OpenBinaural
Low-cost 3D-printable binaural microphone.
Project presented at OSHWDem 2015 (Open Source Hardware Demonstration in A Coruña, Spain) and Maker Faire Bilbao 2015. First featured in Hackaday
Assembly instructions
Click here for the full assembly instructions
Demo recordings
- By Philippe Benaim:
- Un tour Montgolfière (link)
- Château de Chenonceau Outside (link)
- Vacances Aout 2015 (link)
- By Carlosgs:
- Sea shore in A Coruña, Spain (link)
- If you use the mic, please let me know, I'd love to hear about it! :-)
Assembled OpenBinaural microphone:
3D-printable ears
The left and right ears, and the potentiometer knob can be 3D-printed in PLA or ABS. Flexible materials may create more realistic effects!
The support for the ears can be laser-cut out of 3mm plywood (DXF file) or 3D printed (STL file).
Tripod mount detail:
The metal insert can be found in eBay as 1/4" to 3/8" convert screw
Electronics
The KiCad sources for the electronics can be found in the Electronics folder.
Here are the schematic and layout.
The Gerber files, B/W layout in PDF, and CNC gcode files can be found here.
Detailed ear canal
Where to buy
I currently have no plans to sell this microphone, it has an open license so anyone can build it or sell it (as long as they provide attribution and publish their modifications as open too).
Please refer to the following links if you just need a binaural microphone that works out of the box:
Acknowledgments
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The awesome ear model was designed by Jonathan March:
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:499001
For this project, the STL was modified with FreeCAD and Blender -
Great inspiration was taken from 3Dio. If you need professional quality & high-performance, check out their Free Space microphones!
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The potentiometer knob model is derived from John Ridley's: https://www.youmagine.com/designs/knob-for-potentiometer-parametric
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I want to thank Imperial College Advanced Hackspace and Imperial College Robotics Society for providing the infrastructure (tools, 3D printers, laser cutters & material resources) that made this project possible. The community that has grown upon them is just amazing.
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Also thanks to Mr Rodrigo García Saura for sourcing the 1/4" to 3/8" convert screw for the tripod mount
Author & license
Author: Carlos Garcia Saura (https://github.com/CarlosGS/)
License: CC-BY-SA (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/)