3 Simple Ways to
Share What You Make

With Instructables you can share what you make with the world — and tap into an ever-growing community of creative experts.

PhotosPhotos

Share one or more photos of a project, recipe, or whatever you've made, quickly and easily.

Step by StepStep-By-Step

Share your step-by-step photos with text instructions of what you made so others can do it too!

VideoVideo

Share your how-to video. You'll need your embed code from a video site such as YouTube.

CRANE GAME

Step 33Some more video

I just think this is funny:

« Previous StepDownload PDFView All StepsNext Step »
2 comments
Feb 28, 2010. 10:42 AMjsgraham says:
The instructables I enjoy most are the ones that are comprehensive, well detailed, and even show the rush of the maker in their notes.  e.g. misspellings, etc.  I'm not complaining.  In fact, I'm extending a kudos.  This was an A++ instructable.  I don't know a lot about microcontrollers.  I guess I'm afraid of jumping in and screwing up whatever I'm trying to do.  But your instructable has inspired me to get an Arduino and start exploring.  Love the work you've done.  You've illustrated that robotics is in all aspects of our lives and we don't even think about it.  On a side note, your "little helpers" are adorable. :-)
Feb 24, 2010. 9:44 AMDuhDuhDave says:
Very nice project. I appreciate the way you show the design evolving rather than just showing the polished (well, maybe not polished, exactly) final design. Cute kids, and clearly, you made it simple enough a 4 year old can make it work. I have a 4 year old of my own who would love something like this. Thanks for posting it.

Pro

Get More Out of Instructables

Already have an Account?

close

All Steps Viewing
View all steps of an Instructable on the same page when you're a Pro Member.

Upgrade to Pro today!
41
Followers
16
Author:marc.cryan
Looking for access to land or water in Boston Metrowest area.