#BeerHacks #Amateurrocketry #Beer #Beerkeg #Bottlerocket #Liquidrocket #Liquidrocketpropellant
Beer Keg Plumbing for a Liquid Rocket
https://web.brid.gy/r/https://hackaday.com/2026/01/23/beer-keg-plumbing-for-a-liquid-rocket/
Another Way to Recycle Those Empty Beverage Cans
Do you ever sit around thinking of ways to repurpose things in your house? Well [BevCanTech] found a way to recycle some of his empty beverage cans by turning them into homemade wire.
The premise is simple. He cut 2 mm thick strips of wire from the beverage can along its circumference, creating a thin, long "wire" spool. He sanded the ends of each strip to crimp pieces of his homemade wire together. He found he could get about four meters from a standard-sized beverage can, probably roughly 12 oz, as he unraveled the can. He then used crimp connectors to connect his homemade wires to the battery terminals and also to the end of a flashlight. He used a red cap from another can as a pseudo light diffuser and lampshade, creating a pretty cool, almost lava lamp-like glow.
Maybe the meat of this project won't be as filling as your Thanksgiving meal, but hopefully, it can serve as a bit of inspiration for your next freeform circuit design. Though you'll probably want to smooth those sharp edges along your homemade wire.
#beerhacks #beer #freeform #recycle #repurpose #reuse #upcycle
Centaur Costume Features Drinks Cooler And Walking Legs
Let's say it's Halloween, and you're a big fan of centaurs. At the same time, you want to be easily able to store your drinks on ice and always have them to hand. Well, this costume from [David Yakos] might be the one for you.
Construction is simple. Two small bike wheels were fitted to the cooler using bits of a broken chair, and the other end of the cooler is simply fitted around the wearer's waist with a strap.
The rear centaur legs are carved out of foam board, and attached to the rear wheels with a bolt through the spokes. The top of each leg is attached to a rod, which slides into the frame holding the wheels on. It keeps the top of the legs roughly where they should be but lets them move, allowing the legs to "walk" as the wheels rotate.
It's not exactly an advanced build, but we simply love the idea of costumes that keep drinks cold all night. Hiding the cooler as a centaur's body is really just the icing on the cake. Of course, if you've got your own costume design for keeping your beverages chilled and frosty, do let us know. Video after the break.
Voice controlled home assistants are the wonder of our age, once you've made peace with the privacy concerns of sharing the intimacies of your life with a data centre owned by a massive corporation, anyway. They provide a taste of how the future was supposed to be in those optimistic predictions of decades past: Alexa and Siri can crack jokes, control your lights, answer questions, tell you the news, and so much more.
But for all their electronic conversational perfection, your electronic pals can't satisfy your most fundamental needs and bring you a beer. This is something [luisengineering] has fixed, an he's provided the appropriate answer to the question "Alexa: bring mir ein bier!". The video which we've also put below the break is in German with YouTube's automatic closed captions if you want them, but we think you'll be able to get the point of it if not all his jokes without needing to learn to speak a bit of Deutsch.
As he develops his beer-delivery system we begin to appreciate that what might seem to be a relatively straightforward task is anything but. He takes an off-the-shelf robot and gives it a beer-bottle grabber and ice hopper, but the path from fridge to sofa still needs a little work. The eventual solution involves a lot of trial and error, and a black line on the floor for the 'bot to follow. Finally, his electronic friend can bring him a beer!
We like [Luis]'s entertaining presentational style, and the use of props as microphone stands. We'll be keeping an eye out for what he does next, and you should too. Meanwhile it may not surprise you that this is not the first beer-delivery 'bot we've brought you.