THIS BLOG HAS MOVED. PLEASE UPDATE ANY BOOKMARKS TO GO DIRECTLY TO WWW.RAISINGGEEKS.COM

Sunday, December 26, 2010

December 25th: A DeskSign for Mom

When we started making the Metal Christmas Trees as presents, Candy commented that she wanted one. The boys and I decided to make something a little more personal for Mom.

We used the same materials and process as the Metal Christmas Trees, and we loaded a family picture, some pics of the boys, and a fun picture that we made with PicSayPro.












And finally, the "crazy" picture the boys made...


December 25th: The Forest for the Trees

This year, the boys & I made gifts for family & friends. 2010 was the year of learning electronics and metalworking, so we came up with something that captured the spirit of both :)

Our 2010 holiday gift - Metal Christmas Trees !



The LCD (which looks much better in person!) displays the holiday greetings, like this:













We made a few variations...the first batch were painted steel, most were painted aluminum, and one special one was polished (for my Grandmother...).

Most had the LCD greetings, but a few were made as simple decorations (like the polished one above).

The boys and I learned a lot while designing and building these.

In order to make them in quantity, we built a steel template for plasma cutting. I made it from 1/4" steel (which was overkill in hindsight...)



While building the template, I cut away too much of the top left "branches" so I had to weld it up and grind it back down. So, yes, this project did require welding :)

We plasma cut the first batch from steel, then sanded them with flap discs on the angle grinder. The below pics shows some of the steel batch...

You can see some HAZ (Heat Affected Zone) discoloration from getting aggressive with the sanding.

We then put them in the vise between pieces of angle iron (learned that trick from a metal-working DVD) and bent them first by hand, and then flattened with an autobody hammer.
















After the first batch, I found some recycled 1/16" aluminum sheet at Skycraft (it was used for a prototype somewhere and had small holes all over the sheet), and wanted to try plasma cutting aluminum, so we switched to aluminum. It was much easier to work, so we stuck with aluminum. BTW, I did all the plasma cutting and sanding of the aluminum and I wore a respirator the whole time, so that no one was inhaling aluminum dust or direct cutting fumes.


After the trees were cut & bent, they received many coats of green spray paint.







Then the boys hand-decorated the trees.






The LCDs (which are keychain picture frames from Best Buy) were charged, formatted (remove factory pics), settings updated (stay on for 30 minutes, don't load the website when plugged in for charging), and the custom pics were uploads. The custom greeting pics were made with PicSayPro on my Viewsonic gTablet. It is a fun program for applying "stickers" and text onto photos (or blank backgrounds). The kids had a blast picking out stickers for these presents (especially the one for Mom, which will be another post...)

The LCD's were attached with velcro so that they could be removed for charging if desired.

We then placed them in boxes for shipping or giftbags for local gifts.

In total we made 17 LCD trees and 3 non-LCD trees (one polished, 2 painted).


Polished tree for Nana Douglas...


Polished tree for Nana Douglas...

We also made a dual-screen "JBT" desksign for Candy's work gift exchange and a single-screen "MOM" desksign. We will post those later :)


I wanted to make & give more, but December was very busy, and we ran out of time. I still have 8 or 10 LCDs here, so we will have to find creative uses for them :)  (I've already had some special requests for custom desksigns...)


If you received one, and you are reading this, please post notes to the boys in the comments - many of them were given to people when they weren't around and I'd like them to see the comments.

Merry Christmas!!

December 25th: Stand for the Nexus One

Since I'm in a "what can I make from aluminum" phase, I wanted to try a more complicated stand for the Nexus One that would hold the phone with the charging cable in the bottom.

I liked this design, so I set out to make one.


It would have been handy to know the angles - I did a cardboard mockup, and set the angles by my preference. In the end, my stand has the phone much more vertical, I'll try the next one with it kicked back more. This will also allow for shorter "fingers" holding the phone which means less obstruction in portrait mode.



I didn't get the bends straight as you can see here. This is really tough to do properly without proper bending tools. If I build another one, I will be making a center line and perpendicular bend lines _before_ I put on the plastic wrap.

I also bent & unbent the bottom once since I was guessing on the distance. You can see a line about 1/2" from the bottom bend. We will call this one "prototype" :)





The pictures don't show the polish level very well. I was quite happy with the shine :)


And yes, this is my idea of Christmas Day fun :)

December 24th: Lego Stand for the gTablet

A few weeks ago when I purchased the gTablet, I asked my 10 year old to update the Lego stand we built for my G1 when I went to Korea (Lots of movies on a 13 hour flight!)

We googled "Lego iPad stand" and used what we found as the basis for a new stand. Pics below!




It needs slightly larger tires on the front to grip the surface just a bit better and prevent sliding, but overall it works great and fits in the backpack side pockets!