CEB Press: Difference between revisions
Line 34: | Line 34: | ||
[http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/CEB_Press/Manufacturing_Instructions/Code_Upload How to upload code to the Arduino microcontroller] | [http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/CEB_Press/Manufacturing_Instructions/Code_Upload How to upload code to the Arduino microcontroller] | ||
=Updates= | =Updates= |
Revision as of 12:16, 24 May 2013
CEB Press | ||
---|---|---|
Home | Research & Development | Bill of Materials | Manufacturing Instructions | User's Manual | User Reviews | ![]() |
Overview
The Liberator is OSE's automatic, high throughput Compressed Earth Brick Press. It is named The Liberator because it is intended to free people from the single highest cost of living - housing. See Cost of Living and GVCS Naming Convention.
The CEB Press takes earth/dirt/soil and compresses it tightly to make solid blocks useful for building. Compressed earth blocks have many advantages as a building material: by making the building materials from the readily available dirt on the building site, they eliminate the need to transport bricks from elsewhere, reducing financial cost and environmental impact. Compressed earth blocks are very strong and insulate well against both heat and sound, making for very energy-efficient building (especially combined with the energy savings from not needing to transport them from offsite). Best of all, the material they use is already on-site and does not need to be purchased -- quite literally, dirt-cheap! See the wiki page on Compressed Earth Blocks and the CEB category for more details on building using CEBs.
The Liberator has been fully designed and tested by the Open Source Ecology team. Because the Liberator is an open source technology, you can freely download instructions to build your own from materials you can obtain yourself, or contact opensourceecology[at]gmail[dot]com to buy a kit or a finished machine.
Building a machine yourself might seem intimidating, but every step of the process is fully documented and the OSE community is available on our discussion forums if you need help, advice, or a little hand-holding.
Using the CEB Press, two people can build a 6 foot high (1.83m) round wall, 20 feet (6.1m) in diameter, 1 foot (30cm) thick, in one 8 hour day, though construction time will vary somewhat depending on preparation time, what equipment is available (tractor to prepare the ground and move the blocks where they need to go), the quality of the soil, and other factors. The bigger the block size, the faster a wall can be erected, but at the cost of heavier blocks that are more of a strain to work with. Blocks from The Liberator average 25 pounds (11.3kg).
See CEB Design for more information.
Assembly
Liberator CEB Press v4 Assembly. from Open Source Ecology on Vimeo.
Code
Testing and Operation Code - Last Updated January 15, 2013
Arduino Uno R3 Board from NKC Electronics via Amazon
How to upload code to the Arduino microcontroller
Updates
Videos
Product Ecology

From | Uses | Creates | Enables |
---|---|---|---|
Components
|
Status
- Prototype IV built in a Collaborative Production Run.
- Currently the CEB is at product release status and is being actively manufactured at Factor e Farm and in Texas. The presses will be used heavily as a part of the Factor e Farm Infrastructure Buildout 2011.
- The CEB documentation is being actively upgraded to meet Fabrication_Procedure_Standards with the goal of serving as a reference implementation for GVCS documentation.
- Eventually the torch table will be used to automate the fabrication of the CEB machine, reducing fabrication time by an estimated 20 hours and, thus, the cost to build the machine.
- The first independent replication is in process as of Sep. 2, 2011, by James Slade and Jason Smith in Texas.
- CEB 4 design planning
- CEB Press V
See Also
- CEB Design
- Compressed Earth Blocks
- Cinva Ram
- CEB_FAQ
- CEB Press/Rollers
- CEB Press/ModularRollers
- Hablab