Friday, October 29

The Twin Paddler

The Twin Paddler is a remote controlled floating vehicle. I built it out of a twice used milk-shake bottle, two NXT motors the PF IR system and a lot of assorted Technic pieces. I sat it in the bath tub for an hour and it didn't ship any water. I've run it out on the lake for a while and there doesn't seem to be any thing wrong with it. The handling is very good, it doesn't tip much, and overall I would say it is a good NXT boat. For a few more Pictures click HERE.
There isn't really any thing else to say about the Twin Paddler, so I will have to cut it short. Until next time, so long!

Thursday, October 28

Mission Hexawheel Exploration II

Mission Hexploration is under way.
The object; To navigate through enemy territory under the guise of a toy, and come back with useful information in the form of pictures and video.
The means; A fully autonomous NXT robot with a bluetooth and camera enabled phone, mounted onto an X and Y axis turret. (At the present I am using the PF IR setup for the turret, but everything else is autonomous. This could be substituted for the IR Link sensor from HiTechic to make the robot fully autonomous.)
Other info; click HERE to see this bot's predecessor; the Hexawheel Explorator I, or HERE to see more pictures of this robot.

Sunday, October 24

Music Bot

Are you interested in music? Well, if you are I have built an NXT music maker!
Yes it really makes music, the knob on the right controls the tone, while the knob on the left controls the volume. Pressing the orange button in the middle starts the sound, and releasing it makes the sound stop. For more pictures, click here.

Saturday, October 23

A few minor creations

I know these are not built using an NXT, but I thought I would post them anyway.





Tuesday, October 19

A new form of Lego clockwork

I have seen many analogue clocks on NXTLog; Some of them complex,


And some of them very simple.


Many of them have second hands, but very few have them coming out of the middle along with the minute and hour hands.
I have recently discovered a very simple way of doing this.

All you need is a turn table, a four wide differential, and some other assorted parts. The hand attached to the turn-table is the hour hand. The hand connected to the differential is the minute hand. And the last one counts the seconds.
So there you have it. A much easier way to build the hand part to a clock. Make sure to give me credit if you use it in your design.
For more pictures, click HERE.

Monday, October 18

The Marble Express

This project was just an experiment. The hypothesis which spawned the Marble Express was, "Marble contraptions are easy to build." The test thoroughly disproved this theory.
But, although relatively hard to build, the Marble Express was fun to build and play with. I made it into a sort of game, the marble goes up the long right track, and when it gets to the top, it rolls down into the lifter. The lifter is remote controlled and you have to tilt it so that the marble rolls down to the slide on the left, which allows the marble to roll at terrifying speeds back to the start where it gets picked up by the track again.
The goal of the game is to keep the balls in play for as long as possible.
To see more pictures, click HERE.

Saturday, October 16

The Sorting Machine

I built this machine to sort 4x4 Lego cubes. They move slowly down the ramp onto a conveyor belt which moves the brick under the grabber. This then moves the brick onto the Sorting Belt. The Sorting Belt moves the brick out from under the claw and in front of the light sensor. The said sensor will detect color and tell the Sorting belt which side to dump the brick off of. This process repeats itself until the ramp is empty. You are left with two piles of of different colored bricks.

You will find more pictures of the Sorting Machine HERE.