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Preparation of the acrylic faceplate to accept the keypad board.
Initially, I did not want to have any hardware visible on the keypad area of the faceplate. After a bit of examination & head scratching, I realised that tapping the screws from below seemed to be too troublesome and, more importantly, less secure.
So, to get the desired result I purchased some nice M3 stainless hardware and proceeded with a couple hours of drilling and countersinking (by hand).
This is one faceplate down... 2 more to go!
When I have more faceplates made in the future, I will be certain to include the penetrations for attachment of the keypad board. That will only leave the countersinking to be down by hand (roughly an hour's work for the 19 hole total).
Keypad at-rest. When driving, green dot indicates selection. Actual gear in use is on the instrument cluster display.
Close up of keypad, manual boiler fill and manual brew switch. I was holding a lamp in one hand and the camera in the other while hunching over in front of the machine, fighting off the cat.
Preparation of the acrylic faceplate to accept the keypad board.
Initially, I did not want to have any hardware visible on the keypad area of the faceplate. After a bit of examination & head scratching, I realised that tapping the screws from below seemed to be too troublesome and, more importantly, less secure.
So, to get the desired result I purchased some nice M3 stainless hardware and proceeded with a couple hours of drilling and countersinking (by hand).
This is one faceplate down... 2 more to go!
When I have more faceplates made in the future, I will be certain to include the penetrations for attachment of the keypad board. That will only leave the countersinking to be down by hand (roughly an hour's work for the 19 hole total).
Jacob working on our DIY open source lock project, built from a raspberry pi and an electronic keypad. It's called MayPi after William May, San Francisco's infamous doorman.
Part One of a DIY foot controller build.
Read more here:
www.chromedecay.org/2010/03/12/1152-diy-usb-foot-controll...
Alfia Stanley photography for corporate brochure. Photography by James Barke, commissioned by Creation Design, graphic design agency in Bristol.
This is a keypad I'm planning to use on the MIDIbox SID I'm building, and the original keypad from the satellite receiver I'm using as an enclosure.
Just bored and playing around with the new camera. Not bad considering I wasn't using a tripod or flash :P
Current version uses a bottom layer with traces made from aluminum tape cut to shape and adhered to an acetate sheet, an interstitial layer of acetate with holes cut for each button shape, a top layer that mirrors the bottom layer, and finally, the printed face art.
Texecom Alarm System installed for 2 Houses, 2 Keypads, 1 Control Panel, 2 Different Areas, Arm and Disarm Local, Arm and Disarm Both the house same time, Control and Monitor Using App.