GE 3D-Printed a Miniature Jet Engine That Runs at 33,000 RPM

GE 3D-Printed a Miniature Jet Engine That Runs at 33,000 RPM

Curious about just how far they could take the company’s additive manufacturing technology, engineers at GE Aviation’s Additive Development Center in Cincinnati successfully created a simple jet engine, made entirely from 3D printed parts, that was able to rev up to 33,000 RPM.

The additive manufacturing process that GE Aviation uses relies on a laser to melt layer after layer of metal powder until eventually a custom part is build up. It’s similar to how a 3D printer like the MakerBot works, but being made from actual metal some of these parts have already been approved for use in planes by the FAA.

The miniature jet engine the engineers at GE built was actually a modified version of one you’d find in an RC model plane. As a result, it’s incredibly simple and basic compared to the jet engines powering modern airliners. But the experiment helps add credence to the idea that 3D printing will eventually be used for more than just plastic trinkets. Eventually it will become an essential part of modern manufacturing. [GE]

via Gizmodo
GE 3D-Printed a Miniature Jet Engine That Runs at 33,000 RPM

Make Perfect, Effortless Rice with Alton Brown’s Pour-Over Method

Make Perfect, Effortless Rice with Alton Brown's Pour-Over Method

It’s not easy to make perfectly consistent rice on the stove—sometimes the pot of rice comes out too mushy, burnt, or crunchy. That’s why you might want to adopt Alton Brown’s method of rice cooking.

Instead of adding rice to the pot of water, Brown toasts the rice in a skillet and separately boils water in a kettle. Then he adds the boiled water to the pan, stirs, and lets sit on low heat for 20 minutes. After 5 minutes of resting (the resting time is important), you’ve got fluffy, perfectly cooked rice.

The Detroit News points out a few benefits of this approach:

There are a few reasons why this method works. Toasting the rice enhances its flavors — just like when we toast spices or nuts — and I personally find it improves the finished texture of the dish. Secondly, by boiling water separately and then pouring it over the rice to simmer, you eliminate any guesswork.

One of the problems I find with rice is that, depending on the size of the pot and the strength of the burner, the amount of time it requires to come to a boil can vary greatly. This means the overall cooking time is going to vary significantly, as a result. Brown’s method means cooking time is the same, no matter your stove. (Brilliant, right?)

Personally, I need a dedicated rice cooker, but if I had to do it on the stove, this seems like the smart way to go.

Perfect Rice in a Rush | Food Network via The Detroit News

Photo by allaboutgeorge.


via Lifehacker
Make Perfect, Effortless Rice with Alton Brown’s Pour-Over Method

A One-Minute Explanation Of Why Sitting Is Bad For Your Health

You’ve probably heard by now that sitting is bad for you, but do you know why? Take 60 seconds and let this beautiful animation tell you why it’s so bad.

If you’ve been sitting down all day, you might want to get up and move around a bit. Sitting for around 11 hours per day can increase the risk of early death by 40 per cent compared to those who sit four hours per day or less.

When you sit down, your body dramatically slows down its ability to burn fat, your insulin levels drop and your blood pressure shoots up. You’re more likely to get blood clots in your brain by sitting for extended periods of time, and you’re also twice as likely to get heart disease too.

Moral of the story? Get up and go for a walk!

Aussie animator, Duncan Elms, is back with his beautiful videos. This one appeared on a recent episode of 60 Minutes. You can check out his one about the Deep Web or his one about Bitcoin too!


Republished from our cousins at Gizmodo Australia. Check it out for all of your other-side-of-the-equator tech news.

via Gizmodo
A One-Minute Explanation Of Why Sitting Is Bad For Your Health

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

In the early 1970s, two Boeing engineers used a sandwich press to put a slice of foam between two pieces of airtight nylon and invented the self-inflating sleeping pad for campers. Therm-A-Rest still uses that basic principle today, just the sandwich machine has given way to an entire factory in Seattle. This is that production process today.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 1: Hadouken

These huge blocks of foam arrive at the Therm-A-Rest factory in Seattle from a local supplier. There, they immediately undergo various karate kicks, martial arts combos and WWF-worthy body slams courtesy of the staff. This isn’t technically part of the production process.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 2: Slice The Foam

The blocks of foam are loaded onto what’s basically an air hockey table. A cushion of air enables them to slide onto the platform effortlessly and, when switched from blow to suck, it then securely holds the foam brick as the platform rolls back and forth through that horizontal bandsaw blade you can just see stretched between the machine’s two red towers. Starting at the top and working to the bottom, the foam is sliced into the final thickness required by the pad.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 3: Stamp The Shape

The next machine is basically a big cookie cutter, stamping the foam into the various lengths, widths and shapes required by the company’s product range. There isn’t exactly a huge industry out there producing self-inflating sleeping pads, so Therm-A-Rest has to design and make all this tooling in-house.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 4: Stretch The Foam And Cut The Holes

Without pre-made, bought-in solutions, Therm-A-Rest starts with its desired result, then engineers its tools backwards. Holes in the foam save weight, but if they go straight up and down, they’ll spoil the insulation.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

So, the giant machine you see in the background here locates each piece of foam on a one-ton pallet, then compresses that foam, stretches it lengthwise, then stamps holes into it that, when the pad returns to its shape, actually pass through diagonally. That way, when you sleep on it, you “close” the holes with your bodyweight.

That simple result requires that one-ton pallet to be lifted up overhead and across for each pad stamped, starting at the bottom left and moving to the top right. It’s a ridiculous amount of effort, but the result it a lighter pad that retains its warmth.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 5: Collect The “Dots”

The foam donut holes are sucked out of the press, into the duct that runs up and over the walkway, then blown into giant plastic bags. Rather than waste them, Therm-A-Rest uses the oddly shaped little pieces of foam to fill its range of camp pillows.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 6: Ready The Outers

Polyurethane-coated nylon in various weights and finishes arrives at the factory and is cut to size.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

This lady applies the Therm-A-Rest decal, then inspects each outer for defects on a light table.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 7: Weld The Layers

These two guys stack each piece of foam between the top and bottom layers of PU-coated nylon, then insert them in what’s basically a big sandwich press. Hot oil flows through the machine from the white pipes you see on the wall behind and around the outer perimeter of the pad. The two layers of nylon are pressed together with that heat and permanently bonded.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 8: Cool The Pads

The pads slide out of the sandwich press and onto this bank of box fans, where they cool for a brief period.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 9: Insert The Valve

This machine inserts the valve hardware, a plastic block that holds the valve and allows air to pass through the welded perimeter, then mounts the screw-on valve you’ll be familiar with operating.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 10: Trim The Excess

The extra nylon is trimmed by hand, resulting in the final product.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 11: Test Inflation

Every single pad that Therm-A-Rest makes is inflated to 2psi, then stored inflated for 36 hours. If it doesn’t hold that pressure, the pad is recycled. As you can see in the top photo, the factory floor is quite literally full of pads undergoing that test period.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 12: Dunk Test

The valves are dunked in a bucket of water to ensure their air-tightness. Any bubbles and they start over. This is one of the newer, more expensive NeoAir pads, but all Therm-A-Rests are tested the same way.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 13: Compress Pads For Shipping

Following the 36-hour test, the pads are placed in this wooden press, which compresses them to the minimum possible thickness. The tubes you see on the bottom right attach to the valves and vacuum the air out.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Step 14: Roll And Box

The pads are rolled by hand into a plastic sheath. The valve is left open to account for changes in pressure and temperature during shipping.

How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

Pads are then boxed and shipped to retailers around the world. When you get yours, you just unroll it and the foam will expand, drawing air into the pad. Top that off with one or two breaths and you’re ready for a good night’s sleep.

IndefinitelyWild is a new publication about adventure travel in the outdoors, the vehicles and gear that get us there and the people we meet along the way. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

via Gizmodo
How Therm-A-Rest Sleeping Pads Are Made

How the M-16 3-Round Burst Works

M16BurstDisconnectorMost military members take the arcane workings of their rifle for granted. Even an avid shooter myself, I was NEVER allowed to do maintenance on my M-16 fire control group while I was in the Corps. While some might argue this is a good thing considering that many members of the military are not interested […]

Read More …

The post How the M-16 3-Round Burst Works appeared first on The Firearm Blog.


via The Firearm Blog
How the M-16 3-Round Burst Works

Life of a DBA in GIFs

A Database Administrator experiences a wide range of emotions. It could be one those endless meetings, friendly disagreements with fellow developers, getting something approved from managers or preparing your junior DBAs for bigger battles. Each day is a challenging one. We’ve tried to compile a list of GIFs which every DBA will be able to relate to.
5 minutes before deployment
Writing the most epic answer Stack Exchange has ever seen and press F5 to “Submit” and end up refreshing the page
When a DBA.StackExchange answer gets 500+ upvotes!
Slightly “re-factoring” the developers’ code after a code review
Training the junior DBA
The junior DBA trying to figure out the production cluster
When you unknowingly fix the client’s problem
When the project manager starts questioning my work estimates
When asked why I’m allowed to query all the databases?
When a developer says he made few changes to the database
When I shut off the marketing team’s access to run reports on the production server
PS: Don’t forget to visit DBA Reactions for a daily dose of GIFs chronicling the highs and lows of a DBAs life.
If you’re not a DBA, make sure you share it with one and watch them nod their head in approval. If you have anything to share, feel free to use the comments section below. Tweet
The post Life of a DBA in GIFs appeared first on Webyog Blog.
via Planet MySQL
Life of a DBA in GIFs

Easily Collect Rain Water for Gardening or Other Outdoor Needs

Easily Collect Rain Water for Gardening or Other Outdoor Needs

Collecting rain water for your garden, indoor plants, or anything else you need to water outside is easier than it sounds. You’ll need a few supplies, but our friends at Old World Garden Farms makes it sound easy—and ever so important now that the weather is warm and water conservation is mandatory in many places.

Over at the Old World Garden Farms blog, they explain all you’ll need is a sizable rain barrel (they use a massive 275 gallon one they got for $40 on Craigslist), but smaller ones are available at your local department store) and they installed junctions in their house gutters and downspouts to divert some of the water to the barrel, which is probably what you’ll want to do as well. They explained that in a single two-hour downpour they can sometimes collect over a hundred gallons, so it’s a worthwhile exercise.

While you do this, it’s important to keep your rainwater container dark and covered. Keeping it dark makes sure that algae or other light-feeding organisms don’t bloom in your water, and keeping it covered keeps the bugs out (especially mosquitoes, who love standing water.) Finally, they remind us that it’s important not to use the water for drinking unless you treat it (they don’t treat theirs, so it’s only used to keep their garden and other plants happy.)

The method linked below is a bit larger scale than most people would consider for their house in the burbs, or their community garden in the city, but it’s still doable (as long as your local HOA or other authority doesn’t pitch a fit about a barrel here or there.) They explain that almost all of the water they use on the property comes from rainwater—which is really important considering they don’t have a well or other natural spring. The end result doesn’t just save water overall, it also saves them the money they’d spend using municipal supplies.

How To Easily Collect Rain Water For Your Outdoor Watering Needs | Old World Garden Farms


via Lifehacker
Easily Collect Rain Water for Gardening or Other Outdoor Needs

You need 10,000 pieces to build a Minifig-scale Lego Millennium Falcon

You need 10,000 pieces to build a Minifig-scale Lego Millennium Falcon

Lego’s Millennium Falcons are some of the toymaker’s largest and most impressive sets, but to keep the price tags reasonable there are some comprises made when it comes to size, scale, and detailing. As the Lego fans at Titans Creations discovered, to build a Millennium Falcon that’s actually perfectly sized for minifigs you’ll need some 10,000 bricks at your disposal.

You need 10,000 pieces to build a Minifig-scale Lego Millennium Falcon

Which means that most of us can only stare in awe at what the team created. But that’s OK, because how many of us actually have the time to build such a creation, or the room to store it?

You need 10,000 pieces to build a Minifig-scale Lego Millennium Falcon

At over three-and-a-half feet long this version of the Falcon is about 40 percent larger than Lego’s largest take on it, and there’s enough detailing here to keep you mesmerized for hours if you’re lucky enough to see it in person. So do you think they’re going to tackle a Star Destroyer next? [Titans Creations via The Brothers Brick]

You need 10,000 pieces to build a Minifig-scale Lego Millennium Falcon

You need 10,000 pieces to build a Minifig-scale Lego Millennium Falcon

You need 10,000 pieces to build a Minifig-scale Lego Millennium Falcon


You’re reading Leg Godt, the blog with the latest Lego news and the best sets in the web. Follow us on Twitter or Facebook.

via Gizmodo
You need 10,000 pieces to build a Minifig-scale Lego Millennium Falcon