Tuesday, August 20, 2013

County Fair

Why stop at the Maker Faire? Sabrina offered to organize an entry of the planes into the Yolo County Fair just for fun. Leo is a regular exhibitor who showed his very first Young Makers project there a couple of years ago.

When the kids dropped off their planes, the Junior Exhibits were just getting set up:
It might have been the first time all the completed planes had been in the same room together. Naturally, a commemorative snapshot was taken.
Back in the parking lot, Leo gave everyone samples of his baking entries, including these starfish s'more cookies, baked completely from scratch:
delicious!
And a couple days later, Sabrina texted us with the news that the planes had done very well indeed.

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Maker Faire 2013

Our Young Maker's year culminates in the Bay Area Maker Faire. This year only four of our families attended, and only Leo exhibited; but it remains the part of the year we most look forward to.

Maker Faire is a celebration of both skill and creativity in almost any area you can think of, among them—

costuming:
needle felting (yes, that dino was completely felted by hand!):
and light sculpture:
—as well as food, games, bicycles, art cars, arduino, 3D printers and more.

Every year the Maker Faire has attracted more and more people. Perhaps it is understandable, then, that the exhibition hall has an increasing number of companies displaying their products and startups looking for funding, and that the Maker Shed now sells more packaged kits than raw supplies.

But outside, and particularly in the South Lot, there are still many spectacularly homemade projects.

a dalek:
a bejeweled mosaic spaceship:
a walking geodesic pod:
 a homebuilt submarine:
a motorized teapot:
We were especially happy to see Make's own version of The Towel prominently displayed in the center of the exhibition hall. It was exactly a year ago at the faire that this very plane was featured on the cover of Make magazine and started us on the process of our own builds.
 Leo's plane also hung all day in the Young Maker's exhibit area:

 His end-of-the-day exhibit drew attention from young and old alike:

Thanks to the Maker Faire's inspirational atmosphere, we are already talking about ideas for next year. Robots? Vehicles? 3d Printers? Group project? Individual projects? It's fun to think about all the possibilities.

Meanwhile, here is a short video of some of the random sights from BA Maker Faire 2013. Our hats are off to all these makers for their individual visions, and for their incredible work to see those visions through.


Thursday, May 16, 2013

A Last-Minute Adjustment To The Towel's Motor Mount

Although the test flights were successful, the planes all still had problems with the motor mount flexing. The spinning motor put force on the vertical part of the bracket, shown below with arrow, bending it inward and making the plane hard to control. We brainstormed ideas on how to reinforce the bracket at the park, and decided to meet one last time before Leo took the plane to the Maker Faire.
 Doug had designed and printed a two-part reinforcement on his printer. The flat piece on the left goes underneath the foam board, while the piece on the right sits on top, behind the aluminum angle stock to keep it from bending backwards.
 With the above parts, 1/16" plywood, and two-part epoxy, the motors were remounted.
And voilĂ ! The motor spins with no flex on the bracket now: