a great way to overcome the dual scourges of NIMBYs and corrupt / slow construction.
Tag: diy
Epic Cycling on Ice
Primitive Technology
After more than 4 years of anonymity, the man building all of the tools, huts, weapons, and other Stone Age technologies in the wilds of Australia has revealed himself as John Plant. And in this video compilation from October, he announces that he has a book out: Primitive Technology: A Survivalist’s Guide to Building Tools, Shelters, and More in the Wild
Baby Flask

It’s so frustrating not being able to enjoy my adult beverage in public. Sporting events, movies, church, all frown on bringing in your own booze. Instead of brown-bagging your beverage at the next bash, why not hide it in plain sight, inside a baby flask!
DIY synth
In 1979, 14-year-old Andy Popplewell built his own 6 track mixer, constructed his own synth, wrote a synth pop album in his mum’s garage and recorded it himself between 1981 and 1983; making 1 single cassette copy. That cassette has now been released as an album.
Techshop
i’m far from a scoble fan but this is very awesome. lots of surreal stuff, like the red phone to the USPTO. for some unknown reason, techshop nyc has been delayed by nearly a year now. i hope it launches soon.
America’s most important startup?
This is a really long video. More than an hour. Why is it so long? Because Techshop could be the most important startup to United States’ manufacturing industry. Here we spend an hour with CEO Mark Hatch.What is Techshop? It’s a place where you can make things. We get an in-depth tour. You can learn more here
In this video you’ll also meet several startups that call Techshop home.
This is why Techshop is so important to our economy. It’s providing a place for many other startups to get going, meet cofounders, and make the things that need to be made to startup companies.
Don’t miss the discussion of 3D printing at 36 minutes into the video: America’s most important startup? as we visit one of the startups located at Techshop San Francisco, Type A Machines. Learn more about this 3D Printing Startup
At 45 minutes into the video we meet SF Made, a non-profit that is helping the growing manufacturing sector in San Francisco America’s most important startup?
At 54 minutes into the tour we meet ProtoTank, a startup that makes unique signs. America’s most important startup?
At 62 minutes into it, the founder of ProtoTank shows me a cool wearable LED system he built. America’s most important startup?
DIY weapons innovation
comparing 2011 innovations to 2013 it is hard to say whether the theses of asymmetric warfare and open source insurgency are true. are the syrians learning from the libyans, and improving upon their designs? the video game controller for controlling machine guns is new, as is the use of smartphones but then there is the decidedly backwards use of slings. let’s call it a tie. also, outcomes matter.
A toaster from scratch
considering it took this writer 9 months to make a toaster from scratch, the maker movement has very far to go. i am a 3d printing fanboy as much as anyone, but really the state of the art allows little beyond toys / frivolous things. actually useful things remain out of reach, probably because of their inherent complexity.
Hello, my name is Thomas Thwaites, and I have made a toaster.” So begins The Toaster Project, the author’s 9-month-long journey from his local appliance store to remote mines in the UK to his mother’s backyard, where he creates a crude foundry. Along the way, he learns that an ordinary toaster is made up of 404 separate parts, that the best way to smelt metal at home is by using a method found in a fifteenth-century treatise, and that plastic is almost impossible to make from scratch.
Steel
Homemade steel
“From Dust to Edge” is the documentation of a long journey in the efforts of making a blade out of homemade steel.
Henri Bergius this sounds up your alley. I don’t think my landlord will go for it but there is plenty of space in the finnish woods for a project like this.
2015-02-17: Nanolaminated steel
the Modumetal process can increase the strength of metals such as steel by as much as 10x. Modumetal uses an advanced form of electroplating, a process already used to make the chrome plating you might see on the engine and exhaust pipes of a motorcycle. Electroplating involves immersing a metal part in a chemical bath containing various metal ions, and then applying an electrical current to cause those ions to form a metal coating.
2021-02-07: 20% less energy
Boston Metal’s process will use 20% less energy than a conventional blast furnace. And if the facility can use cheap, plentiful renewable electricity, perhaps from a hydropower plant, its steel would cost less than the competition. “At scale, we expect to make better metal at lower cost and with no CO2 emissions
2021-11-05: Volvo deployment
Steelmaking is currently extremely CO2 intensive, accounting for about 7% of total global greenhouse gas emissions. As we continue to use ever more steel for new infrastructure around the world, the task of decarbonizing the industry is growing ever more urgent. Hydrogen can now perform that task and Volvo has just taken delivery of the first consignment of CO2-free steel.
2023-02-23: Nice overview of the history of steel production
Blast furnaces continue to be constructed around the world, particularly in China, which now produces more steel than the rest of the world combined. For the foreseeable future, recycling steel scrap won’t be sufficient to supply the world’s need for iron, and we’ll continue to need iron ore based methods of steelmaking. But blast furnaces, like cement plants, have the unfortunate distinction of producing CO2 as a fundamental part of the process: a blast furnace is essentially a machine that turns iron oxide and carbon into iron and CO2.
Direct reduction with CO still produces CO2, but direct reduction with hydrogen only produces water as a byproduct. “Green steel” efforts are thus often centered around finding low-carbon ways to produce hydrogen to use in the direct reduction process. Of the 72 green steel projects listed on this “green steel tracker,” 49 of them involve low CO2 hydrogen production, mostly either “green” hydrogen made via electrolysis or “blue” hydrogen made from natural gas plus CO2 capture.
2023-02-24: Blast furnace retrofit upgrade
It replaces 90% of the coke used in the blast furnace with direct CO injection. The CO comes from a system that captures and recycles the furnace’s own exhaust “top gas,” separating out CO, CO2, hydrogen and nitrogen gases at high temperatures. These gases are then sent through a twin-reactor redox system that keeps the carbon inside a closed loop. Retrofitting this thermochemical redox system to existing BF-BOF steel plants should make it notably cheaper to produce steel. And emissions would be slashed by 94%.
“The system we are proposing can be retrofitted to existing plants, which reduces the risk of stranded assets, and both the reduction in CO2, and the cost savings, are seen immediately.”
DIY Book Scanning
We are a community of people who build book scanners. We have taken preservation into our own hands. We are the missing link between your bookshelf and your e-reader. Join us! Get involved by trying a simple scanner, building a kit, or pushing the limits of scanning technology. If your questions can’t be answered by reading, write us an e-mail: diybookscanner [at] gmail.com.