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131 lines
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131 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1342
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Title: HPR1342: Power Tool Drag Racing!
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1342/hpr1342.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 23:51:58
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---
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...
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Good morning, good afternoon, good evening, this is Sir Gatets calling in once again to
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talk to you about another maker kind of event here in the Kansas City area. I've been
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involved in this make KC, which is a group here in Kansas City, and in fact I am driving
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home from the second day of something called Parkville Days, which is one of the little
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city festivals that we have here in the US, and Parkville is a small town kind of upriver
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slightly from Kansas City, so it's still in the Kansas City area, but it's its own individual
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municipality here. And the make KC groups, in fact, were the first people to do a mini maker
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fair at Parkville Days about four years ago. This is before the big maker fairs ever started
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up in California and New York and various other places. So they were kind of the precursors
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to the Kansas City Maker Fair, which I've called in about before, and this is my third year
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to be up at Parkville Days when they do kind of a maker event at Parkville Days. They had
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a big chinch that had lots of people showing off various things that they had made, of course,
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very kind of electronic kinds of things to discuss, 3D printers and a guy from Oracle that
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works here out of the Kansas City office that had a system set up for kids to be able to
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play around and learn some programming and things like that. Rockets, we're not talking
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little model rockets, we're talking big rockets and all those kinds of things. And one of
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the most fun things that we did was we did have Rob Bishop from the Raspberry Pi Foundation
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came in the first employee of the Raspberry Pi Foundation and the engineer and evangelist
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to what his job title is. And he gave us a talk on Raspberry Pi where they're at with the
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Raspberry Pi Foundation and the kinds of things they're looking at, you know, coming out
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in the future and all that type of thing. I would have loved to extend him for a hacker
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public radio kind of interview, but he was beginning to actually lose his voice. He's been
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in the Midwest of the United States here for quite a while. And his fact was on his way home
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to the UK again the following day. And so I didn't feel like I was very sure to ask him
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to kind of repeat the whole thing again of the talk that he had just given. But one of
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the really fun things we did, and I advised you last time when we talked about the
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Maker Fair in Kansas City about finding something like a Maker Fair or some other kind of
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Comic Con or, excuse me, other event and going and getting involved with that and then
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sort of calling in or recording a hacker public radio episode and telling us about it.
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Well now I've got an idea for you about what you might want to do to get involved in something
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like that. We actually had power tool drag racing that we had set up at this event. Now it's
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an outdoor event in a park right next to the 33 River. So we had lots of room to do this,
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but right next to the tent, we then had an 80-foot track made out of wood. It was a
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foot wide and had two by fours along the side to kind of keep the racers in.
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Guys thought that drive sales and other places, you know, where they can get them cheap.
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We had lots of things that were based on belt sanders. We also had a couple of guys
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that had circular saws to say we're racing and one guy had actually a dual motor, a dual
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set of grinders, right, that he didn't have a regular grinding disc on it. He had brushes
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so that it could get traction with the wooden track. It was actually pretty sophisticated.
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It wasn't just the wooden track. We had an Arduino that was actually controlling everything that
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they were such as for each of the cars, and we would use, you know, long extension
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cords to power the cars or power the racers down the track so you'd need, you know,
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100 foot extension cords to do this. And there's power in the park that's available for us to do this,
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with the electricity that's available. But it became very important tying them
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not to tie the cord from the power tool to the extension cords because some
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situations we found that people were just, their cords would come unplugged
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two thirds of the way down and of course then they would stop and leave the race.
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We know a lot of fun doing this. The Arduino not only controlled the endpoints of this,
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but by European friends, drag racing is kind of an American thing in motor sports
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of going straight down the road, not no curves here, right, going straight down the track.
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And who could do it fastest? It's that small part thing from the
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40s, 60s and 60s and on end of the 70s. And it's about the skill of negotiating what's
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current, right? It's about going straight. I guess you could say that we still have
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a certain amount of limitations compared to European motor sports because the most popular
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form of motor sport in the United States only involves turning left, right,
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with soccer racing. Anyway, we had a setup where we had a tree, or people
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used to call it a light tree, at the end of the track that would sequence through
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lights and when it got down to the bottom from the red to the yellow to the green light
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that's when you're supposed to step on the gas and then drag race.
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Well, that's when they were supposed to press the button for their individual cars.
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We had a sensor up towards the beginning of the track that would indicate
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when they folded, which is they pressed the button too soon to press before they were
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supposed to start the race. Of course, that didn't prevent you from having a
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qualification for that race. And we had sensors at the end to actually
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determine who was the winner. It would flash the lights on the lane that
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won. So it was pretty sophisticated text that we had running it.
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It was very similar to the actual things that you would see at a real drag racing
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trip. And we had a lot of fun with it. Literally, the circular saws, as you might
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imagine, were cutting holes and carrying up the track. We got some interesting people
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coming out. We had the bleachers there set up and we had a fall crowd to watch us
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do our power tool racing. So if you want to get some interest from people about
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some things you can do in playing around with being a maker and playing around with
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the track, I'd suggest that you go out and look at some power tool racing. I'll send in
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some show notes here with some links about power tool racing. But if you Google it,
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you'll see a lot of it. We think we're probably the first group to
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have done this in the Midwest. There's some people on the host, maybe, who have
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done power tool racing. But we think we're pretty much the people who are breaking
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this to the Midwest. And it was a really fun weekend. It was very warm and human.
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We're here in Kansas City as it is, want to be at the end of the summer. But it was a
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fun time going out. I was the announcer for the races and usually would run the actual
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control setup. We are, do we know have some software in it that would allow us to
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reset the race? And of course, as I say, to detect the faults and declare who's
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the winner, there was actually a failsafe switch that I would hold down that would
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power both lanes. And if anything actually happened that I felt like we needed to set the
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power, I could let go of that switch and the power to both lanes would instantly
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go off. We never really had anything that was any danger to anybody who was
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sitting because they were well back. But we did actually have the circuiter saw
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us. You could see parts of the wood of the track being thrown up behind them as it
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was literally cutting the track. And we did have one racer that was based on a
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vacuum cleaner motor that literally would shake itself apart and there were two
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different times that that system actually lost its drive wheel. It came flying off
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and flew off. It was luckily enough in the same direction that the entire
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contraption was running down the line. And I shall see if you look at those
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links also in the power to erasing. It involves some wood that is the 12 inches
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of bit inside the track. Lots of inline skate wheels to actually facilitate
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you know, and getting rid of the friction of the thing moving down the track. In fact,
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what are the guys with his circular saw? When he showed the bottom of it when he
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was adjusting things on it, you can see that he had actually used the bottom of an
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inline skate that used to belong to his daughter when she was a child that had all
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these four little pink wheels in a row. And it was a lot of fun. I think crowd
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really enjoyed it and it's a way to have some fun with your maker skills and get
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people interested in this playing around with technology if you have something
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like this that you can do a set up of similar types. So I'll send in not only the
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links to that, but also the makekc.org site as part of the show notes for the show
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as well as a link to Part 2 days. Not that you're really interested in that unless
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you live in order of the Kansas City area. But that was how I spent my weekend.
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So you should record a show or call in a show like I'm doing here and explain to
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everybody how you're spending your time on a weekend and having fun with tech
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because we need some shows. All right. So with that, this is Mr. Gadget signing off
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and telling you once again, you should go out there and do something to make
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something do something. We'll talk to you next time. Bye now.
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