More Synth-DIY, Analog Synth & Electronics Sites

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Here are more websites that provide useful information to the synth Do It Yourselfer. You will find creative and imaginative people from around the world sharing a useful tip, schematic, or link to another cool site. If you would like your synth-diy site to be mutually linked with MFOS send us an email. Sites are listed in alphabetical order.

(Synth photos courtesy of Kevin Lightner)
      
      
Analog Notes - Huge cache of useful links
Atanua Real Time Logic Lab
Curious Inventor (Totally Cool Learning Site)
Data Sheets (WWW.ALLDATASHEET.COM)
Datasheet4U.com
DatasheetArchive.com
DataSheetDir.com
Datasheetpro.com
Don Sauer's Web Site (Designer of the LM13700)
EE Web Electrical Engineering Community
electro-music.com
electro-music.com Sound Lab Forum
Electronics with Graham Knott of CRC
Experimentalists Anonymous DIY Archives
Google's Totally Cool "Robert Moog's 78th Birthday" Doodle
High End Audio Community
High-End audio component reviews, audio equipment discussions, audiophile systems, record and music recommendations
InsideTechKnow
Engineering and Sciences Directory website insidetechknow.com
Kevin Lightner's Synthfool! Site
"Manual Manor" by Mark Glinsky
MATRIX-SYNTH (Everything Synth)
Modular Form Factor Chart I
Modular Form Factor Chart II
Motohiko Takeda's Site
Music Thing
Neil Johnson's Site
Nyle Steiner Synthasystem
Oren Leavitt's Site
Roman's Site
Scott Stites' Site
Seb's Synth-DIY Pages
Subscribe to Analog Heaven email
Subscribe to Synth-DIY email
Synthtopia Electronic Music Portal
The Electronics Club
The Electronic Peasant
The Free Information Society - Schematics
The Master Synthesizer Book List
The New England Synthesizer Museum
Yves Usson's site (Yusynth)

Dead Link? email the poor URL so I can bury it.

Kevin Lightner provided both the photo and the interesting story behind it...

Btw, you might be interested to know what that synth in the graphic actually was and why. That Moog was assembled as a temporary synth for use by U2's (then) producer, Flood. Hans Zimmer loaned him some of the modules I was working on for his big modular moog beast at the time. I took some of the spare wood C cabinets and assembled a large Moog (with a VSM 201 vocoder, Bode freq shifter, etc) just for one recording session. Was gone for about 3 weeks and then came back and was stripped back down again. That synth didn't exist for even a month.