lamgiang1 wrote a comment on 3D Printed Repeating Crossbow/Sling Shot Pistol.Nick Hehr has added a new project titled A Smarter On-Air Light.Nick Hehr has added details to A Smarter On-Air Light.lion mclionhead has updated the log for Apartment ventilation system.Dude on Old Prius Gets Upgraded Batteries.spaceminions on Calculation Before We Went Digital.mojojoe on Old Prius Gets Upgraded Batteries.Zoot on When Is An Engineer Not An Engineer? When He’s A Canadian Engineer.cplamb on Ask Hackaday: What Do You Do When You Can’t Solder?.PPJ on You Can’t Make What You Can’t Measure.cliff claven on Ask Hackaday: What Do You Do When You Can’t Solder?.Joshua on When Is An Engineer Not An Engineer? When He’s A Canadian Engineer.Herr Brain on When Is An Engineer Not An Engineer? When He’s A Canadian Engineer.Stan McIntosh on Modern Spark Gap Transmitter Uses A Rotary Gap.Hackaday Podcast Episode 248: Cthulhu Clock Radio Transharmonium, Thunderscan, And How To Fill Up In Space No comments Posted in Musical Hacks, Toy Hacks Tagged 3d printed musical instruments, ESP32, saxaboom Post navigation Perhaps future versions of the Sax-A-Boom can take it further by adding a breath sensor, like this 3d printed MIDI instrument. It’s a beautiful journey through creating something with a high level of finish on a limited timescale. Yes, there were some gaps and paint flaws, but ultimately son rocked the school presentation. Time pressure crept in towards the end, and had to go for some dirty solution that he would have preferred (popsicle sticks and epoxy for button mounting). The music samples came from a virtual instrument clone on GitHub and loaded onto an SD card. The device’s guts is an ESP32-based board called Sonatino, built around music generation. After a concerning amount of putty, wet sanding, and elbow grease, had a decently smooth body for an instrument. broke down the model into printable sections and tweaked it to account for buttons. Modeling complex sweeping shapes in CAD is difficult, and commissioned a 3d model from a professional on Fiverr. found himself in that exact position and made a crucial off-hand comment, “I bet I could make one of those.” That was how his hectic journey into the world of toy reproduction began.Īll had for reference when recreating a Sax-A-Boom were pictures and sound clips. However, a quick scan through eBay reveals that everyone else’s kid has also been asking for this obscure toy for a school event, which now costs around $700. Of course, you reply, it’s just 20 dollars. Their lovely child comes up, having seen a celebrity rocking out with a funny $20 toy from the 80s, and asks for it. Best of all it is an endless page, it just keeps adding listings as you go!! I was able to view literally 100's so quickly.Most parents have heard a familiar story. It provides enough information to decided to click through or not. This search program lets you sift through a great number listings quickly, filtered and sorted your way. Plus, flying through hundreds of entries seems a great deal easier without having extemporaneous information cluttering the page. It manages to return relevant results exceedingly quickly. It is fast, easy, and totally addicting!Īside from being visually compelling, PicClick is fast. you can see ALL of the results on one page. It's super simple, just type in your search terms per usual and start browsing this more user-friendly eBay. Sometimes my searches yield over 20 pages - ugh! If you share my pain, there's a cool solution:. I love eBay, but what I don't love is the crazy amount of scrolling I have to do. PicClick is an elegant and simple tool that is more enjoyable to use than the built-in search tools on eBay.
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