2011年12月29日星期四

Simulating Magic Eye Tubes With Spinning LEDs



[via]
So-called “magic eye” tubes are display devices, which indicate signal level by the projection of wedge-shaped shadows on a glowing view screen. They were developed in the 1930′s for use as tuning indicators in radio receivers, and as alternatives to the then-expensive-to-manufacture meter movements.
Because they haven’t been produced in decades, and because they degrade and wear out with use, the supply of functional eye tubes is dwindling. I thought there might be value in coming up with a potential substitute– something that acted like an eye tube that could replace them in applications like antique radio restoration and general experimentation.
It turns out that convincing eye tube behavior can be simulated with one or more LED’s mounted on a rotating disk. The electronics to drive the LEDs amounts to little more an an op-amp, a transistor, and some timing components.
This video demonstrates the appearance of a real eye tube in operation, and introduces the principles involved in simulating one through electro-mechanical means. The video shows that the display generated by the electro-mechanical equivalent can be fairly convincing.   www.bgocled.com

Octolively: Digital interactive LED surfaces



Octolively: Digital interactive LED surfaces @ Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories. [via]
Octolively is an all-new, open source interactive LED surface kit that we’re releasing today. Octolively features high resolution– an independent motion sensor for every LED, stand-alone operation, a variety of response functions, and easy scaling for large grids.   www.bgocled.com