Project:Young Hackspace/YH-3: Difference between revisions

From London Hackspace Wiki

no edit summary
(Created page with "* [https://groups.google.com/d/topic/london-hack-space/z7GR4AH6xxE/discussion Preparing next Young Hackspace: making electronic music; physics of sound. Request for contributions...")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
* [https://groups.google.com/d/topic/london-hack-space/z7GR4AH6xxE/discussion Preparing next Young Hackspace: making electronic music; physics of sound. Request for contributions!]
* [https://groups.google.com/d/topic/london-hack-space/z7GR4AH6xxE/discussion Preparing next Young Hackspace: making electronic music; physics of sound. Request for contributions!]
* Mark may try to organise Slinky springs
== Physics of Sound Demos ==
These are all just proposals. Have yet to try them. Good topics: Periodic motion, the relationship between motion and sound, the frequency spectrum, resonance, harmony, etc.
=== Wine Glasses ===
Everybody knows this one. But: we have equipment to visualise the frequencies!
* Ken: Wine glasses tuned to different notes with a microphone and osciloscope to show the waveform
=== Wave Machine ===
Nice, simple. Maybe a bit brittle; but invites playful interaction, which is perfect.
* Paul: http://www.nationalstemcentre.org.uk/elibrary/resource/2096/wave-machine
* "adhesive tape, jelly babies [really any kind of weight] and wooden skewers"
=== Slinky ===
* Lay it on a table, waggle the end, watch the wave perturbation propagate.
=== Glob Monster ===
From Anthony.
# Take the amp in the space, lay it on its back and cover the speaker cone with cling film. 
# Mix up some non-Newtonian fluid (corn starch & water) and throw a decent sized glob of it onto the cling film protected speaker.
# Throw various audio signals through the speaker and watch the glob monster dance!
# DIY cymatics!
=== Ruben's Tube ===
Fire! What could go wrong.
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubens'_tube
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubens'_tube
* billy: http://www.swtpc.com/mholley/PopularElectronics/May1968/Flame_Amplification.htm
* SamLR said he might build one
 
=== Plasma Speaker/Flame Amplifier ===
 
Cool demo, but probably too much work to build.
* Billy: http://www.swtpc.com/mholley/PopularElectronics/May1968/Flame_Amplification.htm
* Randomskk: plasma speaker http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cEeWtBAE5LY
* Randomskk: plasma speaker http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cEeWtBAE5LY
* Mark may try to organise Slinky springs
 
=== Directional Sound ===
 
Not quite sure how to build this.
 
* Ken: "How about one of those "sound wave" guns that allows you to fire a pulse of air across a room and put a candle out?"
 
=== Sound Generators ===
 
Misc ideas for sound generating setups, these things won't necessarily teach you anything but they're fun to play with.
 
* Ken: Photon phone,  make a musical note by tapping a small filament lighbulb  from which the light output has been focussed onto a phototransistor and suitable audio amplifier. Old style reflector bike lamps were good for this.
* Ken: Arduino theremin or note generator / bender  controlled from 2 axis joystick
* Ken: Musical drawing - use soft graphite pencil on paper to make carbon resistive traces of different shapes and resistances.  Trace the drawing with a metal probe to get different sounds from an oscillator - use anlog inputs of Arduino
 
=== Resonating Spring ===
 
There's an excellent piece at the British Art Show at the Hayward Gallery atm, "A Grammar for Listening," where Luke Fowler and a few sound artists filmed sound environments. In one they attached one side of a metal spring to a stand, and subjected it to vibrations (audio oscillators?) of changing frequencies which resulted in amazing organic flows of periodic/chaotic movements.