Getting paid to do what you enjoy is a special treat. A machinist and fabricator by trade — hobbyist hacker by design — [spdltd] was commissioned to build a mechanical art installation with a steampunk twist. Having complete creative control, he convinced his client to let him make something useful: a giant electro-mechanical clock.
Pieced together from copper, brass, steel, aluminium, and stainless steel, this outlandish design uses an Arduino Yun — a combination Linux and Arduino microcontroller board — to control the stepper motor and query the internet for the local time. Upon boot, the clock auto-calibrates by rotating the clock face until a sensor detects an extra peg and uses that to zero on twelve o’clock; the Yun then grabs the local time over the WiFi and sends the stepper motor a-spinning ’till the correct time is displayed.
At first glance, you may find it hard to get an accurate read of what time it is, but an accent piece’s pegs denote the quarter hour once it lines up with the notch above each hour. At least this one doesn’t require you to match colours or do much math to check the time.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mMqp_Zk1CwU
In the future [spdltd] would prefer to spend more time working on the software portion of the build to ensure its integrity, as well as perhaps incorporate something special to take place as the clock strikes the hour.
Wow, Love the colorful use of different metals. Nicely finished project.
I like the way the client asked for something simply decorative and he gave them a design that is useful.
*morale intensifies*
What a STEAMer
https://t3.ftcdn.net/jpg/00/91/93/90/240_F_91939089_q7ZVG7B7NmSBE6R5mdAKaA9kqeq8ZAJG.jpg
Steampunk builds are always a lot more interesting when everything’s designed to really work, instead of a bunch of gratuitous geartrains with no function. Well done.
Amen to that.
I gave up on anything that billed itself as “steampunk”, because it almost always mean plastic gears hot-glued to something.