Hack your Hardware
Workshop proposal: Hack your Hardware Jtfoote 14:11, 7 November 2008 (PST)
"No user-serviceable parts inside" -- we call bullshit on that!
Favorite gadget busted? Don't throw it away; fix it! (Or at least autopsy it for the good of science!) Bring in your hardware yearning to reach its maximum potential (or give its life for spare parts). 90% of electronics failures are caused by bad connections or simple mechanical problems: we'll show you what to look for and how to fix them. We give you permission to take things apart, see what's inside, and improve them.
Possible projects:
- Add an extra iPod input jack to your clock radio or computer speakers
- Add a USB hub to a desk lamp (or a bobblehead doll, or a stuffed toy, or...)
- Hotrod your IR remote control to go around corners
- Extract the stepper motors out of a printer found on the sidewalk
- Fix that funky power jack on your old laptop so you can give it to Mom
- Add another headphone jack (or FM transmitter?) to your laptop
- Add a LED backlight or tasklight to a keyboard or a handheld game platform
- Add a dimmer to your favorite floor lamp
- A one-wire hack turns a discarded ATX PSU into a benchtop experimenter's power supply
- Replace the tired nicads in your favorite power screwdriver (or electric toothbrush, or other rechargeable toy)
- Hotrod your favorite power screwdriver with Li+ batteries
You will have more and better ideas. Bring them and share! I personally will be adding a pilot light to my desoldering gun so I can tell when I have the f*cker plugged in.
Yes this could be dangerous, and we may break things. That's how we learn.
Proposed schedule:
Week 1: Take things apart, determine problems, solutions, necessary parts to obtain. Week 2: Having obtained parts, put things back together and smoke-test (if it doesn't smoke, it passes!)
Your comments and suggestions are a crucial part of this: thanks in advance