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November 29, 2010

Book Launch Party: Beer and Boomerangs on December 3!

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The official Snip, Burn, Solder, Shred book launch party is December 3 from 6 to 8pm at the Workantile Exchange (118 S. Main St., Ann Arbor, MI, 48104)

  • FREE beer and family-friendly refreshments!
  • Hang out with Dave-o himself!
  • Check out projects from the book!
  • Build, tune, fly, and keep FREE cardboard boomerangs!

    December 3 is also Midnight Madness throughout downtown Ann Arbor, so the streets will be lively with free music, jugglers, fire eaters, and crazy-awesome deals at lots of shops, restaurants, bars, and cafes!

    RSVP via Facebook, or email me at dave[AT]davideriknelson[DOT]com, or just show up and have fun!

  • November 19, 2010

    42 gauge pickup winding wire

    42GAwindingwire.JPG

    This is the wire you'll use to make the pickup for the $10 Electric Guitar (Project 13). Each card has one continues length of pickup winding wire in two 135-foot coils. You'll have enough wire to 1) screw up once and still be able to build a working pickup, 2) make a single pickup with twice as many windings as the one described in the book (and thus a "hotter" signal), or 3) make two separate pickups.

    Price includes shipping, handling, and PayPal fees.

    How many?

    November 18, 2010

    Four Ways to Play the Thunderdrum

    YouTube - Thunderdrum--"Snip, Burn, Solder, Shred" Book Demo

    November 17, 2010

    Print-n-Snip Boomerang Template

    boomerangs-sm.png

    This PDF includes templates for three boomerangs: a scaled down version of the quad-blade fast-catch boomerang in Snip, Burn, Solder, Shred, plus two new tri-bladers). Each fits on a single sheet of standard 8.5-by-11 paper (and, as a bonus, each of these designs scales pretty well; if you have access to a printer that can handle bigger paper, then you can scale these up and make bigger boomerangs).


    To use the Print-n-Snip Boomerang Template:

    1. Print out the boomerang that catches your eye (slightly heavier paper--like resume stock--makes for a slightly easier to trace template)
    2. Trace the design onto light-weight cardboard (such as poster board, a cereal box, a Krispy Kreme donut box, etc.)
    3. Carefully cut it out
    4. Crimp the quarter-line on each blade (as described in step 7 of Project 18 in the book)
    5. Tune and throw!

    If you come up with a boomerang design you like and want to add it to the template, drop me a line! (My email is in the "About the Author" box.)

    "Circuit Snippets" by T. Escobedo

    If you have a little soldering experience--including building any of the electonics projects in Snip, Burn, Solder, Shred--then you're ready for T. Escobedo's "Circuit Snippets." This document includes several dozen sound circuits (largely guitar effects, although they work with any sort of instrument you can plug into an amp), which range from the relatively common (e.g., distortion pedals, phasers, envelope followers, pre-amps, auto-wahs) to uncategorizable strangenesses. In terms of quality, many of these sound as good as mass-market stompboxes at one-tenth the price.

    (The Synthstick entry has a bit more about Escobedo's FolkUrban website, but the short story is that it was really cool, had lots of great designs for different instruments, and disappeared with GeoCities in October 2009. I saved PDFs of "Circuit Snippets" and the Synthstick, but many other Escobedo fans have done a much better job of archiving than I did, scooping up all of the audio samples, too. The "Circuit Snippets" mirror at Guitar HQ UK is one such faithful recreation of the old GeoCities page.)

    "Circuit Snippets" by T. Escobedo

    "The Synthstick" by T. Escobedo

    For years, Tim Escobedo maintained the excellent FolkUrban website, which featured a wide array of instruments--both traditional and electronic--cunningly made from cheap, common supplies (lots of PVC and tupperware, grocery sacks, etc.) His projects were a huge influence, and served as invaluable templates to my tinkering; the synthstick was the first synth I ever built, and its VCO (the core noise-making circuit) found its way into many of my projects, as well as those built by my students (sharp eyes will see something very similar nestled at the heart of the Cigar Box Synth, Project 17).

    GeoCities evaporated in October 2009, and Escobedo's entire site with it. I archived the Synthstick and his collection of Circuit Snippets as PDFs, but these don't include any of the audio examples. Happily, I've discovered that many other tinkerers loved Escobedo's site as much as I did, and archived various chunks; Googling for "T. Escobedo" is a good place to start.

    "The Synthstick" by T. Escobedo

    "Making PVC Didgeridoos" by Steven L. Sachs

    For years, Steven L. Sachs maintained a great page on didgeridoos. It largely concerned making PVC didges like the Electro-Didgeridoo (Project 11 in the book), but also offered info on modifying lower-cost store-bought bamboo and teak didges into instruments that, sonically, could often pass for their genuine (and expensive) eucalyptus cousins. When GeoCities folded in October 2009, it took Steven's site with it. I've archived a PDF of his page, and humbly offer it here:

    "Making PVC Didgeridoos" by Steven L. Sachs

    November 15, 2010

    Book Trailer #1: Build a Water Rocket in a Minute

    YouTube - Quick-n-Easy Water Rocket--"Snip, Burn, Solder, Shred" Book Trailer 1

    November 12, 2010

    Sock Cthulhu spotted in the wild

    Yfrog Photo : yfrog.com/5572laj - Shared by narcosislabs

    Sew your own with this free sample project from Snip, Burn, Solder, Shred (the Cthulhu mod is at the end of the project; mine is pictured below).

    OMFG the books are printed!

    No Starch Press and Malloy (the printer, right here in Ann Arbor, Michigan) have made a superawesome book out of the jumbled mess of ill-lit pics and typos I produced--and you can order it directly from the publisher at a 35% discount with this coupon code: MAKEMORE (good until the end of December).

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    November 11, 2010

    DIY Multimeter Kit

    A nifty lil digital multimeter kit from the MakerSHED for just 19 bucks. (Lots of other cool, affordable, entry-level kits for the solderer in your life, including a sweet little Simon game, too.)

    Multimeter Kit

    November 10, 2010

    Ill-advised airplane bathroom craft projects

    The Things He Carried - Magazine - The Atlantic

    “The whole system is designed to catch stupid terrorists,” Schnei er told me. A smart terrorist, he says, won’t try to bring a knife aboard a plane, as I had been doing; he’ll make his own, in the airplane bathroom. Schnei er told me the recipe: “Get some steel epoxy glue at a hardware store. It comes in two tubes, one with steel dust and then a hardener. You make the mold by folding a piece of cardboard in two, and then you mix the two tubes together. You can use a metal spoon for the handle. It hardens in 15 minutes.”

    November 07, 2010

    How to Trick Yourself into Writing

    YouTube - 20100731-Ignite-MakerFaireDetroit-08-DavidErikNelson-Writing

    The first few words of my talk were cut off; they were: "My name is David Erik Nelson, and I make my living by writing."

    November 01, 2010

    Coming Soon!

    SNIP, BURN, SOLDER blog
    Coming Soon!

     

    FREE SAMPLE:
    Project 3: the Sock Squid

    Pre-order Snip, Burn, Solder, Shred from Amazon or directly from the publisher, No Starch Press.


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    About the Author


    David Erik Nelson is a freelance writer and former high school teacher. His fiction has appeared in Asimov's, The Best of Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet, and Steampunk II: Steampunk Reloaded. He is a contributor to the “Ask the Giant Squid” advice column at Poor Mojo's Almanac(k), a weekly online literary journal.

  • Find him online at www.davideriknelson.com
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  • Contact: dave[AT]davideriknelson[DOT]com
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    Make cool things (water rockets, cardboard boomerangs, a $10 electric guitar, a sock squid, etc.) while learning cool skills (basic soldering, sewing, carpentry, woodburning, etc.), and do it all on the cheap (most projects are under $10, many supplies are *FREE*).
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