Captain America shield made from old satellite dish
Instructables user seamster wins the award for the best creative reuse of an old satellite dish I’ve seen.
Instructables user seamster wins the award for the best creative reuse of an old satellite dish I’ve seen.
Two LED umbrella tutorials caught my eye today. Try out the projects by sockmaster (pictured) and matth3w.
Instructables user sdudley shares the plans for this neat little rotary tool table that acts as a mini table saw, router, sander, etc. Templates included, and he claims you can build one for about $20. He mainly uses his Dremel to build the thing, too.
nelson8815 on Instructables made this hydraulic robot arm our of a pizza box and some tape. More: Holiday Gift Guide 2010: Robots @Makezine.com blog Homebrew SCARA robot arm Building a robot arm from foam Industrial robot arm catapults flaming bowling balls
I built one of these years ago from plans I saw in Slocum and Botterman’s New Book of Puzzles, and still delight in playing with it, so I was pleased as–geez, I can’t say “pleased as punch” and still respect myself in the morning, so I’ll just leave it at “really pleased”–to see this new tutorial from Instructables user Phil B about how it’s done. From the outside, the puzzle is deceptively simple: You can guess from Phil’s description that you’ve got to spin it, to win it, but there’s a devious twist. The book I saw it in had a picture of a clear plastic version that showed off how the mechanism worked, but that makes it rather too easy to figure out; the best way to appreciate Yoshigahara’s design is to build one for yourself, then give it to somebody else to puzzle over.
From a life of recurring knee injuries, I’ve got a closet full of crutches. They’re useless as soon as I’m ambulatory, so I’ve been poking around for reuse projects. Flip those crutches upside down and you’ve got a snazzy pair of crutch stilts! And, as one commenter points out, if you injure yourself trying them […]
That’s a very lucky lad grinning at you in the beginning of this video from his dad, Instructables user Steve Moseley, who designed, built and installed this elaborate marble run around the ceiling of his room.