KOMA Elektronik’s Field Kit Kickstarter project has blown past its fundraising goals, raising nearly 15 times its $21,216 goal, with several days left to go.

The Field Kit is a Eurorack-compatible toolkit for experimenting with electroacoustic sound. It is optimized to process signals from microphones, contact microphones, electromagnetic pickups and is also able to run DC motors and solenoids. On top of that, it can receive radio signals and convert signals from switches and sensors into control voltages.

Here’s the official video intro:

The Field Kit has 7 separate functional blocks, focussed on receiving or generating all types of signals:

Four Channel Mixer

Envelope Follower

DC Interface

Analog Switch Interface

Analog Sensor Interface

AM/FM/SW Radio

Low Frequency Oscillator

These sections can be used together as a coherent electroacoustic workstation or alternatively with with CV-compatible music gear. You can easily interface the Field Kit with a Eurorack modular system. At the backside of the PCB you will find a power connector you can use to power the unit from your system.

The Field Kit is available as a finished unit or DIY.

Audio Demos:

KOMA has also created an Expansion Pack, with a bunch of different sources that you can use with the Field Kit:

2 x Contact Microphones – Use these contact microphones to pick up vibration or sound, they are an amazing versatile input source.

1 x Electro-Magnetic Pickup – good for picking up changes in magnetic fields, you can use it to amplify a string like a guitar pickup or amplify a spinning motor.

1 x Solenoid push-pull motor – Use the solenoid to hit things, together with the DC Interface the solenoid can make anything rhythmical and percussive.

1 x DC motor – The Motor can be used to rotate things or as a noisy oscillator together with the Electro-Magnetic Pickup.

1 x small speaker – Use the speaker to listen to the main mix or as a sound source and to feedback sounds.

3 x patch cables

The Expansion Pack can be ordered with the Field Kit or ordered separately:

Each Field Kit will be shipped with a booklet called 50 Ways To Use The Field Kit, which, besides being the official user manual, is a small book with examples of 50 different setups with the Field Kit to spark your imagination. For example, you can experiment with how to make a spring reverb, do radio feedbacking, sense heat, water and light, make it trigger a sequence of sound and so more. It also includes a few ideas and schematics to make your own add-ons.

Pricing and Availability

The Field Kit is available to Kickstarter project backers, through January 13th, for an introductory price of EUR 199 (MRSP: EUR 229). A DIY version is also available. The Expansion Packs are available for EUR 49.