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The Big Book of Maker Skills: Tools & Techniques for Building Great Tech Projects
The Big Book of Maker Skills: Tools & Techniques for Building Great Tech Projects
The Big Book of Maker Skills: Tools & Techniques for Building Great Tech Projects
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The Big Book of Maker Skills: Tools & Techniques for Building Great Tech Projects

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  • Metalworking

  • Robotics

  • Safety & First Aid

  • Welding

  • Electronics

  • Resourcefulness

  • Self-Sufficiency

  • Mad Scientist/inventor

  • Importance of Safety

  • Power of Community

  • Post-Apocalyptic

  • Survivalist

  • Power of Collaboration

  • Thrill of Discovery

  • Curious Child

  • 3d Printing

  • Hackerspaces

  • Diy Projects

  • Crowdfunding

  • Lasercutting

About this ebook

This ultimate guide for tech makers covers everything from hand tools to robots plus essential techniques for completing almost any DIY project.
 
Makers, get ready: This is your must-have guide to taking your DIY projects to the next level. Legendary fabricator and alternative engineer Chris Hackett teams up with the editors of Popular Science to offer detailed instruction on everything from basic wood- and metalworking skills to 3D printing and laser-cutting wizardry. Hackett also explains the entrepreneurial and crowd-sourcing tactics needed to transform your back-of-the-envelope idea into a gleaming finished product.
 
In The Big Book of Maker Skills, readers learn tried-and-true techniques from the shop classes of yore—how to use a metal lathe, or pick the perfect drill bit or saw—and get introduced to a whole new world of modern manufacturing technologies, like using CAD software, printing circuits, and more. Step-by-step illustrations, helpful diagrams, and exceptional photography make this book an easy-to-follow guide to getting your project done.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherOpen Road Integrated Media
Release dateNov 4, 2014
ISBN9781681881614
The Big Book of Maker Skills: Tools & Techniques for Building Great Tech Projects
Author

Chris Hackett

William C. Hackett is Adjunct Professor of Philosophy and the Honors Program at Belmont University. He is the translator of several works from French to English, including Jean Wahl’s Human Existence and Transcendence.

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5

    Nov 28, 2024

    Brilliant

    This book is a fantastic resource for anyone looking for a quick introduction to all manner of DIY, technical and engineering basics. The knowledge and skillset of the author is very impressive, and the text is written with great humour.

    Hackett is a legend!

    1 person found this helpful

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The Big Book of Maker Skills - Chris Hackett

CHRIS HACKETT

AND THE EDITORS OF

Popular ScienceThe Big Book of Maker Skills

TOOLS & TECHNIQUES FOR BUILDING GREAT TECH PROJECTS

Weldon Owenp2_images

CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION from Chris Hackett

BASICS

1 Set Up a Work Space

2 Plan a Project from Start to Finish

3 Play Nicely with Others

4 Keep Track of Tasks for a Team

5 Run a Safe Shop

6 Decide If You Need Stitches

7 Flush Out Your Eyes

8 Rescue a Smashed Foot

9 Save a Finger (or a Toe)

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HAND TOOLS

10 Wield a Tape Measure

11 Learn Tape Measure Tricks of the Trade

12 Go with a Combination Square

13 Make Micro Measurements

14 Swing a Hammer Like They Used To

15 Keep Your Hammer in Top-Hitting Form

16 Persuade with Sheer Hammer Force

17 Nail it with a Nailset

18 Pick a Hammer

19 Get Mechanical Advantage from Simple Machines

20 Know Your Fasteners

21 Go Threaded or Unthreaded

22 Decode Screw Heads

23 Sink Some Screws

24 Beat Specialty Screws

25 Deal with a Pesky Stripped Screw Head

26 Put More Torque on a Small Screw

27 Pick a Wrench

28 Improvise a Spanner When You Have No Spanner

29 Boost Leverage with a Cheater Bar

30 Wield a Combination Wrench

31 Get a Grip with a Pipe Wrench

32 Hack Your Pipe Wrench

33 Pick a Saw

34 Focus on Wood

35 Familiarize Yourself with Finishes

36 Master Butt Joints

37 Sand It Right

38 Shear and Saw

39 Use a Tube Cutter

40 Choose Sheet Metal Snips

41 Know Your Chisels

42 Pick a Vise, Clamp, or Jig

43 Use an Old-School Tool for a Manufactured Effect

44 Tap a Hole Like a Pro

45 Thread a Pipe with a Die

46 Set Up a Gas Welding Station

47 Protect Your Floor from Sparks

48 Check Gas Tank Hoses for Leaks

49 Make Your First Oxyacetylene Weld

50 Braze with a Torch

51 Bend Metal with Fire

52 Build Your Own Welding Table

53 Cut Heavy Metal with Fire

54 Flame-Cut in Straight Lines

55 Go on the Hunt for Obtainium

56 Assemble a Paint-Can Forge

57 Forge a Knife

58 Cast a Shot Glass

59 Transform a Forge into a Foundry

60 Craft a Crucible (or Two)

61 Fashion a Crucible Carrier

62 Assemble a Crucible Pourer

63 Hammer a Dross Skimmer

64 Refine Aluminum

65 Focus on Masonry

66 Mix a Batch of Concrete

67 Make a Solid Base for a Structure

68 Butter a Brick

69 Cast a Plaster Mask

70 Set Up a Glass Work Space

71 Mount Glass

72 Cut Glass Bottles with String

73 Pick Pliers

74 Tackle Tapes

75 Choose an Adhesive

76 Lock (and Unlock) That Thread

77 Focus on Paper & Cardboard

78 Make a Screen for Screen Printing

79 Burn an Image onto a Screen

80 Screen-print by Hand

81 Assemble a Maker’s Sewing Kit

82 Know Your Stitches

83 Create Quick and Dirty Patterns

84 Win at Life with No-Sew Fasteners

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POWER TOOLS

85 Pick a Power Saw

86 Make Masterful Curves with a Jigsaw

87 Choose a Circular Saw Blade

88 Slice with a Circular Saw

89 Work with a Portable Bandsaw

90 Bench-Mount a Portable Bandsaw

91 Get Inventive with a Bandsaw

92 Respect the Angle Grinder

93 Pick a Sander

94 Do It All with an Angle Grinder

95 Pick a Wheel, Any Wheel

96 Use a Cut-Off Wheel

97 Drill Better Holes

98 Drill Glass Without a Crack

99 Handle a Hole Saw

100 Chain-Drill Slots

101 Pick a Drill Bit

102 Know Your Rotary Tools

103 Transform a Rotary Tool as a Tiny Drill Press

104 Focus on Metal

105 Understand Electrical Welding

106 Set Up a Space for Electrical Welding

107 Start with Stick Welding

108 MIG Weld an Inside Corner

109 Try Some TIG Welding, Too

110 Weld Like a Badass

111 Hack Together a Welder

112 Fuse Metal with Your DIY Welder

113 Set Up a Soldering Station

114 Solder to a PCB

115 Solder Wires Together

116 Decode Circuitry Schematics

117 Prototype with a Breadboard

118 Etch Your Own Circuits

119 Pick Electronic Components

120 Know Your LEDs

121 Wire the Simplest Circuit

122 Store Energy with a Capacitor

123 Regulate with a Potentiometer

124 Direct Current with a Relay

125 Calculate LED Resistor Needs

126 Pick Illumination Sources

127 Fade an LED

128 Wire in Series or in Parallel

129 Work with High-Power LEDs

130 Master Multiplexing

131 Get the 411 on the 555

132 Set Up a Free-Running Oscillator

133 Wire a One-Shot Timer

134 Meet the 555 Family

135 Get to Know Your Multimeter

136 Check for Continuity

137 Measure Voltage

138 Gauge Power

139 Sew Circuits on Fabrics

140 Insulate Your Conductive Thread

141 Pick Fabric for Its Resistance

142 Focus on Textiles

143 Experiment with Flexible Switches and Sensors

144 Use a Multimeter to Check Material Resistance

145 Sew a Simple Soft Circuit Cuff

146 Know Your Photodetectors

147 Improvise a Pressure Sensor

148 Build a Loop Switch

149 Decipher Decibels

150 Get Various Noises from a Buzzer

151 Work with Speakers

152 Build a Basic DIY Amp

153 Master Microphones

154 Explore Sounds with a Piezo Mic

155 Bend That Circuit

156 Get to Know Radio

157 Listen in with a Trench Radio

158 Rig a Cell-Phone Blocker

159 Give a Homopolar Motor a Spin

160 Wire Up a Reverse Switch

161 MacGyver a Generator

162 Strip a Drill for Parts

163 Roll Your Own Gears

164 Shim a Gearbox

165 Pick a Power Source

166 Harvest Electronic Obtainium

167 Cook with the Sun

168 Get Solar Panel Savvy

169 Save Daylight in a Jar

170 Scheme Up a Wind Turbine

171 Power Up with Pedal Power

172 Build a Bicycle Generator

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ROBOTS & BEYOND

173 Meet Your Robot Minions

174 Scope Out the Software

175 Get Access to High-End Tools

176 Understand 3D Printing

177 Find a 3D Printer Near You

178 Prepare to Print a 3D Model

179 Enter the New Age of Replicators

180 Focus on Plastic

181 Pick a Microcontroller

182 Accessorize Your Microcontroller

183 Make a Case for Prototyping

184 Use Programming to Blink an LED

185 Pick an Input or Output

186 Take a Superquick Programming Primer

187 Build an Add-On Board

188 Hail the Lasercutter

189 Lasercut the Right Materials

190 Make Your First Lasercut Design

191 Troubleshoot a Lasercutting Job

192 Set Up a Hackerspace

193 Pick a Crowdfunding Platform

194 Put Together a Pitch Video

195 Build Community

196 Learn the Basics of Robot Anatomy

197 Build a Simple Proximity Detector

198 Make Your Robot See

199 Give Your 'Bot Touch Sense with Guitar String

200 Help Your 'Bot with Distance Detection

201 Hack a Servo for Continuous Rotation

202 Clown Around with a Balloon Gripper

Glossary

Index

Acknowledgments & Credits

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INTRODUCTION

I was one of those children always taking things apart—common to makers, but looking back, I realize that child me was a lot weirder and darker than one would want: I took stuff apart, but with zero interest toward improving the objects or even putting them back together. As I recall, I had no curiosity as to what the little bits did, and the concept of a soldering iron was totally foreign. I just wanted to carefully, methodically destroy things. I think we are all glad I did not have easy access to frogs or puppies.

But as I got older, I started to develop an interest in how the world worked, and realized my ignorance was deep and vast. I paid my electric bills, but where did the electricity come from (wait, back up—what is electricity? ). And what, exactly, was it doing once it got here? I wanted to create things, but I was clueless as to where to begin or even the correct terms to use. Like more and more of us, I grew up in a world that downplays the physical and the practical—where the vague menace of lawsuits makes shop classes disappear and distaste toward working with your hands leaves us all idiots staring at screens.

Slowly I learned the words (thanks, McMaster-Carr) and then the techniques. A great thing about fake it until you make it is that, once you’ve made it, you no longer have to fake it. The first things you make will look like crap, will probably not work, and will become cherished, deeply confusing family heirlooms. That’s OK. In fact, that’s all part of it.

This book is designed for the people starting from zero, the people who know a little and want to know more, and those who are pretty good and want some neat tricks. Writing it was harder than I thought it would be, but I hope it allows you to have hands that never come totally clean and a deep appreciation for the wonderful stuff that holds our world together.

CHRIS HACKETT

Basicsp12-13_images

1 SET UP A WORK SPACE

The perfect work space is one that works for you. If you are inspired and passionate you can work anywhere, and many do, soldering at the kitchen table late at night or grinding metal on the stoop. But a dedicated shop is a wonderful thing—the space and the work feed upon each other, your attention is focused, and the very act of setting it up often leads down interesting channels. Here are some starter considerations.

HARDWARE AND CONSUMABLES Store all the little bits that hold the world together in racks of plastic drawers. Label them clearly, and glue a sample to the drawer front for quick ID.

LIGHTING If you cannot see it, you cannot work on it. Overhead light should be bright but diffuse. Have at least one positionable bright lamp that you can shine into deep problems. Extra clip lights are nice for small work.

STORAGE Divide everything into Now and Later. Now goes where you can reach it in a hurry. Later is for future projects and can be out of arm’s reach. Store raw materials close to where you will use them.

TRASH Generating work generates waste. Have trash cans right at hand, otherwise scraps and wrappings will swarm. Start a recycling pile—broken tools, scrap materials, abandoned projects—that you can scavenge from.

WORKTABLE It should hit hip height when you’re standing and chest level when seated, plus be shallow enough that you can reach over it to access tools behind it. It is nice to have separate surfaces for materials that do not play well together.

POWER More is always better, but try to have at least 15 amps and a breaker just for shop usage. Mount power strips where you have easy access—hung beneath your workbench top or zip-tied high on the legs.

TOOLS FOR COMBINING

HOT- GLUE GUN This basic item is good for temporary and even permanent joints between most materials.

SCREWDRIVER Get grips of a few different sizes with swappable bits. Go in for extra Phillips bits, as they tend to disappear or walk off in your pockets.

HAMMER First tool in, still going strong. If nothing else, get a big, durable claw hammer, followed by a maul, blacksmiths’ hammer, and ball peen.

POP RIVETER Fun to use, it will give you durable, pro-looking connections for any thin materials.

GLUES, TAPES, EPOXY, AND CEMENT These aren’t always just an end solution—they’re also great for tough jigs and clamping.

SOLDERING STATION Digital readouts are nice, but treat a low-end model well and you’ll get the same result. Try to have a dedicated spot for electronics work.

TAP AND DIE SET Cutting your own threads is deeply satisfying, and once you get some experience it only takes slightly longer than drilling bolt holes.

ALLEN WRENCH SET Necessary to keep your tools up and running as well as for making.

VISE GRIPS Get as many as you can, then get more.

FRAME CLAMPS These make perfect 90-degree joints.

BOX WRENCH SET The right way to turn hex bolts. Get extra p14_images - and p14_images -inch (14.25- and 16-mm) ones.

PIPE WRENCH Not just for pipes. Will grip round things like no other tool.

BENCH VISE Get the best one you can.

TOOLS FOR TAKING APART

RECIPROCATING SAW It can impersonate many other types of saws; there are blades for every material.

ANGLE GRINDER Cuts, sands, shapes, and polishes, all with a change of the wheel. Traditionally for metalwork, the sanding and surface conditioning disks can be used on anything.

SHEET METAL SHEARS Best choice is a set of left- cutting, right-cutting, and straight-cutting compound- action snips with color-coded handles.

PIPECUTTER The cheapest, easiest way to get smooth, square cuts in steel pipe. Lightweight models for copper, aluminum, and plastic are likely to be called tube cutters.

ROTARY TOOL Dremel is the most common brand, but keep an eye open for older die grinders, which are twice the size and four times the power.

CORDED DRILL Much more powerful than a cordless model. Build a frame and you have a drill press, too.

KNIVES AND BLADES You’ll need a selection of both disposable- and fixed-blade types.

SCISSORS Get a pair for paper, a pair for fabric, and a pair to destroy through misuse.

SIDECUTTER OR WIRE SNIPS These can only handle thin wires and component leads, but they do it better than anything else.

FILES Files set up and used correctly are the most versatile tools. They are all the hard-core truly need.

BENCH GRINDER Together with an abrasive chop saw, mandatory if you’re going to be working with metal.

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2 PLAN A PROJECT FROM START TO FINISH

It’s been said that Rome wasn’t built in a day—and the Romans had nearly endless resources and conscripted labor. While maker projects tend to be on a smaller scale than Mediterranean empires, a little bit of forethought still goes a long way.

DO YOUR HOMEWORK Stand on the shoulders of the maker giants before you. Check the Internet (or even the library), and pick the brains of pals or experts who might have completed similar projects in the past. There’s no need to make mistakes others have already made for you.

SKETCH Before you start swinging a hammer, sketch out your plans. If you want to get fancy, you might even try to capture your vision using 3D modeling software.

OBTAIN TOOLS AND MATERIALS Procure your materials—the more salvaged, the cheaper and the better. If you’re missing an important tool, now would be the time to call in a favor with that neighbor who owes you one. If that doesn’t work, try a tool library, and a hardware store if you must.

DIVIDE AND CONQUER Based on your research, sketches, and available tools and materials, portion out the project into smaller parts. It can be a lot less daunting to think about tackling a project piece by piece than as a whole.

JUST DO IT With a plan in place, all that remains is, you know, actually following through. Start at the beginning. Work until finished. Easier said than done.

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3 PLAY NICELY WITH OTHERS

As a maker, doing things on your own might come more naturally than working in groups. Still, if you hope to make on a scale larger than you can hope to do independently, it helps to have a crew. Of course, that means you have to get along with people who aren’t you. Here are a few tips for doing so, from one angry loner to another.

PICK A TEAM When making with a crew, you don’t necessarily want a bunch of additional yous on the team. In fact, aligning yourself with people who have skills, contacts, and resources that you lack can be a really big help. Building a tiny house but only know carpentry? Sounds like you might be on the lookout for a plumber and an electrician. Tricking out a car with neon and a booming sound system but only know lighting? Sounds like you need an audiophile.

TALK Once you’ve found people whose skills complement your own, the challenge becomes getting everyone on the same page. Different personalities may require different communication styles. Talk through ways that work for everyone at the outset.

KEEP THE PEACE If at any point things start to go sour, address it in a way that is open, respectful, and direct. A hairline fault, ignored too long, can grow into a crevasse of resentment within your team. It’s a lot easier to patch a small crack than build a bridge.

BRIBE When all else fails, a beer can sometimes help smooth out the rough patches. Just be sure the power tools are powered down before imbibing.

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4 KEEP TRACK OF TASKS FOR A TEAM

Little personal projects—the stuff that most people can keep updated in their brain or on a handy app—require little lists. Add complexity—systems instead of parts, helpers requiring guidance, looming deadlines—and the system breaks. One day, your project manager will run out for a pack of cigarettes and never, ever return.

There is a better solution: giant pieces of cardboard. Boldly write lists of work that needs doing, in order, with a highly visible check box next to each task. There are few things as satisfying as checking off a box.

PUT IT IN ORDER Organize tasks into a logical sequence—steel needs to be measured, marked, and cut before holes get drilled; it’s a lot easier to drill through loose parts, so assembly should go after drilling whenever possible..

PUT SIMULTANEOUS TASKS TOGETHER If two sets of tasks can be done at the same time, break the list into columns to reflect that.

MAKE IT VISIBLE Hang specific lists near the machine or work area they apply to (cut lists next to the saw, drill lists on the drill press, etc.). An even larger list of lists—the whole of the project in paper form—should be visible from all points. With progress and bottlenecks posted in clear sight of all, deadline problems cannot take anyone by surprise.

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5 RUN A SAFE SHOP

Getting into making shows us the world in a new light—once you have done metal fabrication, you find yourself silently critiquing welds, and designing a circuit gives you a new appreciation of consumer electronics. You also discover some really interesting ways to be horribly, horribly injured. Even if you don’t go looking for trouble, it will find you, especially when you’re tired or impatient. Be prepared by having extra protective gear all around your work space, and make proper use of that equipment a standard operating procedure.

SAFETY GLASSES FOR ALL This can’t be said often (or loudly) enough: All shops want to blind you. Metalwork is all about ejecting tiny chunks of razor-sharp, red-hot stuff at high speed. Tear glands packed with fine sawdust are painful and hard to wash out. Touch solder paste, then touch your eye, and you will know pain. Nasty vapors from etching tanks have left me with red eyes for a week. Put a bin of safety glasses by the door and post a notice that everyone must wear them at all times. No exceptions.

VENTILATE (OR GET OUT) For most tasks, it’s enough to open a window or door and run a fan. Pro-level ventilation is pricey, but a cheap alternative is to simply work outside. At my shop, spray-painting, cleaning metals with acid, and sanding wood take place in the backyard, no matter how cold it is or how much time it adds.

HAVE A FIRST AID KIT Get an OSHA-approved one, then add in extra bits, like a small cooler and instant-cold packs (in case any body parts get loose and need to be packed for the ER), what will seem like way too much gauze, a couple of tubes of superglue, a surgical staple kit, and a

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