On Nov 15, 7:36 am, Tech9ine <
tec9...@gmail.com> wrote:
> For $35...just buy another Raspberry Pi and mold it. Now you have a mold.
> Bonus if the Raspberry Pi still works. If not....You can use it for
> parts. That is the great thing about a $35 computer. Granted I don't know
> your money situation...$35 could be a lot. Just a thought though.
> Otherwise just find an old Motherboard... cut it to size... and super Glue
> parts and pieces to it that match the Raspberry Pi. That is
> what McGyver would do... but he would ductape the pieces to the board:)
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Wednesday, November 14, 2012 2:40:51 PM UTC-6, zoot wrote:
>
> > The concept of a fiberglass magnetic mount is cool, but I really wanted to
> > punch these guys in the face when I was done watching this video. I think
> > I'm going to stick with the Genesis cartridge, with a 3D printed case as a
> > fallback.
>
> > Speaking of hardware stuff, I found this STL file representing a mockup of
> > a Raspberry Pi:
> >
http://www.thingiverse.com/thing:21718
> > It claims that it isn't accurate representation for making cases, but how
> > far off is it? I would have loved a plastic mockup when I was grinding
> > away for my case, and it definitely would have been more accurate than my
> > sheet of cardboard was for understanding the placement of ports and whatnot.
> > What would we need to do in order to make this mockup accurate enough to
> > use to design case mod projects around? If anyone has both a 3D printer
> > and a Raspberry Pi, I'd love to hear more about this.
>
> > Ross
>
> > On Wed, Nov 14, 2012 at 9:40 AM, Tech9ine <
tec...@gmail.com <javascript:>>wrote:
>
> >> Nice! Have you worked with creating your own physical platforms or
> >> mounts with fiberglass for your hacks? An example would be in this video
> >> from SoundMan Audio. It starts at 4:25 and the link should bring you to
> >> that time.
http://youtu.be/VnMXGelRDUk?hd=1&t=4m25s
>
> >> On Tuesday, November 13, 2012 11:19:47 AM UTC-6, zoot wrote:
>
> >>> I put my Raspberry Pi into a Sega Genesis cartridge, with the help of
> >>> Mike Putnam's Dremel tool.