Part of me finds it REALLY funny that you managed to reinvent the daisy wheel printer. Another part of me is totally impressed that you came up with what's essentially a conversion kit for turning a typewriter into a printer. I'm not sure which part of me is winning out.
putting that Y slider at an angle is such an obvious but genius move 😅 I was trying to think of a good way to accomplish dealing with that height difference in the rows of keys before you got to it and basically facepalmed when you showed the angled rack setup lol super cool project, as usual 👌👌
Very cool project I which at the end of the video you made normal speed segment of the machine taping a word or more, then a timelapse without moving the camera to see it motion for longer time, just for people to apreciate the creation, well done
What I find genius which some people might not have noticed is the hot glue pockets you modeled into your parts. When using any type of glue a “starved joint” is a very real thing where the glue gets squished out between the 2 materials causing a weakness in the joint. You accounted for this but adding a glue pocket. Very nice.
I know right! I'm in my 3rd year and his videos makes thinking of the possibilities so exciting. I appreciate that he shows and explains a bit of the process more than just "I got this thing and did that thing and boom here it is". My creativity could use some work though!
I just came across this video (and channel)... It hasn't yet, but definitely should! I got here on a convoluted journey via a 3D Printer Academy website link to a Kickstarter of models which was run by JBV while had a TH-cam link.. which brought me here.
What i love about these projects: As a software developer i see just from a quick glance room for some improvements on the software :) Easy peasy for me. On the other side i would really struggle with the 3d design. So i like these projects which bridge different topics :)
As an engineer turned manager, and now software developer in my retirement, I do what I know how, and learn what I need. I learned C++ on my own, and I know there is way more I don't know, and better ways to do what I do. Elegance in software design is a good idea, but sometimes quick and slick wins the race. (Especially since the users don't see the code, just the results.)
I love this! I'd like to see you tackle a string art machine. There's a few examples on TH-cam but they're basically a hoop with a lot of pins around the edge and a mechanism that feeds thread through them. The designs that can be made are very artistic and cool.
3D printing is amazing! Absolutely fell in love with it. The principal of fast Prototyping really puts building something in a new perspective. I once heard "creativity is intelligentice having fun". This really is true with 3D printing
Amazing work!!! I've been following your channel on and off and you are getting more and more ambitious. Really exciting to see you push your creativity!
Thank you for being the first to expose me to and let me know about the career path for me that I've been looking for in this video (mechatronics engineer). Also EXACTLY 400th comment! This can't be a coincidence 😉😜 ;P
Had to pause the video at 04:00 ... I sat and stared off into space cause in my 30+ years of using computers NEVER heard that(or remember hearing it). And it makes so much sense.
Great work! Same thing was in my mind three years ago but only for trying not for image printing and my preference was fixing solenoid actuator on each key. My idea was to create fusion of soft keyboard and hard print i.e. As we go on hitting/typing keys on computer keyboard it will relocate same remotely on typewriter ;)
Hey Jay! Haven't seen you in ages, but my dad told me about your creations. This stuff is awesome! Not only the finished products, but I love these videos of your process!! I just bought your wall mounted marble coaster to print for my son. Keep this up! I've subscribed and will keep watching. Also, "baby Boomer-esque typing style" is one of the funniest phrases I've heard in a long time!
James! Saw that but wasn’t sure if it was you- thanks so much for supporting. Haha we all have at least one peck-typer in the family and their name is often Michael 🤣
Hey JBV, I love your videos! The output of this project is beautiful, I do a lot of 3D modeling and printing in my projects minus the servo and arduino additions (wish I could learn it). I really appreciate the commitment you’ve had holding on to your vision. Congratulations. Big fan of your channel - keep it up ✨
You know, it never occurred to me until now that the boomer style of peck typing might have a reason… it actually makes sense on a typewriter where the keys have long heavy strokes and you have to punch the keys down with force… the “proper” and efficient way of modern typing wouldn’t work on a typewriter without a lot of effort and skill… so most people probably just pecked at the keys to make sure they got a clean result! Not to mention if you make a mistake you can’t just easily delete… so accuracy was more important than speed for most people. It just goes to show that as much as we might judge others, they might have an explanation or reason behind it. My mom types like that but she grew up using a typewriter which she actually still has in decent condition in our storage.. maybe I’ll check it out and see how it feels.
My dad had an even older Royal typewriter, with round keys. As a Boomer, I never had typing class, and two-fingers was the natural way to start. For one, beginners have to look for the keys as they are not in muscle memory. The term for this is "Hunt and Peck". Now I am not a true touch typist, but I use more than two fingers, and I don't usually look at the keys. I also make a lot of misteaks.
Fricken heck man this is an excellent build 🤙 I'm sure it's been said before, but for future servo projects it's very easy to modify them for endless rotation for linear and winching applications. Few resistors or even using a linear potentiometer in place of the potentiometer and removing the stop pin in the output spline. Always looking forward to more mechatronics builds.
You asked for ideas for future projects: You could adapt this to operate a comptometer, this could be an interesting project as there would be all the fun of coding the mathematical procedures used with a comptometer and also whilst it is possible to do this one key at a time on a comptometer they are designed to press several keys at the same time, you could have one arm with several moving fingers. It would also have the advantage of being able to claim the title of the slowest electronic calculator on the planet ;-) BTW - professional comptometer operators only used keys 1 to 5.
Another solution to the backlash problem is that going in one direction you can overshoot slightly and go back, that way the backlash is always in the same direction. I.E. going left you go the normal amount but when going right you overshoot and then go left enough to overcome the backlash.
You should now pair this with AI story creation software. Then make it portable, take it to a coffee shop, and when people look at you funny, tell them you are working on your next novel.
Lol, this would make an awesome art exhibit...dress the mechanism up with a sparking and stressed out looking robot to look like it's typing - then just have it typing away random gibberish generated by an AI bot that was trained by watching months of trash TV Call it "A device by any other MAC address would have as low of latency" by William Sparkspeare
@@SomeGuyOnTheInterweb cool! I once had the dream of using my channel to provide great Buckeye State weather content. That came and went a long time ago. Haha. Still in Ohio. Still enjoy weather.
I know you said you are mediocre at coding but I would suggest using #define next time you have a constant in your code. It just gets interpreted at compile time and hardcoded into the functions instead of using memory space to create a variable. Cool video man ❤
Also, 3D printing has been a concept for as long as history and the idea got very popular in the 80s. Articles in all the science rags were taking of them as a futuristic future thing. To build buildings and tools and prototypes. But it wasn’t until some people bit the bullet and just built one that they became popular. Nobody saw their obvious utility. Nobody saw dollar signs. It wasn’t our engineering capabilities or even or computer power that held us back, it was people willing to just do it finally that made the difference. Makes you wonder how many other amazing things we lack because people expect someone else to come up with it.
This is awesome! Love the ridiculous engineering choices (hot glue 😅) for the lulz, and even the stubborn commitment to using servo motors even if something else would work better. That being said, another approach to building this kind of machine would be to just use an unmodified 3d printer control board and stepper motors with endstops. You just tell the firmware (probably Marlin) how many steps translate to the movement of one millimeter on each axis, and then you could write a simple program to translate a text document into GCode movement commands to move the X and Y axes. The Z axis could be used for operating the "return" lever. And either continue using a servo for the button-press (Marlin firmware can control servos as well) or better yet, a solenoid connected via an H-Bridge to one of the spare GPIO pins on the control board (There are GCode commands that can tell Marlin to set a GPIO pin to high or low). With that in place, you could hook it up with OctoPrint and then you're literally using an entire 3d printing stack to implement a traditional text-on-paper printer! 😅
Bigger mind blow for ya: "Return" was the original keystroke command for all computers in the early days. It was commonly used on terminals, telewriters, home PCs (of which Apple is a member). "Enter" came along later on.
I have seen so called professionals who also used delay function for mutual excrusion or simply to control paralell processes in the industry, even if a real servo drive knows exactly where it is. :-D Anyway this is a very nice fun project with hot glue and many-many hours of thinking. I wish I could do my projects also.
Correction on the return/enter key on Mac keyboards: Full-sized keyboards, both Mac and PC, have both an enter key and a return key. However, very few programs handle them differently, especially on the Windows side. But there's still a tiny difference in MacOS dialog boxes, so the numpad-less mac keyboards have the both on the same key with one on the Fn layer. Some PC laptops also have this, but I've never seen it labelled (not that I have ever looked for it). And in case someone wonders what the difference between enter and return originally was: Mainframe computers used to work by sending a full page of text to the terminal, where the user then could put in all the data they wanted and send the whole thing back to the computer to be processed. The return key did just what it does here when writing a TH-cam comment, it moves the curser to the next line. The enter key did what happens when I press the "Comment" button below, it sent the filled out form to the computer.
@@Engineezy i know you’re a busy guy, but i i figured i’d ask anyway. i struggle with putting my ideas and ambitions into motion, sometimes. what do you use/do to organize your thoughts or goals? i struggle to focus on one project for extended periods of time and end up jumping from project to project, leaving stuff unfinished. trying to improve!
Fantastic work man! So fun to watch! Loved the process, video and your content! , the nerdy mechanical engineer in me wants to suggest a thing or 2 which I’m sure you must be aware of already though (I don’t mean to offend 😂). You could measure the force required to push that return bar and can design around the reduction ratio fr you other robotic arm idea, a simple dynamic model of that system would’ve solved that issue. And, ik the gear selection can be arbitrary but, again, if you had the measured push force required and a dynamic model, the gear reduction can then be determined more accurately, and knowing the loads makes module selection more reliable. (gotta keep reminding these non-hardware ‘engineers’ that we are mediocre coders, or else, might get attacked) 🤣
This is a darn fine combo of real things, made things and the magic glue that holds stuff together.... All you need now is a webcam to take a photo of someone, convert that to ascii art, and then "print it out" Noowwwww you're cooking on gas :D
Just found your channel and have been going through some of the past videos. In the future when you want to get rid of play in your gears you might want to try a herringbone gear pattern. I use them a lot when I want lager gears for an easy 3d print but do not want the play.
fantastic! there's an output filter for mplayer that renders video in ascii, you might be able to type up a short video, grabbing each frame, then animating them together. just an idea :-) subscribed!
Re-iterating what justtestingonce had written below " excellent work and excellent way to tell your story". Great effort and inspiring to mechatronics students.
I know a kid who need this who loves to play the guitar and is sadly stuff with depression and anxiety. He is very close to me and sadly recently talked about wanting to be suicidal. He wants a typewriter to which him and his dad can use to write a secret project out... Hint: the project is based around a large spoon. And he is shy but very easy to talk to. I hear he is your biggest fan as well. :) (Text from speech btw)
I love the project, but as a mech student myself, a free body diagram and some force calcs could have solved your return bar issues before they occured haha
Idea: installing this underneath the typewriter where it pulls the hammers instead of pushing them, so it looks invisible from the top. Makes it look like a ... ghostwriter ...
Part of me finds it REALLY funny that you managed to reinvent the daisy wheel printer. Another part of me is totally impressed that you came up with what's essentially a conversion kit for turning a typewriter into a printer. I'm not sure which part of me is winning out.
🙏🙏
putting that Y slider at an angle is such an obvious but genius move 😅 I was trying to think of a good way to accomplish dealing with that height difference in the rows of keys before you got to it and basically facepalmed when you showed the angled rack setup lol super cool project, as usual 👌👌
Thanks Nate! I was pretty pumped when I realized that would work 🙌
It saved adding a Z-axis servo.
Very cool project I which at the end of the video you made normal speed segment of the machine taping a word or more, then a timelapse without moving the camera to see it motion for longer time, just for people to apreciate the creation, well done
What I find genius which some people might not have noticed is the hot glue pockets you modeled into your parts. When using any type of glue a “starved joint” is a very real thing where the glue gets squished out between the 2 materials causing a weakness in the joint. You accounted for this but adding a glue pocket. Very nice.
Mad respect for catching that! 👊👊
Only 2000 views, you got to be kidding me! Dude as an engineer myself, excellent work and excellent way to tell your story, love the work, subscribed.
Thanks so much dude! Welcome to the adventure 👊👊
What a difference a year makes :)
you’re literally the coolest person i know. i’m currently in university for engineering and can only dream of doing projects like this when i’m older
Thanks James! I started in the same place as you- you got this 👊👊
I know right! I'm in my 3rd year and his videos makes thinking of the possibilities so exciting. I appreciate that he shows and explains a bit of the process more than just "I got this thing and did that thing and boom here it is". My creativity could use some work though!
If you're uni age, doing engineering - surely your entire free time growing up must have been filled with projects like these - that's how you learn.
I already do projects like this and I'm 12 years old
Me too
Brilliant. My first reaction to the finger torque issue was to use an electric typewriter. They have push button carriage returns as well
I just found you a month ago. And I must say you're awesome. I'm loving all your stuff. Keep clapping.
Thanks so much!
printers should've started like this... that would be great to see in history before the actual printer.
This is absolutely incredible and needs to blow up 🙌
Thanks brother! Hopefully it does :)
I just came across this video (and channel)... It hasn't yet, but definitely should! I got here on a convoluted journey via a 3D Printer Academy website link to a Kickstarter of models which was run by JBV while had a TH-cam link.. which brought me here.
@@KieranShort Welcome! Happy to have ya :)
High quality content, I'm surprised the YT algo didn't push this to me sooner.
Took over a year 🤷♀️
What i love about these projects: As a software developer i see just from a quick glance room for some improvements on the software :) Easy peasy for me. On the other side i would really struggle with the 3d design. So i like these projects which bridge different topics :)
Glad you can enjoy it even though my programming is a little hack!
@@Engineezy Seeing you make a variable for every individual key made me so sad but hey, it did work!
Congrats on the build, looks awesome.
@@xXIkaron How would you solve it instead?
@@Seanlabor std::map with KeyPosition being a struct containing the necessary info e.g. x, y, which side, etc.
As an engineer turned manager, and now software developer in my retirement, I do what I know how, and learn what I need. I learned C++ on my own, and I know there is way more I don't know, and better ways to do what I do. Elegance in software design is a good idea, but sometimes quick and slick wins the race. (Especially since the users don't see the code, just the results.)
I love this! I'd like to see you tackle a string art machine. There's a few examples on TH-cam but they're basically a hoop with a lot of pins around the edge and a mechanism that feeds thread through them. The designs that can be made are very artistic and cool.
Im gonna check it out! Thanks for watching Dan!
I can’t believe how clean those gears look. I really need to get into 3D printing before it’s too late.
3D printing is amazing! Absolutely fell in love with it. The principal of fast Prototyping really puts building something in a new perspective. I once heard "creativity is intelligentice having fun". This really is true with 3D printing
Ahh ascii nudes. brings back memories to late 90s and early 00's.
This was incredible by the way!
😂😂 thank you!
16:00 AYO WHAT
Just to be clear I'm definitely not complaining but I was not expecting that
😎
Amazing work!!! I've been following your channel on and off and you are getting more and more ambitious. Really exciting to see you push your creativity!
Thanks Roberto! I plan to keep pushing :)
This is the first video of yours I have ever seen and I love your channel already.
Thank you!!
I love the way he explains what he’s doing , it makes me really want to make something
Thank you! Go make something 😀
Watched your channel for a few hours in one go. Love what you do. 😊
This is such a cool project!! Hope this vid blows up! (And your programming skills are great FYI)
Thanks Steven! We will see what happens 🙈
really cool work. I really like the way the servos are used for linear motion rather than the usual heavier steppers
Thank you!!
This is great! You make it look ALMOST easy with your skills!!
Thanks Anton! Much appreciated
Thank you for being the first to expose me to and let me know about the career path for me that I've been looking for in this video (mechatronics engineer). Also EXACTLY 400th comment! This can't be a coincidence 😉😜 ;P
🙌🙌🙌
16:02 is definitely the best piece
yes
This is by far one of the most impressive things I've seen! Subscribed.
Thanks!! Much appreciated
Had to pause the video at 04:00 ... I sat and stared off into space cause in my 30+ years of using computers NEVER heard that(or remember hearing it). And it makes so much sense.
Haha I know right 🤯
Nice work
It deserves millions views
Thank you!
Absolutely amazing build!!! And the end results are so cool! Love the explanation and walk through too, super interesting.
+ Graham Shoutout!!!
Thanks Graham (everyone, this is THE Graham) for saving me some headaches 👊👊
Great work!
Same thing was in my mind three years ago but only for trying not for image printing and my preference was fixing solenoid actuator on each key. My idea was to create fusion of soft keyboard and hard print i.e. As we go on hitting/typing keys on computer keyboard it will relocate same remotely on typewriter ;)
Thank you! Great minds think alike!
Hey Jay! Haven't seen you in ages, but my dad told me about your creations. This stuff is awesome! Not only the finished products, but I love these videos of your process!! I just bought your wall mounted marble coaster to print for my son. Keep this up! I've subscribed and will keep watching.
Also, "baby Boomer-esque typing style" is one of the funniest phrases I've heard in a long time!
James! Saw that but wasn’t sure if it was you- thanks so much for supporting. Haha we all have at least one peck-typer in the family and their name is often Michael 🤣
Another fun fact about return, macos may never mention it explicitly as return but Linux does. Especially in older software.
Interesting!
Your videos are a huge inspiration. All of your projects make me want to get on Fusion, or VSC, or whatever stuff is cool and do something!
Doo it!!
@@Engineezy yeah i just got klipper working on my rpi4, excited for more printermods!
This is my kind of channel. Great content. Bet your about to blow up so keep creating!
Thank you! Always appreciate comments like these 🙏
Hey JBV, I love your videos!
The output of this project is beautiful, I do a lot of 3D modeling and printing in my projects minus the servo and arduino additions (wish I could learn it). I really appreciate the commitment you’ve had holding on to your vision.
Congratulations. Big fan of your channel - keep it up ✨
Thank you! Appreciate the kind words. Best of luck on your printing journey :)
You know, it never occurred to me until now that the boomer style of peck typing might have a reason… it actually makes sense on a typewriter where the keys have long heavy strokes and you have to punch the keys down with force… the “proper” and efficient way of modern typing wouldn’t work on a typewriter without a lot of effort and skill… so most people probably just pecked at the keys to make sure they got a clean result! Not to mention if you make a mistake you can’t just easily delete… so accuracy was more important than speed for most people.
It just goes to show that as much as we might judge others, they might have an explanation or reason behind it. My mom types like that but she grew up using a typewriter which she actually still has in decent condition in our storage.. maybe I’ll check it out and see how it feels.
For real. I wonder what the WPM were for some early typists on these early typewriters. Some Hulked-out fingers.
My dad had an even older Royal typewriter, with round keys. As a Boomer, I never had typing class, and two-fingers was the natural way to start. For one, beginners have to look for the keys as they are not in muscle memory. The term for this is "Hunt and Peck". Now I am not a true touch typist, but I use more than two fingers, and I don't usually look at the keys. I also make a lot of misteaks.
Nice project and cool execution!
I guess it took a lot of trial and error and waiting for prints to come out, test them and change the design😁😁
Exactly! But I try to design in such a way that I can iterate quickly. Thanks for watching :)
Really cool. Added bonus, it types faster than me 😅
😂😂😂 thanks!
Jay, there is NOTHING mediocre about you. You are brilliant 🤩
Thanks John!
Wonderful. Amazing how much effort you put in each of your videos. Keep up the awesome work and keep having fun
Thanks, will do!
very nice, inspiring me to get into servo motor control!
So many possibilities
Dude you are so underrated, wtf get this man to a million quick
🙏🙏🙏
Fricken heck man this is an excellent build 🤙 I'm sure it's been said before, but for future servo projects it's very easy to modify them for endless rotation for linear and winching applications. Few resistors or even using a linear potentiometer in place of the potentiometer and removing the stop pin in the output spline. Always looking forward to more mechatronics builds.
Thank you! Continuous servo mods will definitely be used in the future!
You asked for ideas for future projects: You could adapt this to operate a comptometer, this could be an interesting project as there would be all the fun of coding the mathematical procedures used with a comptometer and also whilst it is possible to do this one key at a time on a comptometer they are designed to press several keys at the same time, you could have one arm with several moving fingers.
It would also have the advantage of being able to claim the title of the slowest electronic calculator on the planet ;-)
BTW - professional comptometer operators only used keys 1 to 5.
😂😂 slowest calculator
I loved your working area so much. I wish I could get one like yours.
Thanks Vin! Definitely a great place to be creative 🙌
Another solution to the backlash problem is that going in one direction you can overshoot slightly and go back, that way the backlash is always in the same direction. I.E. going left you go the normal amount but when going right you overshoot and then go left enough to overcome the backlash.
This vi turned out really nice, one of my inspirations for my latest typewriter build :D
You should now pair this with AI story creation software. Then make it portable, take it to a coffee shop, and when people look at you funny, tell them you are working on your next novel.
😂😂 that would be hilar
Lol, this would make an awesome art exhibit...dress the mechanism up with a sparking and stressed out looking robot to look like it's typing - then just have it typing away random gibberish generated by an AI bot that was trained by watching months of trash TV
Call it "A device by any other MAC address would have as low of latency" by William Sparkspeare
GPT sucks at ASCII art
Wait... buckeye storms? I am an Ohioan who enjoys weather too!
@@SomeGuyOnTheInterweb cool! I once had the dream of using my channel to provide great Buckeye State weather content. That came and went a long time ago. Haha. Still in Ohio. Still enjoy weather.
I know you said you are mediocre at coding but I would suggest using #define next time you have a constant in your code. It just gets interpreted at compile time and hardcoded into the functions instead of using memory space to create a variable.
Cool video man ❤
An object with the keys mapped to numbers could have saved you a lot of time!
Still working on my OOP skills! Thanks will def need to try this
Also, 3D printing has been a concept for as long as history and the idea got very popular in the 80s. Articles in all the science rags were taking of them as a futuristic future thing. To build buildings and tools and prototypes. But it wasn’t until some people bit the bullet and just built one that they became popular. Nobody saw their obvious utility. Nobody saw dollar signs. It wasn’t our engineering capabilities or even or computer power that held us back, it was people willing to just do it finally that made the difference. Makes you wonder how many other amazing things we lack because people expect someone else to come up with it.
This is awesome! Love the ridiculous engineering choices (hot glue 😅) for the lulz, and even the stubborn commitment to using servo motors even if something else would work better. That being said, another approach to building this kind of machine would be to just use an unmodified 3d printer control board and stepper motors with endstops. You just tell the firmware (probably Marlin) how many steps translate to the movement of one millimeter on each axis, and then you could write a simple program to translate a text document into GCode movement commands to move the X and Y axes. The Z axis could be used for operating the "return" lever. And either continue using a servo for the button-press (Marlin firmware can control servos as well) or better yet, a solenoid connected via an H-Bridge to one of the spare GPIO pins on the control board (There are GCode commands that can tell Marlin to set a GPIO pin to high or low).
With that in place, you could hook it up with OctoPrint and then you're literally using an entire 3d printing stack to implement a traditional text-on-paper printer! 😅
Very true! Maybe next time 😂
Binge watching these cool builds. You had way too much fun with this one at the end. Lol
😂
"Return" is also what functions in programs do. Fun linguistic holdovers.
Love that term- linguistic holdover
Two fingers are better than one, yeah? Love it.
🙏🤣
Bigger mind blow for ya: "Return" was the original keystroke command for all computers in the early days. It was commonly used on terminals, telewriters, home PCs (of which Apple is a member). "Enter" came along later on.
🤯🤯🤯
This vid deserves more love, have some engagement
Much appreciated 🙏
I have seen so called professionals who also used delay function for mutual excrusion or simply to control paralell processes in the industry, even if a real servo drive knows exactly where it is. :-D
Anyway this is a very nice fun project with hot glue and many-many hours of thinking. I wish I could do my projects also.
Haha! Thank you 🙏
The horror fan in me was praying for you to make it type out "all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy"
Beautiful way to turn a typewriter into half of a a Teleprinter/teletype.
Would be neat to see it pump out an animated scene.
That would be awesome! Maybe one day I’ll bring it back to life
This project is freaking awesome! Very happy to discover your yt channel, youre amazing!
Thanks Tomas! Appreciate it 😀
WOW, Simply Amazing!!!
Thank you 🙏
How the hell does this have less than 1000 likes!? You’re fantastic, man!
Thank you!
You should set this up to pull the comments under your video via the TH-cam API and print them all!
I love that idea!
Nice video I like so many nice 3D printable designs
Thanks Felix!
Correction on the return/enter key on Mac keyboards: Full-sized keyboards, both Mac and PC, have both an enter key and a return key. However, very few programs handle them differently, especially on the Windows side. But there's still a tiny difference in MacOS dialog boxes, so the numpad-less mac keyboards have the both on the same key with one on the Fn layer. Some PC laptops also have this, but I've never seen it labelled (not that I have ever looked for it).
And in case someone wonders what the difference between enter and return originally was:
Mainframe computers used to work by sending a full page of text to the terminal, where the user then could put in all the data they wanted and send the whole thing back to the computer to be processed. The return key did just what it does here when writing a TH-cam comment, it moves the curser to the next line. The enter key did what happens when I press the "Comment" button below, it sent the filled out form to the computer.
man i love this channel. love your work! thanks for the top tier content
Much appreciated!
@@Engineezy i know you’re a busy guy, but i i figured i’d ask anyway. i struggle with putting my ideas and ambitions into motion, sometimes. what do you use/do to organize your thoughts or goals? i struggle to focus on one project for extended periods of time and end up jumping from project to project, leaving stuff unfinished. trying to improve!
Im impressed, well done!
Thank you!!
Woooow está increible. Te felicito!
Thank you!
Without doubt this is going to type the sequel for House of Leaves. Johnny?!?
the fingers are like something straight out of an animation movie
Haha yesss! Thats what I was going for
I recall that old PCs used to do something similar by connecting an electric typewriter to the output device.
Fantastic work man! So fun to watch! Loved the process, video and your content! , the nerdy mechanical engineer in me wants to suggest a thing or 2 which I’m sure you must be aware of already though (I don’t mean to offend 😂). You could measure the force required to push that return bar and can design around the reduction ratio fr you other robotic arm idea, a simple dynamic model of that system would’ve solved that issue. And, ik the gear selection can be arbitrary but, again, if you had the measured push force required and a dynamic model, the gear reduction can then be determined more accurately, and knowing the loads makes module selection more reliable.
(gotta keep reminding these non-hardware ‘engineers’ that we are mediocre coders, or else, might get attacked) 🤣
Appreciate the suggestions!
saw one of ur shorts and had to check out the channel, was not disappointed, seems like the channel stuffmadehere
Thanks for checking it out my guy! Stuffmadehere is definitely an inspiration
this is high quality content
Appreciate it!
I love your videos! Keep up the great work.
Thanks Kyle!
so you made a regular printer. Pretty cool!
With pointy fingers**
I've never felt old, until you explained the carriage return key on a keyboard! I guess it makes sense, that most poeple don't know this nowadays! 😄
This is a darn fine combo of real things, made things and the magic glue that holds stuff together.... All you need now is a webcam to take a photo of someone, convert that to ascii art, and then "print it out" Noowwwww you're cooking on gas :D
🙏🙏🙏
Just found your channel and have been going through some of the past videos. In the future when you want to get rid of play in your gears you might want to try a herringbone gear pattern. I use them a lot when I want lager gears for an easy 3d print but do not want the play.
Thanks for the tip! Will definitely need to try it
All the coders: PAIN, also the coders: Nice!
Was NOT expecting the pretty lady picture, but I’m not mad about that 😂
🤣
fantastic! there's an output filter for mplayer that renders video in ascii, you might be able to type up a short video, grabbing each frame, then animating them together. just an idea :-) subscribed!
Ooh that would be amazing!
You say hardcoded values. I say lookup table! 😊
Re-iterating what justtestingonce had written below " excellent work and excellent way to tell your story". Great effort and inspiring to mechatronics students.
Thanks Omar!
15:48 Aw man, you missed the chance to print the surprised Pikachu.
Ahhh next time
I know a kid who need this who loves to play the guitar and is sadly stuff with depression and anxiety. He is very close to me and sadly recently talked about wanting to be suicidal. He wants a typewriter to which him and his dad can use to write a secret project out... Hint: the project is based around a large spoon. And he is shy but very easy to talk to. I hear he is your biggest fan as well. :) (Text from speech btw)
someone: how many a4 sheets have you used for this?
jay: yes
🤣
That’s genius. I wanna build it too. I’m just need to find our old typewriter.
Was definitely a fun one! Let me know if you get around to it
This is so awesome.
Thanks brother 👊👊
Wait…he makes quality content…about making stuff with gears and typewriters and marbles…and he’s Canadian?
…
TIME TO CELEBRATE
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Very cool project
Thanks Gordon! Glad you enjoyed
This is your best work…👏🎇🎆, besides the strandbeest
“That just sounds like a teletype with extra steps!” lol
Cant wait for this channel to blow up
With you on that!
Very nice project. I would like to make one. Are you going to share the CAD files and firmware ?
I love the project, but as a mech student myself, a free body diagram and some force calcs could have solved your return bar issues before they occured haha
Idea: installing this underneath the typewriter where it pulls the hammers instead of pushing them, so it looks invisible from the top. Makes it look like a ... ghostwriter ...
4:40 Ayy, that’s the same brand of servo I use for my rc car! 😃
🙌🙌🙌