A Clap-Activated Machine For All Your Applause Needs

Applause is greatly revered as a symbol of warmth and adoration from a crowd. TV shows that film in front of a live audience often cue their audiences to clap in order to generate the desired auditory atmosphere. Of course, you donā€™t have to rely on squishy humans to do all the work. [Dillon] built a machine of dubious utility ā€“ one which generates mechanical applause when activated by the sound of clapping. (Video, embedded below.)

Somewhat unsurprisingly, the project was built for a Useless Machine contest, but that doesnā€™t diminish its value as a learning exercise. An Arduino runs the show, using a microphone module to listen out for loud noises such as claps. If two claps are detected in the nominated timeframe, the machine begins to flash its ā€œAPPLAUSEā€ lights and clap its hands. The Arduino achieves this with the help of a relay, which switches on a motor spinning a belt-driven cam which seperates the hands. The hands are then pulled back together to clap via a length of stretchy bungee cord.

With an incredibly noisy drivetrain and somewhat amateur clapping ability, the sound coming from the machine isnā€™t exactly recognisable as ā€œapplauseā€. However, itā€™s a start, and it remains the best clapping machine weā€™ve seen this decade. If youā€™ve got your own under construction, consider dropping us a line. And if all this has you waxing nostalgic for the vintage Clapper circuit, you can always build one of those, too.



from Blog ā€“ Hackaday https://ift.tt/36gwAa5

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