A museum exhibit called Buzzwire looks like outlines of two oversized hands giving you a high five (Figure 1). Each hand has a metal handle with a loop, and your goal is to move the loops up and down the hand without touching it. For an even bigger challenge, you can try to do both hands at once in the same or opposite directions. If either loop touches the hands, a buzzer and light come on and the handle vibrates.
The original circuitry for the hands comprised interconnecting timer relays to switch the assorted components. The design had no microcontrollers or anything smarter than a switch, which had several drawbacks – but the main one was that if the puzzle was abandoned mid-run, the light, buzzer, and vibration motor would run continuously until the handles were removed.
Physical Rebuild
While I rebuilt the control electronics, I sent the case out to be rebuilt as well. The original design was made out of plywood and had started to accumulate a lot of dings and scratches. The case rebuild was very helpful because it showed areas that needed to be reinforced. Ultimately, I had the entire front panel replaced with Delrin, a very hard plastic that will withstand wear and tear better than plywood. It also brings a fresh look for anyone that has seen it before.
The physical rebuild also incorporated larger vibration motors in the handles. The old version used pager motors, which were more heard than felt. The machine shop I worked with fabricated new handles from scratch that incorporated larger motors, making the buzz much more noticeable.
Esta historia es de la edición MakerSpace #03 de MakerSpace.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición MakerSpace #03 de MakerSpace.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Access the Raspberry Pi's GPIO Pig Pen
The wiringPi library, which many Raspberry Pi fans have grown attached to over the years, is no longer under maintenance by its developer. An alternative, in the form of Pigpio, has arrived just in time
Shell Programming in Python Snake Shell
Create lightweight Raspberry Pi scripts with Xonsh, a Python shell that lets you write scripts in Python with Bash commands mixed in
Playing old DOS games on the Raspberry Pi Retro Gamer
Play old DOS games on the Dosbian operating system, which turns the Raspberry Pi into an 80486 PC
Home Assistant makes the Raspberry Pi fit for the Z-Wave world Home Automaton
Z-Wave components, a RaZberry module, and the free Home Assistant software make the Raspberry Pi a powerful smart home control center
Water your plants with a Raspberry Pi Watering Pi
With a Pi Zero and a few components, you can build an inexpensive and reliable automatic watering system for your plants in next to no time
Raspberry Pi automated fish feeder Fish Food
Whether at work or on vacation, every pet lover worries about how to take care of their little roommates in their absence. What aquarium owners need is an automatic feeder
Integrate hardware components with pluggable systems Plugged In
Ecosystems with pluggable Raspberry Pi modules, sensors, and displays are a great choice if you don’t want to – or can’t – solder but still want to extend your hardware
Change internal logic from relays to an Arduino Redo
An electronic project at a local science center was showing its age, calling for a refresh: in this case, rebuilding it almost from scratch with an Arduino instead of relays
Get creative with the FLUX beamo laser and open source software Beam Me Up, Fluxy!
With the FLUX beamo laser and a Raspberry Pi Board B10001, you can execute your own laser cutting projects on a wide range of materials
Power your Pi Pico with solar Self-Sufficient
Powering your Pi Pico with solar may not solve the current energy crisis, but it will save you from changing or recharging batteries