Technical Data: Southbend 10L
- Power Requirements: 115VAC/1ph
User Manual:
Leased By: David Kent
Safety Considerations:
Certification Process:
Other Resources:
28 John H. Finley III Way, Framingham, MA 01701, 508-834-7855
We’re getting the front room organized. Two 3D printers and the PocketNC. The Prusa MKIII 3D printer is located in the electronics area.
With Burning Man (http://burningman.org/) right arount the corner there were a couple of Burning Man projects being done at Framingham Makerspace. Here is a DJ table for one of the sound camps.
Recently, Framingham MakerSpace members provided tools and labor to establish a woodworking shop and taught Scratch computer programming at Bendición de Dios, a non-profit private school in Alotenango, Guatemala. While there, we visited some homes and were appalled at the living conditions. Rusted corrugated steel walls and roof, dirt floors, chickens and dogs roaming throughout, a single 6′ x 8′ bedroom for the entire family, an outdoor “kitchen” with a wood fired stove creating smoke that made breathing extraordinarily difficult.
Asociación Bendición de Dios has upgraded more than a hundred of these hovels with a concrete bedroom and bathroom over the years, but the process has been necessarily piecemeal. The founder/director, Julio Garcia Gonzalez, explained to us that land ownership was necessary in order to build a house, and few of their families have access to the required money. We asked what it would take to buy a piece of land for many houses to be built from scratch. He said he could get land for 15-20 homes for about $30,000, and if he could get the land, he has donors and other means to build the houses. An anonymous donor committed to providing the initial payment of $10,000 to establish the fund. We still need to raise $20,000 within six months.
You can donate to this project here
a type of electronic test instrument which allows observation of constantly varying signal voltages, especially very fast changes in voltage over time. The oscilloscope can show information which a simple multimeter cannot. The display usually shows as a two-dimensional plot of one or more signals as a function of time. Non-electrical signals (such as sound or vibration) can be converted to voltages and displayed.
Read and view the material at the following links to help you prepare for using the oscilloscope.