Category Archives: Eggbot

East Bay Mini Maker Faire

IMG_1669


We’re headed to the East Bay Mini Maker Faire this Sunday, October 16th at the Park Day School in Oakland. And we have a discount code for you! Enter EGGBOT to get 15% off tickets purchased online.

We had a great time last year, and are excited to be taking the Eggbot back for more fun. We’re also bringing along the Ostrich Eggbot, which can fit even larger pumpkins. The lineup of makers for the event looks great, and the schedule includes an all-star cast of presenters, lots of workshops, and three music stages. Hope to see you there!


Photo by smerlo03 on flickr under cc-by-nc license.

Halloween Projects from Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories

The Great Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories Halloween Project Archive!

Halloween is one of our favorite holidays, and our collection of Halloween projects continues to grow. Every fall we update it to include our latest projects for the season. In the list that follows, we’ve organized dozens of our Halloween projects into categories: costumes, pumpkins, decor and food.

Last updated: 10/2019.

Continue reading Halloween Projects from Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories

Eggbot in Cairo at Maker Faire Africa

This awesome picture of Manal holding an Eggbotted egg she has embellished comes to us straight from Bilal in Cairo!

We sent an Eggbot along with our friend Bilal Ghalib to Maker Faire Africa and the 3-day Egyptian Maker Space, which were presented by GEMSI (the Global Entrepreneurship and Maker Space Initiative), and the Cairo Hacker Space.

You can find more about their adventures on twitter by following Bilal and Maker Faire Africa.

Ostrich Eggbot

ostrich eggbot, Closeup

What’s just like an Eggbot but quite a bit larger? The all-new Ostrich Eggbot!

ostrich egg in eggbot with chicken egg for comparison

So yes, just like the Eggbot, it’s a machine capable of drawing on the surface of all kinds of spherical and egg-shaped objects. As the name implies, the Ostrich Eggbot is big enough to (very easily) fit ostrich eggs– one is shown above with a (rather large) chicken egg for scale. And, like the Eggbot, we’re releasing it as an open source kit.

Given all that, we feel confident to suggest that the Ostrich Eggbot may already be quite possibly the worlds finest open-source CNC ostrich-egg decorating machine.

ostrich eggbot

The Ostrich Eggbot chassis is CNC cut from hardwood plywood which is then laser engraved with calibration and assembly marks. Versus the original (standard-size) Eggbot, the feet have been moved to the sides for a wider base to give better stability with differently sized objects.

glass ball

This is a glass ball, 6 inches in diameter, which has been decorated in a motley pattern, with some colored Sharpie markers– it almost looks like stained glass.

Large objects

The range of printable objects extends from chicken eggs all the way up past ostrich eggs, and includes things like christmas ornaments, pool (billiards) balls, and all kinds of egg-shaped and spherical objects from 2.25 to 6.25 inches in diameter. (The blue-green alien-egg looking thing is an emu egg. It fits, too.)

XL pen arm

One of the big challenges in the design was that the new “pen arm” had to be much longer, and consequently to be much, much stiffer so that it doesn’t flex and flop around as the pen is moved.

The new pen arm and its mount have been fully redesigned and are now CNC carved from 1/2″ hardwood plywood, which provides a stiffening member along the side. The top section of the pen arm– where the servo motor and hinged pen holder mount –can also now be mounted at two different heights. The lower register allows plotting on small-diameter objects (like chicken eggs) that would otherwise cause the bottom end of the pen arm to hit the tabletop where the robot is sitting.

Emu Egg in Ostrich Eggbot

The Ostrich Eggbot uses the same pen holders (“distal pen arms” in the jargon) as the original Eggbot, so all the same range of pens, pencils, markers, chalk, and crayons can fit in the Ostrich version too. Especially cool is that the engraver kit still fits, now making it possible to do things like engrave on emu egg shells.

Original Egg-Bot with Ostrich Egg-Bot

Here’s how the Ostrich Eggbot looks next to the original. The original Eggbot just about fits inside the Ostrich Eggbot. The original size is still much better for working with smaller objects like ping pong balls and chicken eggs– but it only can draw on objects up to about 4.25 inches (10 cm) in diameter. The Ostrich chassis doesn’t go as small, but it does go up to 6.25 inches (16 cm) in diameter, and works with much longer objects as well.

The Ostrich Eggbot kit has the exact same “active” components– the same motors and EiBotBoard driver board –as the Original Eggbot kit, so we’re making an upgrade kit available (in addition to the standalone version), for those who already have an Eggbot or want to be able to print on everything from very small to very large objects.

ostrich Eggbot

The Ostrich Eggbot is available now at our webstore.

Documentation for the Ostrich Eggbot is hosted at the Evil Mad Scientist Wiki, as a supplement to the more complete Eggbot documentation, which is also hosted there.

Eggbot at MadCamp

Egg Egg

Pete over at RasterWeb! recently posted that he’s planning an Eggbot session at MadCamp. MadCamp is a BarCamp – an open-format conference where the attendees are the presenters — in Madision, Wisconsin on Saturday, August 27. If you’re near Madison and interested in learning more about the Eggbot, unconferences, or any of the other topics that will be presented, go check it out!

We’ve featured Pete’s work with the Eggbot before in our roundup of Eggbot art, and we’re thrilled to see him sharing his mad Eggbot skilz. He invites MadCamp attendees to bring files to print on the Eggbot, and his post provides a nice brief primer on what it takes to get designs sharpie-ready.


Photo by Pete Prodoehl released under cc by-nc-sa license. Egg Egg design also by Pete Prodoehl and released to the public domain.

A Diamond Engraving Tool for Eggbot

Driver board with pen arm

 

What is it? It’s a most useful little thing: a low-cost diamond engraving attachment for the Eggbot.

 

This turns a humble pen-plotting Eggbot into a full-on CNC-driven vibrated-tip diamond-point engraving tool, capable of light-duty marking and engraving on hard materials like glass, stone, and ceramic. Wooo!

Clear glass engraving Continue reading A Diamond Engraving Tool for Eggbot

How to make precision fine line edible ink pens

A guest project by Dan Newman, contributing Evil Mad Scientist.

Egg Warning Label

For my Eggbot plotting, I’ve had two seemingly exclusive goals: to execute
designs with food safe inks, and to use pens capable of producing fine, crisp
lines. Now, thanks to Lenore’s recent investigation of food safe markers combined with a simple five minute pen modification, it’s possible to achieve both goals with the same pen. Yes, I can have my eggs and eat them too!

Continue reading How to make precision fine line edible ink pens

Evaluating some Food Safe Markers

Food Marker Brands

We have, at a number of different times, come across situations where it was desirable to use a food safe marker. One example is our custom message hearts project, another is in the course of making circuitry snacks. The topic came up again recently in discussions of Dan Newman’s Nutrition Information and Omelet Recipe eggs, where commenters were debating whether or not one should eat an egg after it has been written on.

There are three types of food safe markers readily available in the US. We tested all three in an Eggbot and just for kicks, by hand on a bit of rolled out fondant.

Black Comparison, Large Text

The primary differences between the markers were in the shades of the red and black, the ink flow rates, and the texture and shape of the nibs. Colors like blue, green and yellow didn’t show significant differences, although it should be noted that the blues in all cases (no matter what color the plastic was) were closer to a sky blue.

Food Marker Tips

Continue reading Evaluating some Food Safe Markers