Build A Stereo From an Old Hard Disk
An anonymous reader pointed us to an amusing little hack site that demonstrates how you can build a little stereo out of an old hard drive. Of course I don't need a stereo for I am a human beat box.
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There was a different article like this one over a year ago. The other person made 3.
The song "YATTA" will get into your brain and it won't leave. Except that in the hard disk video you can't quite hear it all that well.
The Cheese Stands Alone.
Here.
main(c,r){for(r=32;r;) printf(++c>31?c=!r--,"\n":c<r?" ":~c&r?" `":" #");}
If you don't have the proper screwdriver handy, try drilling through the screws.
Be careful when using a drill bit that's small enough to wear away a screw of the type used to secure hard drives. Because of their size, they have a tendancy to snap when caught on jagged metal. It's not nice having little pieces of drill bit bouncing into your face.
I've been there.
wbs.
Huh?
Oops....Broken link
:)
Ok, give this a try. This should be it.
Sorry bout that
My MythTV HowTo
No, HD magnets are WAY stonger than those puny things, just don't get two stuck to-gether, or put them on your mum's fridge.
Windows is only $500 if your time is worthless.
In any case it would work far better if the coil was kept within its original magnet, and the edge glued to a diaphragm. It is designed to work that way! If you were only wanting a woofer, you could simply attach the diphragm to the existing head arm, but don'y expect any response above a few 100 Hz.
I honestly wonder why anyone bothers with something so stupid anyway.