User:Lex Berezhny/Microfactory

From Open Source Ecology
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The microfactory is a set of tools and machines that can be reasonably acquired or built from abundant materials with the goal of enabling humanity to transcend scarcity and poverty.

A factory has inputs and outputs. The decision of which tools and machines comprise the microfactory is a function of the available inputs and the expected outputs, including the requirement of self-replication.


Inputs

Criteria for selecting inputs for the microfactory:

  • abundant: it should be easy to acquire useful amounts of the material for free or at insignificant cost
  • safe: acquiring, handling and processing the material should not be inherently dangerous; common mistakes should be reasonably forgiving
  • appropriate: see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appropriate_technology

The following materials have been selected as inputs for the stated criteria:

Wood

  • renewable material that is abundant and free if harvested from your own property
  • wood has been used by humans for thousands of years and can be safely worked with primitive tools
  • many existing methods, tools and knowledge on working this material

Plastic

  • PET soda bottles and HDPE milk jugs are everywhere
  • used for storing food, is expected to be safe
  • it's only in the last decade that this material has become appropriate for a home based microfactory. methods, tools and knowledge is still at early stages

Aluminum

    • soda cans are everywhere, aluminum scraps are also abundant
    • much lower melting temperature than steel, home made foundries for aluminum are popular


Methods

aluminum forge to melt aluminum cans and other scrap


make wire out of ingots


circuit "printer"

  • 3d print board with groves for wire and components
  • place aluminum wire into grooves: http://reprap.org/wiki/SpoolHead
  • apply solder paste
  • pick'n'place components
  • melt solder in oven

aluminum extruder

5 axis mill

other links