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Gnocchi Paddle

Submitted by Robert Narracci on

Like Aziz Ansari, I dedicate a substantial portion of my life to  making and consuming pasta. This little device allows you to make ridged dumplings like gnocchi, capunti and cavatelli. It’s also very easy to make and is a great holiday gift. 

This process makes it easy to make several at once, you can generate a long peice  of it and chop it Ito many paddles. However I suggest shaping a peice  that’s no longer than 2’ because that length  is manageable on a table saw and makes 4 almost 6” paddles. Use 1” maple about 3” wide. Set your table saw blade at 45 degrees and set it super low...just

Coffee

Submitted by Robert Narracci on

On weekend mornings, I like to treat myself to home brewed coffee; high quality, whole bean, ground on the spot and french pressed. Takes about 20 minutes but well worth it. I’m lucky enough to own an antique coffee grinder that has an interesting story. In the early 20th century, my Irish grandparents were servants at the Brewster Estate (now Edgerton Park) in New Haven. Frederick Brewster was the equivalent of New Haven's John Rockefeller. When he wasn't off on safari, he was making phat stacks of Benjamin’s with a life size train set that covered most of New England. Mr. Brewster specified

This tool can splice filament to make multicolored prints.

Step 1: Slice your multi-color model with Simplify3D or Cura

Step 2: Process your .gcode output with Chroma (https://support.mosaicmfg.com/Guide/Chroma+V3.2.2/58)

Step 3: Print with Palette+!

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Wooden handheld game console

Submitted by Alexis Boisserand on

Overview

The idea was to use a Raspberry Pi 3, tear down a SNES controller for getting some parts like the buttons and the PCBs, use some wood and acrylic to make it look nice and add some 3d-printed plastic to hold it together. On the Raspberry Pi 3, I installed a customized version of a linux distribution called Lakka, it emulates a lot of old consoles, from the Atari 2600 and NES up to the Playstation 1 and the Nintendo 64. A Teensy 2.0 board was used for implementing the controller logic and adding two extra analog joysticks.

Material

Overview of my handmade bicycle

Submitted by Lior Trestman on

I'm sure I will make more videos specific to individual components of this bike, but this video goes over most of the parts. If you'd be interested in seeing more videos detailing how I made it (or about some of my other projects) comment/like/subscribe and I'll put the time into editing. Here are some of the things I could make videos about, let me know which you'd be most interested in:

-Steam bending handlebars
-Clear coating steel
-Cutting/brazing steel tubes
-Choosing the tubes/designing the frame
-Choosing the components on the bike (1x gear calculations)
-Building up wheels with