Control your volume with a wireless rotary encoder, as you deserve
Every decent stereo sold since the invention of sound has included a knob on the front for adjusting volume. There are influencers and entire communities dedicated to evaluating the feel of those wonderful knobs. So why would you settle for the mushy volume buttons on a remote? Eric Tischer didnβt think he should have to, so he built his own wireless rotary encoder device for controlling his DACβs volume.
A digital-to-analog converter (DAC) is an important part of modern digital audio systems. Tischerβs DAC/preamp takes the digital signal from a TV or other device, turns it into an analog signal, and then pushes that out to an amplifier. The DAC has a rotary encoder on the device itself for adjusting volume, but the remote just has the standard buttons. Tischer measured that remote and found that it takes 25 seconds to go from zero to full volume. Thatβs almost as annoying as the horribly unsatisfying buttons.
Tisherβs solution was to construct a new wireless remote with only one job: controlling volume. It has a big CNC jog-wheel style rotary encoder that reportedly has a very nice feel, with 100 total detent βclicksβ per revolution. That matches perfectly with the number of volume levels.
An Arduino Nano ESP32 board monitors the remote rotary encoder and communicates the detected position (via pulse-counting) to another ESP32 board by the DAC over ESP-NOW. That second board attaches to the DACβs built-in rotary encoder pins and simulates pulses that match the remote. So as far as the DAC knows, Tischer is rotating the built-in encoder. In reality, heβs sitting comfortably on the couch spinning that handheld knob instead of pushing buttons dozens of times per commercial break.
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