## You will make:
* A guitar
-* A keyboard
* A set of drums
* A pair of maracas
* Bread boards (1 per instrument)
* Card
* Sugru (or some other modelling material)
+* Electrical tape
## Software requirements:
This will increase the flexibility and resonance of the sensors. Let the sugru set.
-### 2. Make the circuit
+### 2. Connect the circuit
Piezo buzzers generate a small charges when you tap them, so they don’t need a power source.
Connect one lead from your buzzer to one of your analogue inputs, and connect the other lead to ground.
-Repeat for each of your drums.
+Repeat for each of your drums. It is easiest to use a bread board for making your circuit.
+Look at the picture for an example.
+### 3. Set up in Scratch
+
+Find four different drum sounds (or whatever sounds you'd like your drums to make!). Upload the sounds to Scratch.
+
+
+## Guitar
+
+### 1. Make your guitar
+
+Grab your strip potentiomater, a piece of thin card, and a pencil.
+Lightly draw round your potentiometer on the card and then use this as a guide to draw out your guitar shape.
+(The potentiomater will be the fret board of your guitar).
+Cut out and colour in the guitar and stick down the potentiomater.
+Tape a pencil or stick to the back of the guitar to make it stiffen the fret board.
+
+### 2. Connect the circuit
+
+The strip just adjusts resistance, so you will need to feed it some electricity.
+Run +5V into one of the strip’s outer pins, and ground into the other outer pin.
+It doesn’t matter which way around you connect these, but it will affect which the direction
+the fretboard runs (high and the top, low at the bottom or vice-versa).
+
+Signal will come from the centre pin, so connect that to one of your analogue inputs and you should be good to go.
+
+### 3. Set up in Scratch
+
+
+
+## Maracas
## Pull-down Resistors