The plan was that we'd put it together and shove it in a pumpkin last Halloween. We finally got it assembled Saturday night. I did most of the soldering, but I did make Yummy solder in one LED over her objections. And last night I stuck it in a pumpkin.
The assembled Larson Scanner and the tools of the trade. |
The power switch is on the battery case. A button at the tip of my thumb speeds it up and slows it down.
I did add a last minute change. The kit came with an extra resistor and LED. I got some of my own wire and wired the extra light in parallel with the Larson circuit. Then I let it dangle behind the mouthpiece so the mouth has a solid glow.
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This one is much better than mine. Also doesn't seem to use the same kit. |
It's not fancy, but you can get simple LEDs in your own Halloween decorations with a coin battery and any LED. By coin battery I mean any of the flat round batteries you'd use in a watch. LEDs from the store have two long pins coming off of them. Just wedge the coin between them and you have a simple light. Tape may be necessary to keep the coin in place and the circuit closed. This is good for a bright light in your jack-o-lantern or a glowing ghost or something. A little electrical tape around the sides and you have a pair of eyes from the shadows that don't actually light up the shadows.
Don't use a straight 9 volt battery. That'll burn out many LEDs in the blink of an eye. If you do use a 9 volt instead of a coin battery you'll need to shove a resistor between the two.
A hack for the Larson Scanner came out the other day. It's a way to extend it as long as you'd like. [link]
This is *CRAZY* fantastic. I'm both reverent and envious.
ReplyDeleteMy soldering sucked. It's okay to acknowledge that to the Internets.
ReplyDeleteI need to do something with my pumpkin. Though it looks awfully fantastic all warty like it is.