Electronic Hacks

UV LED Illuminated Halloween Skull Room

  If you are looking for a way to convert a regular room into a scary Halloween room have a look at this UV LED Illuminated Halloween Skull Room idea. Flashing UV LEDs are used to illuminate skulls that have been painted on black fabric walls. If that wasn’t enough camouflaged people were in there scaring the guests! This is an entry in the Hacked Gadgets Show us your Halloween

Hard Drive Camera Stabilizer

  BobS has come up with a creative Hard Drive Camera Stabilizer. We have seen other ways to Gyro Stabilize a Camera but this one is nice because it has the possibility of making use of a hard drive that otherwise would have no purpose. "In an experiment, I connected a loose HD to a computer power supply, and felt the resistance to its change of position. I figured a

NES USB Drive with Security

  Joe from ProtoDojo has made a NES USB Drive with Security out of his old NES controller. Instead of simply hacking the device with a USB drive he wanted to use the controller buttons to add some extra security to the device. When the device is plugged into the computer nothing happens until you enter in the Konami code. When the code is entered in correctly a relay pulls

Honking Pumpkin

  Todd Harrison came up with a great way to scare anyone who dares to press the red button nose of his pumpkin. The Honking Pumpkin is sure to be a hit sitting on the front step of your house. 🙂 "Control board showing the two 555 timers, two MOSFETs, pot to control horn blast timing and other discrete elements. The first 555 timer starts when the red button is

Hidden Sound Trigger

  Bumblebeepee from the Hacked Gadgets Forum entered the Halloween Project Contest with this cool Hidden Sound Trigger contraption. He used an infrared beam to detect when someone enters the target area, the buzzer output of the beam module presses play on an mp3 player which is amplified to drive some speakers and scare someone. This year he is working with the same module to play some music and light

Bumble-b LED Matrix Computer Interface

  Guysoft shows us how to create a Bumble-b LED Matrix Computer Interface. I have never used a Bumble-b but for $17 how could you go wrong? It seams like one of the best ways to communicate directly via USB to a computer. Via: HG Forum "After getting my LED matrix to display messages, I wanted to make use of the USB port, and get the matrix to work as

POV Fan Display Hack

  This POV Fan Display Hack by Hacking with Gum required a bit of reverse engineering to determine how the device worked in the first place, then a way to re-program the operation of the device to display a new message.  Thanks Craig. "It turns out that Cenzic made it very easy to access the fan’s EEPROM chip, and with a simple RS232-to-I2C interface you can re-write the EEPROM on