I'm joining in with the others who started projects for the Fall contest but couldn't meet the deadline. I didn't start working on designing the PCB until Nov. 10th so that kinda set me back. Then some calibration issues, Thanksgiving weekend, blah, blah, blah. I've got a ton of excuses, but no good reasons. Enough of my whining...So it's an A/DA Flanger designed from Moosapotamus's schematic and also using his great series of vids to calibrate it. I mounted the Volume pot externally. I included pads to add the jack for the external Manual foot control. I searched for vid examples of people using them but didn't find any. I decided if the rest of the world isn't using it then I probably wouldn't use it either. So I omitted it from the build and cannot say for sure that that feature works. But without the jack wired I had to jumper the Sleeve and Switch pads to make the Manual pot work. I thought I had FUBAR'd my PCB but I just needed to simulate that unplugged jack. Only a few minutes a foul language there.I'm gonna post a few pics of my populating procedure for those of you that are curious about working with SMT.First I get her all wet with a flux pen and put down some solder on one pad of each component. Usually the right side pads as I hold my iron in my right hand and the components in my left. I prefer .015" diameter solder for SMT parts.Next I grab my part with tweezers, heat the pad with the solder, and place the part on the pads. Like through-hole stuff I start with the shortest parts first then work through to the tallest ones. I wait to add those pesky through-holes parts until after all the SMT stuff is finished.After all parts are tacked in to place I go back over the board soldering the remaining pads. Then I added the socket for the MN3007.Toss in some pots, a switch, and LED and she's ready to go on the test rig. The Speed pot pictured here was later replaced with the correct "C" taper pot. And IC9 was rotated to it's proper orientation. Chip Quik FTW!After that it's all the usual buildy stuff. Drill some holes, tighten some nuts, yada, yada, yada...6 pots, 1 toggle, the usual jacks and LED and only 9 short wires. I loves me some board-mounted parts.Thanks for checking it out. I was bummed it didn't make the contest deadline but I was stoked with all the entries. I'm always inspired by the stuff you guys build.