Snowden Immortalized As Bond Villain In Edge-Lit Acrylic Poster

snowfall_smaller

[Wilywyrm] needed to come up with a final project for art class that commented on a social issue. Healthcare, schmealthcare, he said, and busted out this movie poster about the NSA spying scandal instead.

The circuit uses three extended-duty astable 555 timers to control the brightness of the 5050 RGB common-anode LED strips that run up the sides of the 24″ x 12″ x 1/4″ acrylic panels. Each of the three panels was laser-engraved at 600 DPI on an Epilog laser engraver and features a different aspect of the poster. There’s one for Snowden, one for Daniel Craig, and one for the text.

[Wilywyrm] tied the color channels together in the first panel to output white light. He used red for the second panel and blue for the third. A complete list of parts with build notes is available on his Google Drive. [Wilywyrm]’s notes include improvement ideas, like making all the RGB strips color-adjustable with more 555s or a microcontroller and timers.

Perhaps [Wilywyrm] could get into the clear whiteboard business after college.

12 thoughts on “Snowden Immortalized As Bond Villain In Edge-Lit Acrylic Poster

    1. You’re not. When I walked into the storeroom to get resistors, the guy on duty suggested using something besides a 555 (I think he said schmitt triggers, and even warned me about pin 7 shorting), but I have a tube of them and they were all I knew how to use, so I went with them. Now that I have time to look into it, these triggers are so much simpler. Probably should’ve used them, would have cut down on parts too.

    2. I make oscillators out of what’s available as in uncommitted gates or
      parts that fits my requirement. I think I have only used the 555 timers
      a handful of times in the last 10 years.

      Interesting part I have used: TI’s TPS2811, Dual 2A (peak) MOSFET gate
      driver with 40V regulator and hysteresis (aka schmitt trigger).
      I used that to generate low duty cycle pulses to drive a MOSFET in a
      fast transient loads (50A/us) for testing power supplies.

  1. Great job! (though, “not a hack!” ;)

    Suggestions for improvements (some impractical):
    1. More of a margin around the edges, which would help when you…
    2. Reduce/eliminate the light leaks
    3. AR coating on the PMMA (to reduce/eliminate the “infinity mirror” effect)

    For #3, you might try contacting Ben Krasnow ;)

Leave a Reply to HookCancel reply

Please be kind and respectful to help make the comments section excellent. (Comment Policy)

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.