The Much Larger Board of Many Ping-Pong Balls

 by DaShroom
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THIS HAS BEEN ENTERED INTO THE LED AND LASER CUTTER COMPETITIONS, PLEASE VOTE FOR ME :-D

Ok, you saw the 8x8 board, now prepare yourself for the 16x32 awesomeness that is about to ensue.



I cannot apologise enough for the video quality, but I am still using my phone as a camera until I have fixed up my decent one

However... I do have decent pictures (ie not from a camera phone). Unfortunately, instructables thinks that 13.24mb for a photo is a bit excessive. I disagree, so until I resize them you will have to make your way to my blog to see them.

Just a little note, as whatnot has reminded of me in the comments, ping-pong balls are made of celluloid, which is very flammable. The LEDs do not heat up, or anything else for that matter, but you should not put this near anything that could light it. Using this on a stage can be problematic too, as most won't allow wooden fixtures. Some do, and if you explain it most are understanding.
 
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Step 1: Things you should know

Firstly - I sell (or try to sell :-) ) kits. Unfortunately, I am a Brit  (not actually unfortunate, just impractical). This means shipping abroad is expensive. Very expensive. This means that for this, I cannot sell the wood parts, or anything that is not the electronics. If you buy a kit you get all the network cables, PCBs, ICs, Components, and LEDs. If you want to get the boards fabricated yourself, never fear, they have been open sourced under CC-BY SA V3.0 Unported and Eng+Wales. As for the laser cut wood panels, the DXF files are released under the same license. All you have to do is send the files to your local friendly CNC turner or Miller, pay him, and get some nice identical panels (though without my blog etched onto them :-) ), and you can pick any wood you like, and save yourself about £150 in shipping (no joke, that is what it would cost).

Secondly - The stand and frame are the only things that were manufactured by hand. There are no CNC files for these. In this instructable I will go over how I made my stand and frame, then an alternative method without requiring a full on workshop, then a guide on how to design your own if neither of these are to your liking.

Thirdly - Ah the joys of copyright. Initially I found another project, a matrix of the same size, and used their computer-side code. I then modified it, as allowed, ported it to my hardware, and added animations for my specific purposes. The problem is, that due to their licenses, I cannot redistribute my modified code. I do have my own original code, but it is still in the pipeline, and not ready for others to use it, its a bit of a "poke it with a stick" type program. Never works first time, until you kick it. Aaaannnnyyway, I digress; there is a solution to the problem, in that instead of giving out the modified code, I modified my electronics design to work with the code, without modifications or porting. Unfortunately, the electronics are worse because of it, but until my code is ready, that's just the way things are. (The code is from solderlab.de)
tomvanschelven says: Sep 30, 2012. 8:50 AM
Hi, I really like this! Would it be able to be programmed to work as a clock?
thanks,
t
DaShroom (author) in reply to tomvanschelvenSep 30, 2012. 9:38 AM
ish - you could easily fit the numbers on it, the problem would be how it would know the time. It could be told it from a computer, though that is quite a bit of overkill. What most people use is something called an RTC module, or a Real Time Clock. These are little chips (you can buy them in easy pre-done modules) that keep track of the time and give it over i2c or similar. The problem with this is that the i2c pins are used (though not by i2c) so you would have to modify the pinout to free these pins, then put an RTC on them. It should be plain sailing from there.

Ta,
George
tomvanschelven in reply to DaShroomSep 30, 2012. 11:55 AM
would that be something you might be able to do through your online shop and sell to me? sounds too complex for me! cheers
tom
DaShroom (author) in reply to tomvanschelvenSep 30, 2012. 12:44 PM
Yeah sure, though I have a LOT to do at the moment, including coursework (sooooo much coursework), more projects (cool instructables on the way, such as a fire-spitting twitter pumpkin, concrete nixie clock, joke keyboard .etc) and breathing (I am currently ill). But after I have got through this large mountain of work (ie half term), I should be able to start work. The basic stuff will be ok, but doing the frames (and animations I know I will end up doing), might take a while.

Thanks, George
jbjorge says: Sep 16, 2012. 1:05 AM
What were the dimensions of the finished board as well as the individual squares?
DaShroom (author) in reply to jbjorgeSep 16, 2012. 8:51 AM
All the panels are slightly different, due to borders, and space for text, but for arguments sake let's say 400mm square, and the whole thing is 1600 by 800mm not including the bottom text bit.

Ta,
George
Whatnot says: Aug 9, 2012. 7:01 PM
Reminder: Real ping-pong balls are made of celluloid and celluloid is about as flammable as it gets, so keep that in mind if you use a ton of them.
DaShroom (author) in reply to WhatnotAug 9, 2012. 9:09 PM
Yeah, I know, but the LEDs don't get hot, or even heat up by one degree, so hopefully it won't burn anything down for a while :-D
Whatnot in reply to DaShroomAug 11, 2012. 4:10 AM
I wasn't worried about the LED or anything, it's just that with a lot of ping-pong balls strapped to a large area it's good to know you should keep it away from candles and such, more a general reminder for people that make it and don't realize.

I'm sure it's fine in on itself and wasn't knocking the project which looks rather spiffy. :)
But the neater something is, the more people make it, the more chance that somebody doesn't realize and now they know.
DaShroom (author) in reply to WhatnotSep 8, 2012. 9:47 AM
Actually, by quirk of fate, the cheap ping-pong balls are plastic, not celluloid, so they don't easily burn (just go black and melt when I put a lighter to them)

Ta,
George
DaShroom (author) in reply to WhatnotAug 11, 2012. 9:29 AM
yeah, good call. I will add it to the instructable. I had problems with that, and the fact that it is wooden when people use it as a fixture. Commercial fixtures are all metal, so people can get a bit panicky.
sitearm says: Aug 13, 2012. 5:47 AM
@DaShroom; Hi! Awesome indeed - I tweeted this. Pixels the size of ping pong balls! Cheers : ) Site
DaShroom (author) in reply to sitearmAug 13, 2012. 11:32 AM
Ta :-)
kewpiedoll99 says: Aug 13, 2012. 7:07 AM
Nice instructable!

Can you add pictures of the led pins under "Solder Time"? The description is okay, but a little confusing, and as they say, a picture is worth a thousand words. I'd like to see the pins bent without solder, the two columns without tape (i.e., what is "the other extremity pin"?), the columns with tape, a pic of the whole thing.
DaShroom (author) in reply to kewpiedoll99Aug 13, 2012. 11:32 AM
Yeah sure. I am on holiday, but I will do it when I get back. I decided to do an instructable after I built it, so most of the photos are useless, sorry :-)
keegancdr says: Aug 13, 2012. 10:06 AM
So how much is your kit with all of the electronics? I'm on a mobile phone and may have missed it in the ible' but yeah can you message me a price in USD? Thank you :)
DaShroom (author) in reply to keegancdrAug 13, 2012. 11:31 AM
Currently it's about £300, but I don't know about USD, think about $500. It aint cheap, but neither is the cost of 10 huge pcbs or the 520 LEDs, or the 16m of Cat6 patch leads.

Thanks,
George
HEY YOU says: Aug 13, 2012. 2:49 AM
Nicely Done!

Where did you source you ping pong balls?

Cheers
DaShroom (author) in reply to HEY YOUAug 13, 2012. 3:36 AM
Ebay, I got them in lots of 150, very cheap.
Lindie says: Aug 12, 2012. 3:41 PM
Very nice!
BIOhazard_inc says: Aug 12, 2012. 3:02 PM
I voted
DaShroom (author) in reply to BIOhazard_incAug 12, 2012. 3:04 PM
Thanks :-D
radicalmart says: Aug 12, 2012. 9:51 AM
excellent, simplistic and a brilliant instructable and it uses less power than light sources iof that size!!!
Krow says: Aug 12, 2012. 9:36 AM
Make that into a beer pong table!!
phoenix62_80 says: Aug 12, 2012. 8:23 AM
Very cool....I have voted for you! #Best of Luck....hope you get the code sorted soon!
DaShroom (author) in reply to phoenix62_80Aug 12, 2012. 9:12 AM
Thanks :-D
florinc says: Aug 12, 2012. 6:32 AM
Can you publish the schematic?
DaShroom (author) in reply to florincAug 12, 2012. 7:25 AM
Yeah, though there is a slight problem, in that they have been corrupted. I was in the process of re-making them, though I am now on holiday and away from my main PC. Soon after I get back, I will finish them and upload them. Thanks for your interest :-)

If you are desperate, it is just a basic 74HC595 chain, with 4 channels for each colour and the rows. The pins to go to the arduino are in the shield guide.

Thanks,
George
gweeto says: Aug 11, 2012. 9:17 AM
I used Photogadget for pictures. It reduces the file size but still keeps great quality
DaShroom (author) in reply to gweetoAug 11, 2012. 11:25 AM
Thanks, I will have a look.
amolengko says: Aug 9, 2012. 5:28 PM
it's cool.........
J-Five says: Aug 9, 2012. 12:16 PM
GROOVY!!!!!!
amandaghassaei says: Aug 9, 2012. 10:04 AM
looks great! Can you post the code?
DaShroom (author) in reply to amandaghassaeiAug 9, 2012. 10:44 AM
I can post my code, but would ideally not do so until ready (stop people from having grief with it). Currently the best functioning code is the modified version of the solderlab.de code. Unfortunately they have't open sourced it, also I cannot redistribute it. My solution to the problem was to modify the electronics to be compatibly with the code, with no modifications.

Hoe that helps
George
filpcl says: Aug 9, 2012. 8:26 AM
Very cool! I dream in building a board of Ping-Pong balls
DaShroom (author) in reply to filpclAug 9, 2012. 9:17 AM
Thanks, I'm just counting how much wall space I have left to cover :-D
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