broken EV 646. This looks really cool, I have to open it up, and see if I can find what the issue is.
5. A gemini mic preamp. This is pure garbage, but I'm going to use the metal enclosure for something.
6. probably a few other thing I'm forgetting.
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