The Smell of Molten Projects in the Morning

Ed Nisley's Blog: Shop notes, electronics, firmware, machinery, 3D printing, laser cuttery, and curiosities. Contents: 100% human thinking, 0% AI slop.

Category: Machine Shop

Mechanical widgetry

  • House Sparrow vs. House Wren vs. Entrance Reducer

    House Sparrow vs. House Wren vs. Entrance Reducer

    A friend gave Mary a small-bird birdhouse, which immediately attracted the attention of a pair of House Wrens:

    Bird House entrance reducer - wren exiting
    Bird House entrance reducer – wren exiting

    The vertical black bar is a DIY Birdsaver cord.

    The entrance hole was 1-½ inch ⌀, a bit larger than the 1 inch ⌀ preferred by wrens and entirely suitable for the pair of House Sparrrows who also took an interest in the property:

    Bird House - sparrow inside
    Bird House – sparrow inside

    This led to considerable discussion and displays of outright hostility:

    Bird House entrance reducer - wren vs sparrow
    Bird House entrance reducer – wren vs sparrow

    Sparrows and wrens disagree on nestbuilding materials, with the wrens hauling twigs into the box and sparrows hauling them back out again.

    Because wrens have better PR agents than sparrows, I intervened by taking the box apart:

    Bird House - nest base sticks
    Bird House – nest base sticks

    Although I realize that’s a lot of work for a small bird, I dumped the contents off the patio and set about reducing the entrance hole:

    Bird House - interior cleared
    Bird House – interior cleared

    Because birds aren’t too fussy about looks, I sawed off half an inch of 1 inch (ID) CPVC pipe and glued it in the hole:

    Bird House entrance reducer - interior glue
    Bird House entrance reducer – interior glue

    The outside looks marginally better:

    Bird House entrance reducer - exterior glue
    Bird House entrance reducer – exterior glue

    The sparrows continued to approach the hole at full throttle, deploying landing gear and speed brakes at the last possible moment:

    Bird House entrance reducer - sparrow approach
    Bird House entrance reducer – sparrow approach

    But they no longer fit through the hole and eventually gave up trying. The wrens resumed hauling twigs, although we’re not certain they’ll finish the project, as birds tend to build several partial nests before selecting the final one.

    We hope this will end on a happier note than last year’s Wreath Robins.

  • Book Repair Tape vs. Serrated Cutter: Nope

    Book Repair Tape vs. Serrated Cutter: Nope

    An end-of-life roll of parchment paper contributed its serrated cutter bar as raw material for the Gridfinity Tape Dispenser:

    Gridfinity Tape Dispenser - razor vs serrated blades
    Gridfinity Tape Dispenser – razor vs serrated blades

    Those teeth look exactly like a tape cutter should look:

    Gridfinity Tape Dispenser - serrated blade
    Gridfinity Tape Dispenser – serrated blade

    It turns out that book repair tape bounces right off the pointy-but-not-keen edges, to the extent the tape did not cut at all, no matter how hard I tugged at any angle. Perhaps filing one side to make the teeth thinner would improve the results; given the cutter’s provenance it seems like putting lipstick on a pig.

    The original razor blade continues to work fine, so I dropped the serrated cutter into the hollow under the tape roll against future need.

    Book repair tape is tough stuff!

  • Tour Easy: Bike Rack Tray Holder

    Tour Easy: Bike Rack Tray Holder

    Mary starts her garden plants at home, then hauls the trays to the garden in a plastic drawer strapped to the rack on her Tour Easy to avoid crushing the plants in the packs. I finally learned enough to make an adapter mating the drawer to the rack:

    Bike Rack Tray Holder - in use
    Bike Rack Tray Holder – in use

    It’s made from four layers of laser-cut cardboard glued together with crossed corrugations for stiffness. I intended make a final version from glued-up plywood sheets, but it works surprisingly well as-is and I may just make another when this one wears out.

    The rear view:

    Bike Rack Tray Holder - rear view
    Bike Rack Tray Holder – rear view

    The front has a cutout for the battery powering the rear camera, with the base height allowing enough meat above the battery:

    Bike Rack Tray Holder - overview
    Bike Rack Tray Holder – overview

    The upright posts cradling the drawer may be too skinny for durability, which is why this is a prototype. The inner edges of the posts angle outward by a few millimeters to match the drawer’s mold draft.

    Four feet locate the holder on the rack rails just ahead of the Ortlieb pack clips:

    Bike Rack Tray Holder - rail detail
    Bike Rack Tray Holder – rail detail

    The rails are 8 mm ⌀ and the cutouts are 9 mm, because a little tolerance goes a long way. Similarly the tab widths just fit the available spaces beside the rail.

    The two flat plates support the drawer and space the uprights to match the Ortlieb clips. I intended to mortise the plates into the uprights, but hot melt glue is wonderful stuff and the joint may outlast the cardboard. In retrospect, the outer edges of the plates should align with the inner sides of the uprights for maximum tidiness.

    You don’t have that drawer and likely not the racks, so a picture of the LightBurn layout will give you the general idea for your hardware:

    Bike Rack Tray Holder - LightBurn layout
    Bike Rack Tray Holder – LightBurn layout

    Cut four copies of the uprights in two different orientations, glue them together, then do the obvious thing with the plates.

  • Metric Micrometer: Percussive Adjustment

    Metric Micrometer: Percussive Adjustment

    This metric micrometer has resided in my tool chest just short of forever:

    Metric micrometer - detail
    Metric micrometer – detail

    During that entire time, it read 0.025 mm too high: when the spindle was on the anvil, as shown, the thimble sat 2-½ divisions above the index line. Not off by much, but an annoying bit of mental arithmetic every time.

    It doesn’t get a lot of use, because I rarely need more precision / accuracy than my digital calipers provide, but measuring those teeny USB wire strands finally forced me to adjust the poor thing.

    A cap unscrews from the end of the thimble, revealing the setscrew locking the thimble to the spindle:

    Metric micrometer - overview
    Metric micrometer – overview

    Unfortunately, loosening the setscrew (with a 2 mm hex wrench) didn’t release the thimble:

    Metric micrometer - thimble setscrew
    Metric micrometer – thimble setscrew

    After steeping the joint in Kroil penetrating oil for while, I stood the thimble on the bench block and gently tapped the spindle with a punch, just enough to break it free:

    Metric micrometer - spindle adjustment
    Metric micrometer – spindle adjustment

    Then it was a matter of screwing the thimble back onto the frame until the spindle contacted the anvil, continuing to screw the thimble until the 0 line matched the index line, and tightening the setscrew. There was some slippage as the Kroil worked its way further into the joint, but a firm grip on both got the job done.

    That should hold it for the rest of forever.

    Speaking of forever, the 3D printed repair part for my caliper is now fifteen years old:

    Caliper Part - Installed
    Caliper Part – Installed

    I’ve been doing this for quite a while …

  • Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner: Wiring Fix

    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner: Wiring Fix

    Our ancient Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner began behaving erratically due to water seeping under the rather casual seal from last year’s fix. Although drying the switches let it start up again, it would run for only a few seconds before shutting down again, which suggested a deeper problem than just the switches.

    Take a picture of the PCB’s component side:

    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner - PCB component side
    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner – PCB component side

    And of the solder side:

    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner - PCB solder side
    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner – PCB solder side

    Transform those pictures to be the nice real rectangles shown above, resize to a common pixel format, mirror the solder side, turn it into a layer atop the component side, then tweak its opacity to make both sides visible at once:

    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner - PCB overlay
    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner – PCB overlay

    Some pondering produces a partial schematic of the left half of the board:

    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner - partial schematic
    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner – partial schematic

    The 1:1 transformer is constantly powered, so the ON button connects the 120 V (!) half-wave rectified output to the +12V supply bus, with the 750 Ω resistor dropping most of the voltage while the switch is pressed.

    The hotwired +12V supply forces the relay closed, which (in some as-yet unidentified way) fires up a +12V power source to hold the relay closed, with the 555 timer driving an MC14060 14-bit divider to count down the time until it turns itself off.

    Reminder: this design dates back to the days when a pair of chips and a handful of through-hole components cost less than one of those fancy microcontroller thingies.

    Plug the cleaner into an isolation transformer and trace the half-wave rectified signal through ON button to find it got all the way to the contact on the end of the orange wire in the connector, but did not reach the pin header on the PCB.

    A closer look at the connector revealed a broken contact on the white wire, which I (rather crudely) soldered together while considering my choices:

    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner - soldered contact
    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner – soldered contact

    While plugging that wire back in place, this happened:

    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner - another broken contact
    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner – another broken contact

    Neither of those are the (presumably) similarly failed orange wire, but even I can get a clue from three similar failures.

    So I replaced the OEM connector with a JST-XHP 2.54 mm connector from an assortment I got for another project, replaced the chunky 22 AWG wires with flexy 26 AWG silicone wires in the same cheerful rainbow colors, and it began working perfectly again.

    The buttons needed another water seal, so I tweaked the previous layout to kiss-cut GITD tape and through-cut colorful vinyl sheets:

    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner - power button cutting
    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner – power button cutting

    Capped with a transparent cover sheet cut from a pack of PDA screen protectors (remember PDAs?):

    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner - power button cover
    Branson 200 Ultrasonic Cleaner – power button cover

    In truth, the GITD tape is too thick, so I’ll probably repeat this dance later this year.

    FWIW, I was totally ready to buy a new ultrasonic cleaner, but all of them have scathing one-star Amazon reviews, to the extent I decided fixing this cleaner would be much easier than fixing a new one that’s been cheapnified to the point of no return. A common complaint seems to be water leaking into their capacitive switches and killing the circuitry stone cold dead: not an improvement over this one.

  • Work Sharp Precision Sharpener: Clamp Support

    Work Sharp Precision Sharpener: Clamp Support

    Another Work Sharp Precision Adjust sharpener improvement from Printables:

    WorkSharp - clamp support
    WorkSharp – clamp support

    Although the blade clamp is a snug fit in its socket, it has enough stick-out cantilever to move slightly even under minimal force from the diamond tools.

    I added a thin cardboard shim, cut with a utility knife (!) and stuck on with a craft adhesive sheet, as the block was about half a millimeter upward with the clamp turned this-a-way and half a millimeter downward the other way. Your mileage / setup will certainly differ.

    I like the sharpener, but it’s much fiddlier than I expected.

  • Work Sharp Precision Sharpener: Turn Signals

    Work Sharp Precision Sharpener: Turn Signals

    The blade clamp on the Work Sharp Precision Sharpener fits into a socket that can rotate 180°:

    Work Sharp Precision Sharpener - Blade Clamp operation
    Work Sharp Precision Sharpener – Blade Clamp operation

    What’s not obvious is that the socket can rotate only 180°, which means you (well, I) must remember which way to turn it based on the presence or absence of the small white mark. I get it wrong somewhat more than half the time while sharpening a small symmetric blade, rather than a knife with a handle, so I added arrows to the socket.

    With the white mark upward, turn 180° counterclockwise:

    WorkSharp - turn CCW
    WorkSharp – turn CCW

    Then turn it 180° clockwise:

    WorkSharp - turn CW
    WorkSharp – turn CW

    As with the slug filling the uncomfortable button on the back side of the socket, this seems like it should be a standard feature.