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Things I took from The Great Internet Migratory Box Of Electronics Junk.

 

www.tgimboej.org/

This is something we're quite excited about this is the very early stage of our quest to make a sub $10 Arduino Compatible product. It's getting close.

 

(something to let people get into experimenting with the Arduino for peanuts, before upgrading to more robust products)

Breadboard Arduino with working Arduino ethernet shield (v5) fitted.

Code running on a breadboard, this is what the finished lighting effects will look like

“Saturn V Breadboard, S-IV-B and instrument unit 500ST Stages.”

 

Awarded the contract September 1964, operated by the Boeing Company, the Saturn V Development Facility, aka the "Saturn V breadboard" at MSFC, would electrically simulate the operation of the Saturn V and its ground and electrical support equipment. Each step at the launch site, through liftoff and flight of each stage, could be computer-simulated at the facility.

 

Above at:

history.nasa.gov/MHR-5/part-9.htm

 

I believe "500ST" and/or "500S/T" refer to the simulator/test articles. The complete(?) S-IVB version of such seen here I guess. To include its J-2 engine.

Using a permanent marker to color code rows on a breadboard makes wiring common chips easy.

A DIY audio electronics development platform. Very easy to plug things in and out of the breadboards and Arduino (duemilanove). Seeed Studio oscilloscope has proven to be a worthy tool. Now cooking: an arduino synthesizer, based on some simple waveform tables, homemade 8-bit DAC and bitwise modulation. Basically same as this but now much neater. Audio and video demos coming up, soon maybe... Here's an old demo, this one sounds roughly the same.

We've created an easy to assemble Breadboard Based Arduino Compatible (BBAC) Micro-controller product,

 

For all the details visit our blog:

 

oomlout.com/blog/2009/04/breadboard_based_arduino_compa_1...

Here, taking the latest "WTF?" award, is an object my friend Mitch and I found in the surplus aisle of an electronics store.

 

It's about 64 wire-wound resistors, mounted on box nails and connected with uninsulated (!) wire in some fashion that served some unknown purpose.

 

Yes, the orange cord was connected to this thing. The plug had been removed, if it had ever had one, but if it did the hot end of this thing had 120 VAC on it.

 

Perhaps there is a fine line between madness and genius.

  

Check out this Ford- and Lincoln-inspired holiday tree, decorated by the team at the Breadboard and HiL Systems Integration Lab! Submitted by Rachael Forbes.

Experimenting with Arduino.

This allows me to use an old floppy drive cable to break out the Pi's GPIO pins to a breadboard. It's made of a bit of stripboard and pin headers, the outer of which I pushed the pins through so they stick out of the bottom of the board far enough to connect to the breadboard.

 

See the next photo.

My parents ot me a giant breadboard for Christmas; now that my guitars are done it's time to start building pedals again. I have a few interestin gideas and the real estate here will let me really lay things out modularly and connect different stages different ways. Looking forward to making some noise!

A 3-board design. 2"x3.25" overall.

Main idea was the breadboard adapter for the MSP430-Launchpad. The other two were added to make use of the space I was paying for anyway.

The top is a simple power supply to fit my breadboards (single side rails).

The bottom is my implementation of a "Mini-Launchpad". It's an idea I had to use some SMD MSP430s I ordered samples of by mistake and some SMD switch/LED combo parts I had laying around. It lacks the programming/emulation side, and only uses the 2211s I have, but it has most of the other features.

Using the breakout adapter and an old floppy drive cable. The cable is too big by eight holes but the excess can just hang off the end.

This quick-and-dirty video shows the N900 controlling two servo motors via its accelerometers, a Perl script and a Bluetooth serial connection with an Arduino Duemilanove.

 

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Este vídeo mostra um celular N900 da Nokia controlando dois servo motores com acelerômetros, um script Perl e uma conexão serial Bluetooth com um Arduino Duemilanove.

 

Cameraman: Gino.

Winter light on the bread board.

A new version of this pummer circuit, but with the solar cell installed. Low and behold, it worked the first time! I soldered it up, plugged it in and the LED pummed; then I aimed a flashlight at it and the pumming stopped.

 

See the notes on the previous photo for the rest of the details.

 

Watch a video of the pummer in action on YouTube!

this was the radio shack in east pasadena, near rosemead & foothill

 

Laying out a test for the Gravity Gun illumination

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