Thursday, April 10, 2014

"Where does he get those wonderful toys...?"

... From China. Ok, I'd feel bad, but the places I'd get them from in the States, get them from China. Just eliminating the middle-man and saving a few bucks. But DAAAAAAMN - don't plan your week on whether something will arrive or not.

I thought I'd give a tour of my electronics box to demonstrate:
A) My dedication to this project's vision and electronics requirements.
B) My complete detachment from reality in regards to moderation.

Keep in mind, this is my ELECTRONICS BOX.
Pics of the greebles, controller stash, spanking new PC and the like will be forthcoming.

This is the "Ambilight" clone test - I was incredibly psyched about how easy it was to install and wire, and the effect is absolutely AMAZING! In addition to controllable lights for "condition" (Red/Yellow/Green) and the ambient lights for the back of panels and "running lights" in the cab, this little gem will add a HUGE level of immersion durong dogfights and atmospheric entry. And DAMN are they bright!

Bags of goodies from China. Wire connectors, a whole bunch of various switches, and power interfaces for breadboards. The power units support USB power and an external adapter to keep things modular. 

Aircraft knobs from the aircraft rotary switches. Some of them have up to 5 gangs and 10 terminals each! They built them to last, that's for sure. My LED box with a few hundred individual LEDS. I just got another 50 RGB's for about 5 bucks. Just had to wait 3 weeks for them to arrive.

These are the aircraft switches, snug in their temporary storage home. These things are BEASTS! Off to the right you can see an arcade joystick just waiting to be installed as thruster controller. Or maybe I'll build that arcade machine I always wanted...


Arduinos, Teensy and some of the breadboards. More commercially available switches waiting for homes. A box of randomness including annunciator lights from the panel. Not sure whether I can use them, but they're just too cool to toss out. 

More geeky goodness - LCD displays, keypad and terminal blocks for PCB boards. Modular hookups is the key - I don't know my final setup, so those allow me to disconnect and reconfigure without resoldering. There's the new power modules for breadboards - these bad boys can be connected to USB power or wall wart adapters to drive the breadboard circuits. On the right, one of the four LED strips I bought on clearance at "that electronics place"...

The big box of resistors - You never know when you need one, so I go a bunch. The KeyWIZ, LEDWiz and two of the USB game adapters pre-wired for switches. I've been impressed with the ease of setting them up, but I haven't had a chance to reconfigure the key mapping for game control. The Groovy Game Gear stuff has utilities included, but the generic Chinese boards might require some AutoHotkey or Joy2Key to maximize their usefulness.

The Goodies Box. Note the 7221s - these chips drive RGB LEDS and are ideal for running the individual LEDS needed for panel indicators and LED matrices. I picked up 2 8x8 matrices (bottom right) and can't wait to play with them! The two huge LEDS are 6-segment domes. I'm hoping to modify a hard drive indicator project to animate the light for my "artificial intelligence" computer VARYS. Think "HAL 9000 meets R2-D2". VARYS responds to VoiceAttack scripts - incredible voice recognition for about $8!

More ICs and general electronics stuff. A lot of these are for other non-sim projects (as if...) but they're all neat and tidy... For now. 

As a tattoo artist during the day, I have bought used tattoo equipment just to get it off the streets. The machines I destroy, but the power supplies... I always knew a variable DC power amp might come in handy for something. The one on the left was a nice find, and the smaller amp will be useful for less critical power needs. And it helped to keep my community safe from unlicensed skin hackers. Professional artist are your safest bet!

Here's the collection dominating my dining room table. I'm fortunate enough to be able to invest in these types of projects, but I admit that the more goodies and gizmos, the easier it is to get distracted. I've gone back to my original notes on design philosophy and what I'm really trying to build, and matching the components to the elements I most wanted to incorporate. Despite the daunting tasks of circuit design, programming, and creative kit-bashing, I really think I have a chance at building my dream man-cave from these humble parts. 

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