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05-02-2010   Torrent Search Engine
E-mail: (hidden)   http://www.picktorrent.com
Recently I've downloaded an article 'Top 10 DIY Home Projects'. I found a lot of interesting, useful and necessary information there. For example, Secret Bookshelf Door. Every kid's dream is to discover a secret door magically open when you pull a book off the shelf, and dedicated DIYer Simon Shea made that dream come true. This is a really cool project, but it obviously takes quite a bit of commitment.
05-02-2010   sammy
E-mail: (hidden)   http://www.google.com
thanks
24-12-2009   Brian Alguire
E-mail: (hidden)   
I have just completed reading your Fuzzbass articles and would like to thank you for posting them. I plan to build my own bass speaker system this winter; not to save money, but simply to see if I can do it. I was disappointed that you have not finished the speaker design section though, as it would have been a critical element for me. I will try to find a copy of the Dickason book that you recommend and then go from there. Again, great articles and thanks for the help.
24-12-2009   Bernard Olij
E-mail: (hidden)   
Hallo Joris,
Bedankt voor je website.
Ik ben een gebruiker van Timex horloges, met alle gebreken van dien !
Toch zou ik graag de Data-Link 5B111 willen hebben voor mijn collectie. Hier in Indonesia is hij niet te koop. Hoe is dat in Nederland? Weet je een adres waar ik dit horloge nog kan kopen ?
Bedankt voor je reaktie.
Groetjes,
Bernard
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Fuzzcraft replied on 24-12-2009
05-12-2009   Robert Gaffney
Hey Joris, thanks a lot for that amplification walkthrough. I found it very interesting, clear, and down to earth. Thanks,
Robert Gaffney
25-10-2009   Grelli
E-mail: (hidden)   
Hi Joris,

you make great projects !!!, but I can't find schematic and code for propeller 1 and 2. Please can you this send me :=) ?

Greetings from Erfurt (Thuringia)

Ralf-Peter Grellmann
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Fuzzcraft's reply: I've updated those two pages with everything I could find about the clocks. It's not much, but maybe it'll help. All that stuff is a long time ago, I hope you understand.
14-10-2009   Emeth
E-mail: (hidden)   www.myspace.com/emethbe
Hey Matty van Emeth hier; coole foto's die je van ons gemaakt hebt in de baroeg!! Ik mail je even om te checken of je er nog meer hebt dan die op je website. Je kan me altijd mailen. tnx!!!
Matty & Emeth
29-09-2009   Dylan Fairbanks
E-mail: (hidden)   http://dylanfairbanks.blogspot.com/2009/09/fiber-optic-ring-flash.html
Thanks for the great website on your ring flash work. I built my first one and am having good fun with it (see link).
-Dylan
17-09-2009   Sylfest Muldal
E-mail: (hidden)   
Re your ringlight 4.0 (and others):
I'm inspired to use 1mm optical fibres to make the most of the onboard flash on my FZ28 for macro nature photography. While I'm waiting for everything to arrive (the camera, the fibres...), I'm thinking - why make just a ring light? That lighting is unnaturally flat. You've shown how to channel the flash into 120 fibres. Why not keep the setup flexible, and bundle and point groups of fibres as required to get whatever lighting you want? I'd just need to find a handy way of tethering and pointing the various bundles (clips and bendy wires on a collar at the front of my camera?). Do you think this would work?
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Fuzzcraft's reply: That's a great idea. But there's a drawback. As you may have read, a bundle of 120 fibers is very stiff, and I had to preform it with a heat gun to make it work. That's why it only works with 1 camera body and 1 lens. So if you plan to have several fiber spot lights, you'll have to put them in fixed places and preform the fiber bundles. If you can't live with that, you will have to build a very strong fixture to overcome the spring tension of the bundles.

The very flexible traffic sign fiber bundle I used for ringlight 4.1 would be perfect for this, but it's probably very hard to find.
17-09-2009   Hans Smits
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Joris,

Ik las een wat ouder bericht over de Canon Powershot S1 IS. Ik zag dat je aardig wat energie gestoken had om het stroomverbruik van deze camera in kaart te brengen. Ik zou je daar nog graag een vraag over stellen.

Je stelt dat de camera bij 5V nog werkt maar wordt dit lager dan stop de camera er mee. Nu zal dit vermoedelijk gebaseerd zijn een externe voeding maar de vraag blijft hoe deze camera dan zou kunnen werken op 4 Ni-MH batterijen die in principe maar 1,2V elk leveren. Ik heb deze batterijen geprobeerd maar de camera werkt hooguit 10 minuten op zo'n set en dan is het over. Bij aanvang was de spanning per batterij ongeveer 1,48V. Na 30 minuten in de camera zakte dit naar 1,44V per batterij en weigerde de camera aan te gaan.

Je zegt ook ergens dat "Record, auto power saving: 205 mA " is. Is dit hetzelfde als de "UIT" stand? Zoniet, weet je dan misschien nog wat de consumptie is als de camera "uit" staat?

Bij voorbaat dank voor je reactie,
Hans

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