Last weekend, I joined Adam Kemp, author of our book The Makerspace Workbench, in northern Virginia for the NoVa Mini Maker Faire. His exhibit was called Inside the Makerspace Workbench:
Come and meet Make: writer Adam Kemp, author of The Makerspace Workbench. He will be making giveaways with his home made 3D printer, answering questions, and demoing artifacts from his book.
Adam’s printer is amazing. He used a CD duplicator for the chassis and power supply, scavenged the steppers and actuators, and built the extruder out of a diesel glow plug.
Just a couple of tables down from us, the folks from Synthetos were set up with projects showing off their TinyG platform. This one’s a little hard to explain; it demonstrates smooth linear motion of a pendulum with a curious implementation of synchronized movement by spectators — in this case, the heads of toy dolls:
Read more about TinyG in Motion Control for the Masses: The TinyG Story, and check out the gallery here for more photos from the Faire.
- Kevin Osborn demonstrates the Wyolum photo booth.
- Adam Kemp’s Arduino Fio powered robot
- A locally-made InMoov robot was part of the fun.
- Craig Trader’s Chaos Machine was on hand to delight children young and old.
- Todd Blatt of Custom 3D Stuff had his creations available for sale.
- Nova Labs had a sign you could control by tweeting.
- The fair was so big it filled two schools.
- Alden Hart of Synthetos and Adam Kemp.
- Adam’s also working on an inexpensive TinyG based 3D printer design.