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As of last log, I was trying to use some silver glue to attach all the LEDs to some copper wire. After drying though, it immediately crumbled in my hands and was pretty much useless. Maybe I'm doing something wrong, but I'm probably going to abandon that method.
Inspired by Mohit Bhoite:
https://www.instagram.com/p/BnEHsEsAb_s/?taken-by=mohitbhoite
I picked up some 20 mil brass rod.
And I bent it into shape and super glued it to my wood jig. Superglue just kinda absorbs into the wood, though, so I also laser cut one of the templates in acrylic. Acrylic doesn't seem to work as well at small scales like this, it gets all melty, but we'll see how it goes.
As mentioned earlier, the plan was to laser etch a stencil, and use it for assembly.
0603 components are hard to work with, without a PCB!
I laser-etched a piece of plywood, juuust deep enough to nestle some LEDs and a piece of wire. Then, I used conductive silver glue (in the syringe) to glue them to the wire.
The idea there is (from experience) it's pretty difficult to simultaneously hold down the LEDs in the proper position, and deadbug solder them. The hope was that the glue would just be able to get blobbed in appropriately, without disturbing the components. And, honestly, it didn't really work.
The LEDs love to jump around, and part of the issue is that my tweezers were ferrous. So just the slightest bit magnetic, and that messed with stuff.
So this while this glue is drying, I'll try again, maybe try solder again, maybe try with glue and holding this down better somehow.
Side note:
When you order a bunch of conductive glue from China, and then forget about it while it takes the 2-month boat trip across the ocean, it is a total mindfuck when you randomly get a bunch of syringes in the mail.
If I charlieplex an LED cube, using 0603 LEDs, it could look like this:
Pictures pulled out from my archive, where I've been toying around with this idea since the last Square Inch Contest, three years ago.
That's pretty dense, but the majority of it can be made layer-by-layer, like this:
That means each layer looks like this:
A couple years ago, I laser cut a stencil and soldered up one layer, and it seemed to work okay. Not easy, but it was possible.
I never did multiple layers, and the hard part would be getting those vertical wires attached, near the centre of the cube. I have an idea, though.
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Definitely write up your experiences when you do!
This is brass wire I'm using, and I don't think rigidity is a problem, it holds its shape really well.
You totally can solder to steel wire (most cheap Chinese jumper wire you buy from China is steel, check it, it's magnetic), but in this case, I'm not sure where one would purchase an appropriate gauge, so I'm not sure there are any benefits that would make it worth it.
I think the latest strategy has some real promise, I have just been to busy with other stuff to come back to it.
maybe you could make a stencil, sort of, with acrylic and use it to solder the wires
I am absolutely doing that, but with wood :)
It seemed to work when I tested it out a few years ago. Not super easy still, but it should work.
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I have been contemplating a similar project of using SMD LEDs to create a LED Cube .. I was thinking of using LEDs that have a half-circle notch on the ends, and have them angled front to back about 45 degrees with the vertical support wire running top-to-bottom behind the LEDs (resting in the half-circle notch) and the horizontal wire running across the other end of the LEDs .. This would construct vertical planes of LED matrix, with multiple planes used to create the depth of the cube .. I was also thinking of using hobby wood (i.e. Balsa or Bass) that comes in small sizes to make a jig/fixture to hold the wires and LEDs in the correct position while soldering .. The wood could be cut with small notches/grooves and stacked//glued to form a fixture .. I was also thinking of trying steel wire used for hanging pictures (I have not tried soldering to steel wire yet to see if this is feasible), as the steel wire would be more rigid than copper wire ..
I have not actually started any construction yet.. However, if any of these ideas help, please help your self ..