No One Can Recycle Old, Broken Toys like This 11-Year Old. His Latest Innovation Is Outstanding! -….

Vedant is no ordinary kid. While other children throw away broken toys and buy new ones, he collects the scrap from his discarded ones to make new and ingenious gadgets.

Vedant Dhiren Thaker is a student of Class 6 in Shantinagar High School, Mira Road, Maharashtra. Like many other kids his age, broken toys are a regular feature of his growing years. But, not all his toys break accidently. Some of them are disassembled carefully and all the electronic parts obtained from inside saved.

Vedant is interested in using these broken parts – the remote controls, magnets, batteries, etc. — to build new things, things that are completely different from the original toys.

So, when one of his remote control cars broke down recently, he decided to use it to make a device which would help him solve a daily household problem for his mother.

door1

“During my summer vacation, I keep going outside the house many times. Many of my friends also come over frequently. The doorbell is constantly ringing and every time it goes off my mother has to leave whatever she is doing to open the door. I realised that this was a troublesome task and my mother used to get irritated at times,” says Vedant.

Vedant decided to do something to help his mother. He put his gadget-loving brain to use and made a remote control door operating device with the following spare parts obtained from a broken remote-controlled toy car:

· Remote control
· The motor drive mechanism circuit
· Rechargeable batteries
· The remote control (RC) circuit used inside the car

Vedant connected these to make a prototype device that opens the lock of the main door in his house with a remote control, and has enough range to be easily operated from any part of the house.

His mother can now open the door from anywhere, without having to leave the work she is doing.

For those who want to know how exactly the device works, here’s more: 
(Geek Alert: Read at your own risk)

An RC car has a transmitter in the form of a remote control, and a receiver in the form of an antenna and a circuit board placed inside the car. There is a motor drive mechanism which turns the wheels and operates the steering of the vehicle. Finally, there is a power source in the form of rechargeable batteries.

For functioning, the transmitter sends Radio waves as the control signal which drives the motor, leading to the specified action (like rotation of wheels or steering), which then causes motion in the car.

Vedant utilised this entire process for the working of his device.

Remote Unlock

He attached the RC circuit, along with the motor drive mechanism of the car, to the door. The RC circuit also includes the antenna. From the remote control of the car, he sends radio waves to the antenna, which then gets transmitted to the motor drive mechanism through the battery. This rotates the shaft of the gear box. Vedant has connected the shaft to the latch of the lock with a simple nylon thread. As the shaft rotates, the thread winds itself, thus pulling the latch, and the door opens. When the remote switch is released, the latch goes back to its original position.

“He never keeps any of his toys in their original form. Always makes something new out of them,” says Vedant’s father Dhiren. With his wonderful and inspiring curiosity, Vedant has built numerous things like electronic boats, a power source, and crackers made from scrap. Read more about the solar power source that he has developed from a discarded laptop battery here.

Kudos to the young genius and his love for electronics!

You can contact Vedant’s father here: dhiren.thaker@gmail.com

Source………..Tanaya  Singh….www.the betterindia.com and http://www.you tube.com

Natarajan

” Your Plane Could Be Operated by Remote Control , if the Latest Trial in Sweden Takes off …” !!!

The technology means air traffic controllers can work from anywhere. Picture: Saab

The technology means air traffic controllers can work from anywhere. Picture: Saab Source: YouTube

YOUR plane could soon be operated by remote control if the latest trial in Sweden takes off.

Örnsköldsvik airport in the northeast of Sweden has ditched its control tower and is now landing planes via remote control from an airport sitting 100km away. And there are plans for a similar system to come to Australia.

Air traffic controllers for Örnsköldsvik now sit in a computer simulated room at the larger Sundsvall airport surrounded by giant television screens beaming footage to them of Örnsköldsvik’s incoming planes.

Air traffic controllers sit in a room hundreds of kilometres away where they are beamed f

Air traffic controllers sit in a room hundreds of kilometres away where they are beamed footage of incoming planes. Picture: Saab. Source: YouTube

The only airport in the world to be managed by remote control, it is called the Remote Tower System (RTS) and is being trialled in Sweden as a way of improving accuracy and cutting costs.

It works by streaming high definition images of incoming planes at Örnsköldsvik to a Remote Tower Control room based in Sundsvall. Using high tech cameras, sensors and microphones — the RTS collects data about the plane to provide a simulated digital visual to the controllers as well as surround sound audio of the incoming plane.

The technology has been designed by Saab, the Swedish defence and security company, who says it provides “enhanced situational awareness” for air traffic controllers.

New features include object tracking and alerting, night vision, image enhancement, onscreen display of plane statistics, runway incursion warnings and options for zooming and switching to infra-red view in thick fog and darkness.

The system will use real time object tracking. Picture: Saab.

The system will use real time object tracking. Picture: Saab. Source: YouTube

Mikael Henriksson, the project manager of the RTS in Sundsvall, told NPR it’s a “paradigm shift” for the industry. “For the air traffic controller, this is like airline pilots going from propeller to jet,” he said.

NPR spoke to Erik Backman who runs the RTS in Sundsvall, who says he was dubious when he first saw the mock-up technology in 2004. However a decade later he says they’ve been landing planes remotely for months without any major problems.

The use of remote control towers has been explored by the aviation industry as a way of cutting costs at airports too quiet to warrant full time air traffic controllers.

Later this year a US airport, Leesburg Executive Airport in Virginia, will be installing the RTC, making it the first remote-controlled operated airport in the country.

This airport is operated by remote control... really?

Saab believes regional airports can be operated by remote towers. Picture: Saab. Source: YouTube

Australia is also considering installing the technology with plans to control planes at Adelaide airport by air traffic controllers sitting in Melbourne, 700km away.

Rob Walker, spokesman for Airservices Australia, told the Adelaide Advertiser that the increase in air traffic across Australia requires an upgraded and centralised air traffic system.

He said this system would allow controllers monitoring aircraft in Adelaide to be based in Melbourne and aircraft in Cairns to be monitored from Brisbane.

“There is no change in the number of controllers but only where the service is delivered from … and safety is not an issue,’’ he said. Changes will not be made until 2017.

SOURCE::::: http://www.news.com.au

Natarajan