return home | Get your supplies. We ordered ours via snail mail and it came with 307 parts I will not describe them all at this time. However, we will give you the email of the dude that can send all this stuff to you. A saudering iron is needed to help the wires and circuits stick and connect thru the circuit board. Look at the sign HIGH VOLTAGE (did we spell saudering right?). | |||||||||||||||||||||
theories and ideas | ||||||||||||||||||||||
the experiment | ||||||||||||||||||||||
multimedia | ||||||||||||||||||||||
links | ||||||||||||||||||||||
contact | ||||||||||||||||||||||
The instructions to build this pile of crap were pretty awful. The booklet had the feel of a Michael Crichton novel, and we had to sift thru the parts about the dangers and potential casualties of high voltage and yadda yadda. Anyway, we assumed that the key lime green tube thing needed to go on our base circuit board. And those little baby blue tubes looked important enough to go on the circuit base as well. We are geniuses. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
See these fun little contraptions? They look like little teats. So, we thread some wire thru em, stuck em onto another smaller base board, and wallah! We now have ourselves 6 ridiculously good-looking teat-like circles. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
next page | ||||||||||||||||||||||
for real info on how to build this sucker..go to the links page! | ||||||||||||||||||||||