Fallout 3 wrist-mounted Personal Information Processor, working pipboy 3000 (made with Arduino)

Fallout 3 wrist-mounted Personal Information Processor, working pipboy 3000 (made with Arduino)…

This is the first test of my attempt to build a working pipboy 3000, complete with fully functional controls just as depicted in the game.

It consists of an HTC Desire HD as the screen and processor, and an Arduino Uno with a USB host shield running microbridge to act as an ADB host for the phone. The Arduino then sends button presses to the phone via TCP over USB. The casing is a cast made by Skruffy over at http://www.therpf.com , it’s amazing!

It came out quite well, with a few problems:
- I couldn’t fit the potentiometer for the dial inside (the phone is in the way), so I mounted it on the front. I wasn’t too bothered by that as I think it looks fairly cool.

- The phone and the Arduino and the battery take up so much room that I can’t fit my arm in anymore, making it kind of hard to use as a costume accessory to SDCC 2011 as I had planned.

- The electronics consist of some stripboard and lots and lots of loose wires. My soldering is pretty dodgy and the result is quite flaky; lights go out and buttons stop working as it is moved around. It’s my first electronics project though so I’ve learned a lot and I think I can improve it.

Filed under: arduino — by adafruit, posted September 4, 2011 at 11:33 am


Try Adafruit's new iPhone & iPad app for makers! Circuit Playground! "Incredibly handy for anyone working in electronics. Perfect for engineers and non-engineers alike."
Looking for engineers, makers and the builders of dreams? Try our Adafruit job boards.
Join our weekly Adafruit SHOW-AND-TELL at 9:30pm ET every Saturday night! Then at 10pm, ASK-AN-ENGINEER with Ladyada and the Adafruit team!

3 Comments

  1. Good Job! Absolutely the best ever seen!

    Comment by Mauro — September 6, 2011 @ 5:28 pm

  2. Do you have the source for the Android app? Looks rather nice!

    Comment by Alex Holsgrove — September 7, 2011 @ 5:42 am

  3. You’re featured on Hackaday, and this looks great. For an improvement, let’s see if you can’t make it wearable!

    Comment by Graham — September 7, 2011 @ 9:01 am

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

www.flickr.com
adafruit's items Go to adafruit's photostream
www.flickr.com
items in Adafruits More in Adafruits pool