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Hack a Day blogged An even more useless machine 19 hours ago
Here’s the most useless machine we’ve seen so far. It comes from the workshop of [forn4x] and happily turns itself off whenever any one of its eight switches are flicked to the on position. The build began when [forn]‘s Canon 850i printer gave up the ghost because of a broken print head. All the ...
Useless machine advanced edition
forn4x
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335,043 views
Made of a broken printer. You can't win.
More Info, schematics, source etc.: http://leyanda.de/stuff/use...
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Hack a Day blogged FireHero: Raspberry Pi Controlled Pyrotechnics 1 day ago
To put on a live pyrotechnic show at a music festival, [Chris] built the FireHero 3. The result is remotely controlled flames shooting up to 100 feet in the air. The system is controlled by a Raspberry Pi and an Arduino. A server runs on the Pi and allows a remote computer to control the [...]
FireHero 3 Christmas Special: "God Rest Ye, Merry Gentlemen" by August Burns Red
oswaldonfire
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2,485 views
This is a video of FireHero 3 performing the song "God Rest Ye, Merry Gentlemen" by August Burns Red. Full details about FireHero 3 are now up on m...
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Hack a Day blogged Building a tornado in a bottle 1 day ago
Recreate the look of a tornado by building this water vortex art piece. The components that go into it are all very simple and can be found in your recycling bin with the exception of a motor and a way to drive it. The hard part is going to be getting to the point where [...]
TORNADO MACHINE
ixisuprflyixi
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3,887 views
Learn how to build this awesome TORNADO MACHINE at http://www.instructables.co...
check me out!
song: Bring it back. By: Michael...
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Hack a Day blogged Tesla Model S handle dispenses beer; hides when done 2 days ago
Let’s face it, sometimes you need to take time out from engineering cutting-edge electric vehicles to over-engineer a beer fridge. And to tell you the truth, after seeing what [Matt Brown] managed to pull off we now have a gut-felt yearning for one of our own. He took a beer fridge and added a va...
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Hack a Day blogged pyMCU test project looks like a Minecraft mob 2 days ago
Hackaday’s own [Jeremy Cook] has been testing out the pyMCU board and managed to put together an animated block head that looks like it could be a foe in Minecraft. That’s thanks mostly to the block of foam he’s using as a diffuser. The face of the project is a set of LEDs. These, along [...]
python head demo
Jeremy Cook
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4,258 views
More info at: http://www.jcopro.net/2012/.... Demo of a robot head using the pyMCU to control it with the...
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Hack a Day blogged Two computer vision builds from Cornell 3 days ago
[Bruce Land], professor at Cornell, is a frequent submitter to our tip line. Usually he sends in a few links every semester from undergraduate electronics courses. Now the fall semester is finally over and it’s time to move on to the more ambitious master’s projects. First up is a head-mounted ey...
Face detection and tracking on FPGA
ece4760
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1,273 views
Face detection and tracking has been an important and active research field because it
offers many applications, especially in video surveillance, ...
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Hack a Day blogged Months of failure lead up to this EL panel dimmer that pulses to the music 3 days ago
Way back in March [Ch00f] took on a for-hire project to make a suit that lights up to the music. He decided to build something based around a pulsating EL panel. He’s put a lot of time and tried of a few different techniques, but he finally has a working EL panel dimmer. This is [...]
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Hack a Day blogged Stellaris Launchpad and booster packs used as frequency analyzer 3 days ago
[Jordan Wills] got tired of being limited to eight pixels of resolution and having jumper wires littering his work space. He set out to upgrade his Stellaris Launchpad frequency analyzer project using booster packs. You may remember the initial iteration of the project which used an 8×8 LED matri...
Stellaris Launchpad Frequency Analyzer Demo/Explanation
Jordan Wills
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1,025 views
This is an update to the side project I've been playing around with in my free time lately. It uses the LM4F120XL microcontroller on a Stellaris L...
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Hack a Day blogged O Christmas tree of digital logic 4 days ago
[Chris] over at PyroElectro is getting into the swing of the holidays with a LED Christmas tree build. Unlike the other electrical Christmas trees we’ve seen this holiday season, [Chris] designed his tree entirely with digital logic – no microcontrollers included. The tree [Chris] constructed on ...
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Hack a Day blogged Man proposes to girlfriend with an arc reactor 4 days ago
Thinking long and hard about how to propose to his girlfriend, [Ed] hit upon a great idea: use an arc reactor as the ring box, with enough LED lights to outshine all but their love, and servos to present the ring and tug at the heartstrings. [Ed] set about giving his now-fiancé from his arc [...]
Iron Man Arc Reactor Proposal - Best Proposal Ever!
Eddie Zarick
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38,216 views
What better way to propose to a girl who loves Iron Man and comics. She always calls me Tony Stark for all of the projects I have going, So I figur...
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Hack a Day blogged Electric clothes drier repair heats things up 4 days ago
[How To Lou] sure has shown us how to do quite a few things. This time he’s dealing with an electric clothes dryer that won’t heat. We’ve been elbow deep in our own appliances and we think [Lou's] matter-of-fact demonstration will help you gain the confidence to investigate problems before decidi...
How To Fix a Dryer (HowToLou.com)
LouTube222
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570 views
If your electric clothes dryer is running, but not getting hot, you can fix it yourself, very easily for around $25.
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Hack a Day blogged Welding with over a hundred A123 Lithium cells 4 days ago
[Doctor Bass] needed to do some welding on his electric bicycle. The problem is that he’s never welded before and doesn’t have any tools for it. As you can see, that didn’t stop him. He used a bicycle battery made from reclaimed DeWalt A123 cells to power his diy welding rig. He has a huge [...]
Welding with electric bike A123 battery !!!
Doctorbass
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11,184 views
I watched couples of video that was showing some guys with their jeep in the desert and succeded to weld their broken jeep parts using some jumpsta...
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Hack a Day blogged Build a $360 synthetic aperture radar with MIT’s OpenCourseware 5 days ago
A few profs from MIT’s Lincoln Lab are giving those poor MIT undergrads something to do over winter break: they’re teaching a three-week course on building a laptop-powered radar system capable of radar ranging, doppler, and synthetic aperture imaging. Interestingly, the radar system that teams w...
Coffee Can FMCW Ranging Demo
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Hack a Day blogged The Hexapod Hexacopter 5 days ago
Over at Mad Lab Industries, they had the idea of building a quadcopter that could walk and fly. By combining a hexapod with a hexacopter, they ended up with this creation. The hexapod part started off with PhantomX Hexapod Kit, but it was far too heavy to fly. To reduce weight, they manufactured ...
Walking Quadcopter, or Flying Hexapod?
MadLabIndustries
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62,047 views
Here we have combined a quadcopter (actually a hexcopter) with a Hexapod. Both machines are fully functional, and currently controlled seperatly. Y...
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Hack a Day blogged 244 9 Volt Batteries in Series – Arcing Ensues! 5 days ago
Here’s another hack that we would definitely discourage you from trying at home, 244 9 volt batteries wired in series. There’s really not much more to it than that, but [jersagfast] takes this setup through its paces arcing through air first, a LED light second, and then a CD. The air arc is prob...
Fun with a few 9V batteries. (244 of them)
jersagfast
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2,715,479 views
Just some goofing around with a bunch of batteries. DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME. Read more at: http://thecustomgeek.com/2011/09/13/fun-with-a-few-
9... -
Hack a Day blogged Watermelon air boat 5 days ago
We think you’ll turn a few heads in Central Park if you’re driving a water melon around when everyone else is piloting sailboats. This watermelon is both sea worthy and radio controlled thanks to the work which [Starting Electronics] put into it. We used this image because it shows you what’s ins...
Radio Controlled Watermelon
startingelectronics
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18,370 views
This radio controlled watermelon consists of parts from a radio controlled aeroplane and a hollowed out watermelon. The propeller direction has bee...
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Hack a Day blogged Repair your ice maker motor without buying a whole new assembly 5 days ago
There are a number of things that can go wrong with an automatic ice maker. But one of the more common problems is that the motor which scoops the ice out of the integrated trays can burn out after years of use. [Dave] recently repaired a common ice maker motor and shows us how cheap [...]
How to repair most refrigerator ice-makers for $2.50
hammydude12345
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1,984 views
PLEASE KEEP ANNOTATIONS ON FOR MORE INFORMATION. This video shows how to repair the most common type of refrigerator automatic ice-maker; these oft...
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Hack a Day blogged Tea-bagging an Arduino 5 days ago
[Dmitry Narkevich] likes a strong cup of tea and his method of getting there is to oscillate the tea bag as it steeps. But why take the time to do this when you can make an Arduino brew your tea for you. As you can see, he rigged up a system to move the tea [...]
teabag-o-matic | Arduino-based teabag oscillator
Dmitry Narkevich
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2,877 views
I like strong tea, so I made this from an arduino, a servo motor, a guitar capo, a metal thing from a stapler, and a pen tube. It does a fantastic ...
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Hack a Day blogged Electronically controlled NFC tag 6 days ago
[Per] is replacing his car stereo with a Nexus 7 tablet. It’s a great modification to add GPS, navigation, and a good music player, but [Per] wanted to pause his tunes and tell the tablet to go to sleep with an NFC tag. This means building a an NFC tag he can turn on and off, [...]
Electronic Control of NFC tag
zaprodk
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3,001 views
Controlling the presence of NFC tag at will with an CMOS switch.
More info at: http://www.blog.zapro.dk/?p...
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Hack a Day blogged ATTannenbaum 6 days ago
It’s that special time of year again where the smell of baking cookies fill the house and shopping mall parking lots are filled with idiots and very angry people. [Kevin] thought it would be a good idea to build an LED Christmas tree and ended up building a great looking tree that’s also very sim...
ATTiny13 buffer overflow LED xmas tree
Kevin McGinley
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1,691 views
Schematic and project files in my github repo: https://github.com/kmm/ATti...
Gallery: http://imgur.com/a/cjkEt#0
In the video I say "no resi...
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Hack a Day blogged Displaying text on random strings of Christmas lights 6 days ago
With the help of a microcontroller, a few strings of GE Color Effect Christmas lights can be easily turned into a fully programmable LED strip, or if you are so inclined, a huge RGB LED display. [Hubbe] had a few strings of these Color Effect Christmas lights, but didn’t want to spend the time ar...
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Hack a Day blogged Solving a Rubick’s Cube with LEGO and popsicle sticks 1 week ago
We’ve seen automated Rubick’s Cube solvers before, but never one that has garnered as many awards as [James]‘ popsicle stick and LEGO Rubick’s Cube solver.\ To keep the project complexity down, [James] opted not to use a webcam to detect the color pattern on each face of the cube. Instead, he wro...
Rubik's cube solver - Lego and Arduino
James Watson
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9,654 views
This is a Rubik's cube solver i have designed and built for a school project.
the user enters the cubes state into a python GUI i created, which th...
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Hack a Day blogged Self-balancing unicycle using Arduino and Sparkfun IMU 1 week ago
Here’s proof that you can build cool stuff with simple tools. This self-balancing unicycle uses an Arduino and a five degree of freedom IMU from Sparkfun to keep the rider upright. Well, it’ll keep you upright as long as you have good side-to-side balance. But that’s true of any unicycle, right? ...
Self Balancing Unicyle
NThatchable
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42,578 views
The Raptor is a self balancing Unicycle that's controlled by an Arduino UNO. Ive not quite got to grips with steering yet, so I'm a little wobbly, ...
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Hack a Day blogged Raspberry Pi used to automate a dimmable light bulb 1 week ago
[Stephen] took the safe route when getting his Raspberry Pi to dim an AC light bulb. He didn’t roll his own outlet box with a mains-rated relay inside, going with a mechanical connection instead of electrical. By attaching a servo motor to the dimmer knob the RPi can adjust the light level withou...
WiFi controlled light bulb
philstuffs
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1,926 views
More info: http://www.philippinestuffs...
What started off as a DIY sunrise alarm turned into something even more usef...
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Hack a Day blogged A Hexapod Robot Made from Scrap 1 week ago
Many if not most good hacks come from scrap or unused parts, but this hexapod robot takes it to a new level. [Helmut] wrote in to tell us about his ‘bot built from discarded electronics. As with most of the little walkers that we’ve featured here, this robot features some basic obstacle avoidance...
Radial Robot
TheInsectoid
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2,880 views
Radial Robot "Jamie jr".
Thanks to Jamie Mantzel and HexBug
(see also the German version in HD http://youtu.be/3yOy7mXl3r8 )
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Hack a Day blogged Deck the cubes 1 week ago
[MrBuildIt] has lived up to his name when it comes to this year’s Christmas decorations. He built a rig that spreads Christmas cheer from one end of the cubicles to the other. In the demo video after the break you’ll see that the system is controlled by a nicely polished Android app. It lets you ...
Smartphone controlled Santa and Lights
adtgreen
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3,489 views
Smartphone controlled Santa.
This Santa is controlled via smartphone app: Deck the cubes. This app was developed by us to send REST service reque...
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Hack a Day blogged IFF system keeps you from shooting your friends 1 week ago
An IFF system – Identification of Friend or Foe – are used by military aircraft in battle situations to determine if another aircraft is being piloted by a fellow aviator or an enemy. For the boots on the ground, friendly fire is generally regarded as a very bad thing, so a few students in [Bruce...
IFF system for infantry
ece4760
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1,263 views
This project implements an Identification Friend-or-Foe (IFF) system for use by soldiers to prevent friendly-fire. The inspiration for the project ...
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Hack a Day blogged Almost building an engine from hardware store parts 1 week ago
You can build a surprising amount of stuff from parts you can pick up at a hardware store. Sometimes, though, getting a project built from sections of pipe is very, very difficult. That’s the case with [Lou]‘s hardware store engine: despite an inordinate amount of cleverness, he just can’t seem t...
How To ALMOST Build an Engine With Only Parts From the Hardware Store (HowToLou.com)
LouTube222
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2,927 views
I need your help. I am trying to build this engine and it almost works. Please post comments and ideas. Thank you!
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Hack a Day blogged A pair of N64 portables 1 week ago
Casemodding has moved far beyond the old portabalized Ataris and NESes of only a few years ago. Now, the new hotness is more modern consoles including the GameCube, Dreamcast, and the venerable N64. Two N64 case mods rolled into our tip line over the past few days, and we can’t think of a better ...
The Pocket64 - World's Smallest N64 Portable
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Hack a Day blogged Converting a Chinese laser cutter to work with Mach3 1 week ago
Like most of us, [Chris] has pined over the very, very inexpensive Chinese laser cutters available on eBay for a while now. When most of us disregarded these machines due to their inability to work with the file formats commonly used with laser cutters, [Chris] took the plunge. He was a might dis...
Swapping the controller board on my laser cutter.
Chris Jones
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1,861 views
A video demonstrating how easy it is to change from the "moshidraw" board to my custom controller board. Visit chriscircuits.blogspot.com for more ...
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Hack a Day blogged Super slim wristwatch build 1 week ago
This slmwtch lives up to its name. When the LCD screen is folded back onto the PCB the entire thing comes in at just 2.35mm. That’s including a coin-cell battery not shown above. Wow! Part of what makes this possible is the specialized PCB design. [Anders] didn’t want to add more thickness than t...
Hack-A-Gecko 32-bit EFM32 powered ultra slim watch
energymicro
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4,311 views
Slimwatch - proof of concept ultra thin wrist watch with 32-bit EFM32 Gecko microcontroller. Unique inside PCB component mounting.
Find out more: ...
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Hack a Day blogged Unlocking Verizon Galaxy Note II and Galaxy S3 1 week ago
[Adam Outler] and friends have been hard at work unlocking the bootloader of some Verizon Android devices. His most recent adventure involves unlocking the Verizon branded Samsung Galaxy Note II. You can’t run Cyanogenmod on a device that has a locked bootloader. This is presumably why it took no...
Unlock the Verizon Galaxy Note II Bootloader
xdadevelopers
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17,142 views
WARNING: DO NOT FLASH ANYTHING WITH a sboot.bin!! This will either
relock your device or render it inoperable.
Recently, resident hardware hacke...
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Hack a Day blogged Digital IR Theremin 1 week ago
This Digital IR Theremin creates tones based on the distance of an object from its IR sensor. There’s no microcontroller here, since the project is part of an Introduction to Digital Electronics course. Instead, it uses a handful of comparators, transistors, AND gates, and a 555 timer to make noi...
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Hack a Day blogged Garage door opener using Siri and Raspberry Pi 1 week ago
[DarkTherapy] wrote in to tell us about his garage door opener that works with Siri and a Raspberry Pi. It’s pretty hard to find a picture that tells the story of the hack, but here you can see the PCB inside the housing of the garage door opener. He patched the grey wires into the [...]
SiriProxy on the Raspberry Pi
darkther4py
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69,960 views
Siriproxy running on my Raspberry Pi, along with wiringPi to access a relay attached to the garage door system.
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Hack a Day blogged Virtual chess uses glove controllers 1 week ago
Check out the game of chess going on above. It’s a virtual game where each player uses a glove as the controller. Or course the game board and pieces are missing from this image. They’re displayed on a computer monitor which both players can see. The hardware rather simple, and we think it would ...
Glove-driven Chess board
ece4760
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877 views
An Introduction top
"A glove embedded with accelerometers to play a hand motion-controlled chess game"
project soundbyte
For our ECE 4760 fin...
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Hack a Day blogged Retrotechtacular: A 1983 walking robot called ODEX-1 1 week ago
ODEX-1 is called the first commercial walking robot in this video from 1983. Of course you will quickly recognize this as a hexapod. It’s hard to get over the fact that what was so advanced at the time can now be built at home relatively inexpensively. As with most of these retrotectacular posts ...
ODEX-1 Functionoid walking Robot 1983
ReubenHoggett
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13,500 views
ODEX-1 Functionoid walking Robot. see http://cyberneticzoo.com/?p... .
Music by Lyn Murray and Scott Harper.
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Hack a Day blogged An interview with the creator of Slic3r 1 week ago
When in Rome, most people visit great works of art, see masterpieces of architecture, or simply try to convince random tourists that a modern recreation of naval battles in the Colosseum would be really cool and somebody should really get on that. [Andrew] had a different idea, though. He thought...
(1) 3D Printing Adventure - Rome, Italy - Slic3r
andrewupandabout
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5,957 views
Had the opportunity to interview and converse with the lead Open Source programmer for Slic3r, Alessandro Ranellucci, in Rome, Italy. The pleasure ...
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Hack a Day blogged Homemade tank joins the battle in Syria 1 week ago
What does a hacker do when going into battle for the freedom of their country? He builds a tank from scratch, of course. It’s a little bit of a stretch calling it a tank as it lacks treads. But it’s got a high-caliber gun mounted on top and has been heavily armored. There is room enough [...]
Video: Syria rebels unveil cutting-edge homemade tank
RussiaToday
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1,971,086 views
From a distance it looks rather like a big rusty metal box but closer inspection reveals the latest achievement of Syrian rebels: a homemade armour...
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Hack a Day blogged 10 ways to etch PCBs at home 1 week ago
There are a ton of benefits for etching your own circuit boards at home, chief among them the ability to design a circuit in the morning and have a prototype in your hand by lunch. There’s always the question of how to etch the board, but [NurdRage] over on Youtube has all the chemistry covered o...
Make 10 Etchants for Copper Printed Circuit Boards
NurdRage
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37,846 views
We show 10 ways to make PCB etchants using easy to access chemicals
1. Hydrogen Peroxide (5mL of 3%) and Hydrochloric Acid (5mL of 37%)
Loses stre...
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Hack a Day blogged The Burrito Bomber 1 week ago
The Burrito Bomber, created by the folks at Darwin Aerospace, claims to be “the world’s first Mexican food delivery system.” The delivery process starts with the customer placing an order through the Flask based Burrito Bomber webapp. The customer’s location is grabbed from their smartphone using...
Burrito Bomber
DarwinAerospace
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149,624 views
We believe everyone deserves carne asada when they want it and so today, we make that dream a reality. We're proud to introduce: Burrito Bomber -- ...
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Hack a Day blogged [Staci Elaan]‘s awesome portable tesla coils. 2 weeks ago
We stumbled onto [Staci's] videos a while ago when we posted this big tesla gun. While it wasn’t the first portable coil we had seen, it was certainly an impressive implementation. In the comments we found [Staci] had already been making these for a while. Hers were big and small, had awesome mod...
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Hack a Day blogged Bird buggy soothes a screeching parrot 2 weeks ago
[Andrew] has enjoyed the company of [Pepper] the parrot for more than a decade, but the screeching of a bird in the next room is something you just don’t get used to. [Pepper] gets very lonely some times, and short of having someone carry him around on a shoulder, there’s not much that will calm ...
BirdBuggy
viron11111
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772,527 views
Song 1:
Jon Rauhouse_Jon Rauhouse's Steel Guitar Air Show_01_The Glow Worm
Song 2:
Short Circuit Theme Song
Andrew Gray
University of Florida (Ma...
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Hack a Day blogged Building a spectrum analyzer with parallel processing 2 weeks ago
It’s the end of the semester for [Bruce Land]‘s microcontroller design class at Cornell, and the projects coming off the workbench this semester look as awesome as any before. For their final project, [Alexander Wang] and [Bill Jo] designed an audio frequency spectrum analyzer using two microcont...
Audio spectrum analysis
ece4760
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980 views
Our ECE 4760 final project was an audio spectrum analyzer that would display a histogram-style visualization of an audio signal. We were able to su...
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Hack a Day blogged Driving a WS2811 RGB LED pixel 2 weeks ago
[Alan] has been working on driving this WS2811 LED module with an AVR microcontroller. It may look like a standard six-pin RGB LED but it actually contains both an LED module and a microcontroller to drive it. This makes it a very intriguing part. It’s not entirely simple to send commands to the ...
WS2811 driven by a 16MHz ATmega
alanburlison
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2,490 views
Three WS2811 RGB pixels driven by a Minumus (16MHz AVR ATmega32u2). Refresh rate is 100Hz, each step increments/decrements the RGB values by one. T...
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Hack a Day blogged Autonomous helicopter works like a Wii remote 2 weeks ago
[Jack Crossfire] took one of those inexpensive indoor helicopters and made it autonomous. He didn’t replace the hardware used for the helicopter, but augmented it and patched into the remote control to make a base station. The position feedback is provided in much the same way that the Wii remote...
Good Blade MCX autopilot
heroineworshipper
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5,314 views
Another aircraft converted to autopilot was dead accurate, vindicating the machine vision & autopilot system in flying a super microscopic indoor c...
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Hack a Day blogged $250,000 hard drive teardown 2 weeks ago
Have you ever seen hard drive platters this big before? Of course you haven’t, the cost of this unit is way beyond your pay grade. But now that it’s decades old we get a chance to post around inside this beast. [Dave Jones] — who we haven’t seen around these parts in far too long [...]
EEVblog #395 - World's Most Expensive Hard Drive Teardown
EEVblog
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94,678 views
What's inside a $250,000 1980's vintage IBM server hard drive used in banks?
1989 vintage Model 3390 mod2 1.89GB or 3.78GB
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Hack a Day blogged Online radiation monitoring station 2 weeks ago
This is a Geiger counter which charts its readings on a webpage. [Radu Motisan] put a lot of time into the build and it shows. This thing is packed with features and the hardware choices were the best combinations found through several iterations of development. In addition to radiation levels th...
DIY Geiger Counter with Multiple Tubes
Radu Motisan
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2,946 views
Depending on used tube, this can detect alpha, beta and gamma. Construction details here: http://www.pocketmagic.net/...
It can be used with Di...
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Hack a Day blogged Printing press made from Ikea furniture 2 weeks ago
Those planning to get married take note: real hackers print their own invitations on a press which they built. [Jenny] and [Charles] actually did this for printing the cover pages of their ceremony programs. They built their press using a chest of drawers from Ikea. If you look closely you’ll see...
Home Built Letterpress
GTGehrke
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84,519 views
Built a "letterpress" to print wedding stationary. Whether or not you technically call it "letterpress" is open to debate, but it does what I want...