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Project 11 musical shapes, Project 12 human & liquid sounds, Project 13 liquid strobe light – Elenco Strobe Light and Sound User Manual

Page 3: Project 14 make your own parts

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Build the circuit as shown; note that the speaker (SP2) is a tight fit

on the strobe IC (U23), but does fit. Turn on the switch (S1). Make

your parts using either the water puddles method (A), the drawn

parts method (B), or the pencil parts method (C). Touch the metal

in the jumper wires to your parts and hear the sound. See how the

sound changes for different shapes.

Project 11

Musical Shapes

Method A (easy): Spread some water on the table into puddles

of different shapes, perhaps like the ones shown here. Touch the

jumper wires to points at the ends of the puddles.

Method B (challenging): Use a SHARP pencil (No. 2 lead is best) and draw shapes,

such as the ones here. Draw them on a hard, flat surface. Press hard and fill in several

times until you have a thick, even layer of pencil lead. Touch the jumper wires to points

at the ends of the drawings. You may get better electrical contact if you wet the metal

with a few drops of water. Wash your hands when finished.

Method C (adult supervision and permission required): Use some double-sided

pencils if available, or VERY CAREFULLY break a pencil in half. Touch the jumper wires

to the black core of the pencil at both ends.

Use the preceding circuit but touch the metal in the jumper wires snaps with your fingers.

Wet your fingers for best results. Your fingers will change the sound, because your body

resistance is less than the 100kW resistor (R5) in the circuit.
Next, place the loose ends of the jumper wires in a cup of water, make sure the metal

parts aren’t touching each other. The water should change the sound.
Now add salt to the water and stir to dissolve it. The sound should have higher pitch now,

since salt water has less resistance than plain water.
Don’t drink any water used here.

Project 12

Human & Liquid Sounds

Repeat projects 11 & 12 but replace the speaker (SP2) with the white LED (D6, “+” side

to the 2-snap wire).

Project 13

Liquid Strobe Light

Build the circuit as shown, with the red &

black jumper wires initially hanging loose.

Turn on the switch (S1); the white LED

(D6) will be off, because the air separating

the ends of the jumper wires has very high

resistance to electricity. Touch the loose

ends of the jumper wires together and the

LED will be very bright. Next, connect the

loose ends of the jumper wires to the

resistors (RV & R5) and the speaker

(SP2), and see how bright the LED is.
Now make your parts using either the

water puddles method (A), the drawn parts

method (B), or the pencil parts method (C).

Touch the metal in the jumper wires to your

parts and see how bright the LED is.

Compare the LED brightness for different

shapes, and see how they compare to the

R5 and RV resistors.
Next, touch the metal in the jumper wires

snaps with your fingers. Wet your fingers

for best results. The LED should be dim,

because your body has moderate

resistance.
Next, place the loose ends of the jumper

wires in a cup of water, make sure the

metal parts aren’t touching each other. The

water should change the LED brightness.
Now add salt to the water and stir to

dissolve it. The LED should be brighter

now, since salt water has less resistance

than plain water.
Don’t drink any water used here.

Project 14

Make Your Own Parts

Long, narrow shapes

have more resistance

than short, wide ones,

so different sounds are

produced. The black

core of pencils is

graphite, the same

material used in your

resistors (R5 & RV).

SCP-14_022014.qxp_SCP-14 Instructions 3/7/14 2:37 PM Page 3