ATtiny Hacks: Robot Halloween Costume

When it comes to Halloween costumes, [Michael] doesn’t like buying expensive and poorly made bits of cloth and fabric that resembles [random Disney character]. Last year, his son decided to be a robot for Halloween and although gray spray paint and dryer vent hose make a very good costume, that only goes so far. The robot needed lights, so [Michael] spent a little time on this build that blinks a few LEDs in a random pattern.

The build is very simple; an ATtiny13 drives two 74HC595 shift registers. The code – all 30-odd lines of it – uses the random() function to shift high or low values to the shift registers. After pausing for a little bit, the cycle continues and a new patterns of LEDs light up.

The electronics of the robot costume could be easily transferred to another theme – astronauts need LEDs on their backpack, and of course aliens communicate with blinking lights. In any event, it would avoid last year’s fiasco with a dozen [Heath Ledger] Jokers. Check out the video of [Michael]’s intergalactic robot son after the break.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kLOo2hJF7G8&w=470]

7 thoughts on “ATtiny Hacks: Robot Halloween Costume

  1. I did that costume as a kid a few times not quite that fancy couple of boxes with tin foil few lights and an alarm is all i had.

  2. I developed a very similar robot costumer for my kid. He got claustrophic and had limited arm movement when trying to hit a pinata. I highly recommend making your costume big enough to the kid.

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