- makeITcircular 2024 content launched – Part of Maker Faire Rome 2024Posted 1 month ago
- Application For Maker Faire Rome 2024: Deadline June 20thPosted 3 months ago
- Building a 3D Digital Clock with ArduinoPosted 8 months ago
- Creating a controller for Minecraft with realistic body movements using ArduinoPosted 8 months ago
- Snowflake with ArduinoPosted 9 months ago
- Holographic Christmas TreePosted 9 months ago
- Segstick: Build Your Own Self-Balancing Vehicle in Just 2 Days with ArduinoPosted 9 months ago
- ZSWatch: An Open-Source Smartwatch Project Based on the Zephyr Operating SystemPosted 10 months ago
- What is IoT and which devices to usePosted 10 months ago
- Maker Faire Rome Unveils Thrilling “Padel Smash Future” Pavilion for Sports EnthusiastsPosted 11 months ago
The Disney’s Dancing Teapot is Real!
Have you ever dreamed of your own dancing teapot, just like in the movie Beauty and the Beast? All thanks to micro-computing and Arduino Pro Mini, you can actually create your personal 3D printed robotic dancing teapot. Created by French computer scientist Paul-Louis Ageneau, this little kitchen accessory looks like a two-legged mini-robot.
Ageneau has used 3D-modeling software OpenSCAD to design different parts of the robot teapot and then 3D-printed them in polylactide. After 3D printing all the parts, he has further attached four servos around the legs of the robot and hooked them up to an Arduino Pro Mini microcontroller board. This Arduino board has been programmed to dance and is powered by a 9-volt alkaline battery.
Ageneau’s GitHub repository contains his readily downloadable sketches, as well as the corresponding SCAD and STL files. The French maker also walks you through connecting a piezo speaker to the Arduino, allowing the teapot to play melodies while it dances.
The full set of required materials is as follows:
-
- A 5-volt Arduino Pro Mini board (or a compatible clone)
- A 5-volt switching regulator
- Four 3.7g micro servos, H301 or compatible
- A 9-volt battery connector and a 9-volt battery
- A USB to UART bridge to program the robot
- Dupont wires, M2 screws, pins, prototype board, and glue
- Optional: A piezo sounder to play music