funky3000
funky3000
104 / 12
2nd Oct 2015
2nd Oct 2015
Was bored with wind detectors and decided to make a thing that could measure and show how "loud" the wind was. It is a little buggy but it's my first computer-ish thing. I spent 6 hours building this and testing this, and have 2 stamp pages of research!
detector 666 sound sensor earthquake seismometer rictorscale ears an0ear ujtutuy

Comments

  • Yodamort
    Yodamort
    2nd Oct 2015
    Lol my loop mode made the neut melt the computer
  • ariel3
    ariel3
    2nd Oct 2015
    funky3000, your a nerd, thats cool
  • ariel3
    ariel3
    2nd Oct 2015
    this would be cool if it pooped
  • funky3000
    funky3000
    2nd Oct 2015
    @GalacticCat sure, but gravity does not allow sound to travel :P air allows travel of sound, and this machine measures the strength of the sound it detects, and graphs it
  • funky3000
    funky3000
    2nd Oct 2015
    @Jedpog Technically it doesn't, but scientifically sound waves are vibrations in the air, thus, by scientific definition, this is measuring sound. There are programs that allow you to import sounds via images, I'm not sure of the names off the top of my head, but if you imported the graph generated by this machine, you could technically hear what just happened in powder toy as measured by the machine.
  • GalacticCat
    GalacticCat
    2nd Oct 2015
    Cool, its work best with gravity than air +1
  • 00yoshi
    00yoshi
    2nd Oct 2015
    id:1863223 btw do you know that ctrl c and ctrl v and arrow keys and r and shift + r are great for copy paste?
  • Jedpog
    Jedpog
    2nd Oct 2015
    when did powder toy have sounds
  • Paperbell
    Paperbell
    2nd Oct 2015
    I have a thing with id:1863048 that generates a ton of noise/pressure.
  • funky3000
    funky3000
    2nd Oct 2015
    @12me21 upon looking at it, it was simpler than I thought. Thanks for the suggestion, otherwise I wouldn't have seen the easy solution