Massive Space Coming to Atlanta for Inventors, Makers, Small Companies
March 4, 2013 8:59:01 AM EST
My Inventor Club is moving from a typical hacker-space sized building to a massive new location. The club will offer many of benefits of a hackerspace such as a full machine shop, laser cutters, 3D printers, space to build, etc., but also has enough room to be much more for the Atlanta community. They're planning on renting space to small hardware-based startups, serving as a co-location workspace, and maybe even holding conferences (mini makerfaires?).
The wooden floor picture looks large enough to comfortably hold 100 makers all working with plenty of elbow room to spare, and they've got
three floors that size, plus conference rooms. And even more mind-boggling, the 2nd picture shows another "factory" building big enough to hold a cruise ship or small factory. They're planning on having several car bays for auto work, amongst many other industrial machines. The roof is tall enough to work on some huge art installations (think burning man), and even has a few overhead cranes if anyone needs to move steel beams.
They should be moved in around May. Cost to join is currently $100 per month.
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Posted in News
By Scott Driscoll
How Microsoft's Kinect Depth Sensor Works
February 16, 2013 5:42:58 PM EST
Many people thought the Kinect's depth sensor worked using time of flight, but it's actually much simpler. A cheap infrared camera and projector work together to triangulate distances. Read More
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By Scott Driscoll
New kit: SMD Soldering Practice Kit
December 17, 2012 6:25:53 AM EST
We've got a new kit perfect for people looking to learn how to solder SMD parts. The SMD Soldering Practice Kit comes with a range of common parts from big to small, so you can ease your way down to the tinnier components. It also includes 3 pages of full color instructions and illustrations of ideal techniques and finished joints. Read More
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Posted in Soldering
By Scott Driscoll
New Video: How to Remove SMD Resistors & Capacitors Using a Regular Soldering Iron
December 17, 2012 6:18:30 AM EST
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Posted in Soldering
How-To & Quick Tips
By Scott Driscoll
Josh creates waterproof LED staircase with 16X PWM LED Fader
August 31, 2012 7:46:39 AM EDT
Josh Nijenhuis shared a video of the really cool lighted stairs he made using our 16x PWM LED fader board.
store.curiousinventor.com/16x-pwm-led-fader.html
He made custom machined and anodized 6061 Aluminum LED light holders that are waterproof. The lights will eventually be installed on a real staircase outdoors.
Click Read More to see more pics. Read More
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Arduino
By Scott Driscoll
Surface Mount Soldering 101 Workshop at Atlanta Mini Maker Faire
July 25, 2012 9:10:59 PM EDT
Scott Driscoll will be running a Surface Mount Soldering 101 workshop at the upcoming Atlanta Mini Maker Faire on October 6th.
We'll cover some basic techniques for soldering surface mount chips with REGULAR IRONS!
Things you'll learn
- Flux makes SMT easy
- Flood and wick method
- How to fix bridges
- All using regular shaped irons--no special micro tips required!
- You'll be practicing on a small pcb with 1 SOIC and 4 1206 caps (the biggest and easiest SMT parts)
The following advanced techniques will also be demoed
- Solder paste, inexpensive stencils and toaster ovens
- Drag soldering for fine pitch and lots of pins
- Removing SMT chips with hot air and ChipQuik
The cost will be $5 if you'd like parts to solder on, or free if you just want to watch and learn. Please register here (or below) so we can bring enough supplies and schedule multiple sessions if needed.
Also at the Maker Faire: Freeside (Atlanta's hackerspace) will also be doing a (free!) workshop to make a full fledged robot, and part of it will involve learning through-hole soldering. Read More
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Posted in News
By Scott Driscoll
SMD Assembly Demo using Home-Made Vacuum, Stencil, Toaster Oven
March 12, 2012 6:32:10 AM EDT
We talk about solder paste, cheap kapton stencils, how to make a home-made vacuum pick-up tool, and toaster oven reflow temperature profiles.
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Posted in Soldering
By Scott Driscoll
SMS to Cheap Scrolling LED via Arduino, USB Host Shield, and Android
October 28, 2011 2:13:20 PM EDT
This sms-to-LED tutorial shows how to automate the manual button input on this $13 scrolling LED belt buckle with an arduino, and then how to pass SMS messages through it. A USB Host shield connects an android phone that passes SMS messages on. Full code is on the tutorial page.
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Posted in How-To & Quick Tips
By Scott Driscoll
16X PWM LED FADER(tm) now completely open source
October 7, 2011 2:34:20 AM EDT
Our 16X PWM LED FADER board is now completely open source. The firmware (mplab project in C), schematic and layout in kicad, and BOM are all available. Hopefully this project will be a good starting off point for someone needing high resolution PWM control of mosfets, and lots of them.
The brain is a dsPIC33FJ32GS608, which features 16+ PWM outputs with 1.04ns duty cycle resolution. This is used to provide full 16bit control over 16 channels, with a very fast update rate. With SPI, you can send commands fast enough to smoothly fade all 16 channels, although many fades and chases are built in.
A simple command / value protocol accepts control from SPI, 5V UART, or RS232. Read More
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By Scott Driscoll
VMeter: USB MIDI Controller Touch Strip & Display
July 9, 2011 5:30:21 AM EDT
We're making a new product called VMeter that's a USB MIDI Controller Touch Strip and Display. It's going to be sold through a new site: VMeter.net. In addition to a music controller, it has the potential to be used as a general purpose input touch strip and output meter display. It uses a USB HID interface (like a mouse or keyboard), making it relatively easy to interface with. We'll be publishing both the protocol and computer-side source shortly. You could even use it with an arduino if you get a USB host shield. There are 8 capacitive touch sensors on the inside, and all the raw values are sent out, making it possible to do pressure sensing and even some limited multi-touch sensing.
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Posted in Audio / Music
By Scott Driscoll
New Product: 16X PWM Led Fader
March 29, 2011 11:38:09 PM EDT
We're happy to introduce a new product, the 16X PWM LED Fader. It lets you control up to 16 channels of high resolution pwm voltage for LEDs or Speed controlled DC motors. It also has a bunch of built in command shortcuts for grouping lights, and making chase and fading sequences.
Features:
- 16 channels of voltage control--mix DC motors and LEDs
- High resolution 16bit* control enables smooth fading, precise color mixing
- Different voltages can be used on all 16 channels (4 separate banks for simplied wiring)
- Control via RS232 serial, 5V TTL serial or high speed SPI from arduino or other uCs
- Fast update / communication--with SPI, all 16 channels can be smoothly swept
- Easy built-in commands: Group lights, Fade, Chase, Blink , Sunspot
- Up to 25V and 2A per channel (max power dependent on ambient temperature)
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