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At the Rotating Kitchen by Zeger Reyers during the opening of the exhibition 'Vom Essen in der Kunst', Kunsthalle Düsseldorf
The mote for controlling a remote thermostat turned out a bit tighter than I was hoping. Going to install it tomorrow and see if it actually works.
August 1, 2014: Bruce Lakovick shows off freshly modified sprocket and disk brake. He's bored 'em out to accomodate a larger hub so that he can turn a mini scooter into a tall one with lower gearing. The brake disk was heat treated so we bored that one out in the lathe using the external jaws to hold it. Sprocket was too big for the lathe and its 5-spoke geometry meant it had to be bored out using the mill and a rotary table
Here was the original problem. With the windows wound up to the correct position, the glass fouled the side rails quite considerably!
I was sick of fighting with the ugly great triangular flange that my headers were built with so took the opporunity to weld on something a bit more friendly to take on and off. This is one of these machined flanges that is held by a single clamp.
You can see my nice neat TIG welding on the left vs my blobby first attempt ever at MIG welding on the right from when I first built the exhaust
To seal the air tank, I cut off the threaded portion and filled in the hole with hot glue. You can do whatever you like for this, I like hot glue.
On a side note, don't buy the ACE brand hot glue, it has this weird yellow tinge and tends to bubble a lot more than the stuff I usually use, which is Stanley Brand Dual-Temp sticks.
My ninja style prototype circuit
Related blog post: blog.gg8.se/wordpress/2009/11/23/how-to-patch-your-dmg-to...
Washkewicz College of Engineering students, faculty, staff and alumni enjoyed a day turning donated, battery-operated toys into ones that kids of all abilities can enjoy.
I had to cut several holes in the back of the case to fit the I/O shield-plate for the new motherboard (Asus P5Q-EM), and a full-size ATX power supply unit.