Another circuit-bent white noise machine, though one of the higher end models from what I've seen: you can't visit any thrift store around my neck of the woods without spotting at least one of those Homedics Sound Spas amongst the detritus, but I've only ever come across two of these things in the wild. Or I could be full of shit.
Ten stock sounds with three modes (single/combine/random), two volume buttons, on/off/timer switch and a headphone jack (mono, though surprisingly plays in both channels simultaneously) make up the native functionality.
Here's what I added:







This one's actually a 'remake' of an earlier build from 2020. I could've sworn I had posted it here before but that doesn't appear to be the case. I did take a comparison photo (old one on the left) so you can see the old one here regardless:
The ever-classic "bitches love my switches" sticker was not present on the new model when I took this photo: this grievous error has since been rectified.
As you can see, I used a VHS case back then as well, which I would not recommend. If I come across another one of these things, I'm creating a new enclosure from scratch, because trying to take advantage of as much native enclosure space as possible—technically two enclosure spaces combined together—ended up being less savvy and more inconvenient. In the image below, you can see an example of how I tried to maximize space by mounting a piece of vero/perf board in the space formerly occupied by a battery compartment (in the absence of 4x AA's, the stock unit uses a linear voltage regulator to drop the 9v coming from the wall wart down to 6v). White this idea is cute in hindsight, it simply added another layer of bullshit to manage on top of the four native PCBs' wiring, the native enclosure components' wiring, and the VHS enclosure components' wiring.
Having since worked on much, much larger enclosures with plentiful space and adhesive tie-downs at my day job, my days of optimizing obtuse prefabricated shells are coming to a swift end. A larger, custom enclosure would also alleviate the other major headache with this project: the stock buttons have a tendency to stick, 'locking' a sound into place if pressed the wrong way. Holding down one of the ten sound buttons prevents any other button from being pressed; this includes the 'mode' button which, as you might imagine, convinced me I'd somehow 'crashed' the entire unit. Turning the unit on and off again didn't resolve the issue: this is obvious in hindsight, but I was driving myself nuts trying to find the right combination of factors that triggered this mysterious issue ("maybe if I turn on gain AND three of the sputters, but NOT either of the distortions?") only to find out the root cause was something much more mundane. I'm still investigating possible fixes for this issue ,so if anyone has any bright ideas I'm all ears.
I could go on but I've already spent the better part of an hour writing this all up. I certainly learned a lot.
Happy Halloween, everyone!