(As a lazy man, I'd really want to make these in a grid size that is exactly matched to the spacing of the led strip. Holy reduction in soldering, batman!)
OMG, your work is an inspiration to me. I am 14 years old and I want to get into computer programming and electrical engineering. All I have to say is stay creative!
@@pauloyeghe1637 well yeah, sometimes though.. if you're not nitpicking. Programming, and making considerations for power dilevery, sequencing this stuff, as well as subtle little factors that require a lot of attention to detail electrically. Would just about qualify of put it on the fence of electrical engineering.
Idea: if the acrylic was raised slightly away from the underlying grid, allowing a little bit of light to escape through, the light bleed could mask the dark spots caused where the grid is touching the acrylic. The distance between the grid and the acrylic could be adjusted so that a balance is found where the light bleeds enough to cover the gap between "pixels", but not so much that it bleeds significantly into the next pixel over.
for the acrylic glass I usually just go through ally ways in my neighborhood until I find a flat screen TV. Plenty of useful parts, and a pretty big sheet of acrylic.
Wow, that is beautiful. I did a small solder job tonight after not soldering for the best part of 20 years and I think I did well. Wouldn't it be beautiful if there was 100 of these, all on one wall in a house! Imagine that in a games room, or a room with a nice stereo.. Or better still, under the floor with a clear Perspex floor omg that would be amazing. So it's settled. When I'm super rich, I'm having LED matrix floors. Sweet project man, very very cool.
Hey GreatScott! Your previous led matrix bar inspired me to make a similar project that will look very similar to this when its finished! Keep up the amazing work cuz you do some great projects for electronics beginners (such as myself)!
There is a really nice startup that creates these cubes aswell, but theirs can do a lot of really cool stuff, like showing notifications and stuff, add that, would be awesome.
I found your RUclips channel a few weeks ago , your work is great! I 'm studying industrial engineering and I love eletctricity and electronic . Furthermore, I come from Belgium , so watch videos in English is so good for my English , your accent is neutral and perfect understanding. Keep on going! :)
Good job, but what about the programming side? Didn't you mention something at the beginning about showing us how easy it is to use? If not, what did you use to program the light patterns featured in this video?
Hey, you should take that up to the next level. a cool electrical project should get a cool outer look as well. saw off anything sticking out, wood filler the holes. sand it nice and smooth then glue down some nice veneer and stain it, or prime and paint it!
Hey Scott! Me and my brother got a Raspberry pi 3 and made your matrix board, we did however make it a 10x20 grid and programmed it so we played tetris. Pretty cool huh? The most tedious process was the hole drilling by far. The wiring got to the point of just being a routine and we took turns making it. It was totaly worth it and we really like your projects. Good luck with future plans
If you use 30 LED/m LED strip, you can just drill holes in the backing material for the LEDs to show through and use strip for each row, only requiring soldering for the row connections. In your case, this would reduce the number of solder joints by a factor of 20.
If you want to get technical, you could buy a small pixel controller (from a website like Holidaycoro) and use it to control this matrix over DMX. Basically so you can control it in real time and integrate it with other panels.
haha, I made one of these out of wood and RGB LED strips for my High School Final Project it was 13x13 leds and a LOT more big and heavy. Nice video man btw
I finished the structural portion and dividers of the top and wiring up the LED matrix, but I moved from Germany back to the US and still have the rest of the portion on hold while I get settled in. SMD LEDs were not the way to go and took way too long to wire up.
@1:22 interesting to see the ground from the external power supply shared with the ground on the Uno to provide the data pin from the Arduino with a common reference ground. I thought this would be more involved, eg MOSFETs to relay the data pin, but if this works then it gets over the hurdle of finding 43w+ to drive those LEDs.
I love how you took time to install each individual LED, but wouldn't it be easier if you kept the rows of 10 LEDs (instead of cutting single ones) and wired each row to the next one?
The spacing would have been a nightmare to deal with but the setup would have been easier. he wanted a specific grid size so he made it work with a little effort.
I've been watching your videos for a while now. Love what you do and the creativity. Your videos inspired me to go out buy a few things come home and build a portable phone charging box. Since the first version I'm already planning on adding a on board charger (had removable recharge able NIMH battery's), a volt meter, and a few others. Keep up the amazing creativity, cant wait to see it in the next video!
This is actually pretty cool! You should get one of those cheap 40 watts 400$ laser cutters. I got one a couple of month ago and it cuts 6mm MDF and Acrylic and stuff with a very good ventilation and a custom air support that you need to add yourself.
I would suggest using the ws2811 string type LEDs instead, that way you dont have to do so much snipping and soldering! Just drill the 8 or 12mm holes in the backing wood and slot the LEDs through.
long story short :D ... After a quick test i can say that the connection of up to 65 LEDs is no big problem. But you have to take care of how bright you want them to be and which color!!
You can do any amount of LEDs(well not really, but a lot) it's the power supply that needs to be beefier the more LEDs you have, not the arduino which is just data.
Tips: 1) Carve the acrylic (and similar plastic) plate with a sharp knife instead of drawing / sawing it. Then simply break it over the edge of the table. Easy, precise and fast. 2) Use white (or even mirroring, like aluminium (foil)) inserts / maze walls instead of black. Black absorbs light.
awesome build! I never thought of using the foam board to make the square shapes.. brilliant and simple :) I've been mulling somethig like this over for awhile. Thanks for the video!
Also, why slice them up? couldn't you achieve the same result by cutting 10 strips with 10 on them and connecting the strips data in to the next strips data out? ( And power of course)
That's what I was wondering as I watched this... using strips is a *LOT* easier. The only drawback to using strips is the LED per meter density is what sets the size of your 'pixels' as the spacing is preset... still, saves a *ton* of time and it really isn't hard to figure out... this seemed way overly complicated.
I'm working on a similar project at the moment using nodemcu, allowing you to switch between patterns by curling a URL. This looks great and has inspired me more!
Great stuff, something I wanna try to do. *But a question:* _Why (in some of such Tutorials) none using a _*_white_*_ layer of the "walls"?_ The black (or brown, as in one with a cardboard was shown) swallow a lot of the light ... and "yes sure, the wall must blocking the light to the neighbours" ... but sone white paint or any other way ...?
Why didn't you use your cnc for the 400 holes and making the sides perfect? I like how you showed it how to make it with common tools so more people can make it their selves!!! Thumsb up.
Hey maybe to fix that gap problem without doing too much work, I'd sand down all the edges until smooth then use veneer and cover everything. Maybe add some tung oil to it?
Awesome video Scott! I literally was just researching this exact project last night for a wall mounted spectrum analyzer to put above my computer monitors. :D
Gut das Du deutsch sprichst, da brauch ich jetzt nicht google translate benutzen :) Wenn Du ein Stück Draht ganz besonders gerade haben möchtest nimm zwei Zangen und ziehe den Draht auseinander. Bei kurzen Drahtstücken kannst Du den auch zwischenzwei Holzstücken hin und her rollen. Nette Idee, werde mir so was auch malbasteln.
Too much work for most people I think with so many cuts and solders, but the end result is very appealing indeed. I would totally fill this thing with with lots of cool gaming retro pixel-art. I think it would be a fantastic product idea. If you could manufacture this thinner (and you undoubtedly could) and add a small bit of memory to make it programmable / wifi connected with an app it could act nice diffused normal lighting when you wanted and then switch to fancy mood-lighting according to timed program or instructions from app. Then just add support for multiple panels to work cooperatively and it would sell like hotcakes I think :)
GreatScott! Is that all. You're pretty fast then. My portable classic console projects take me about that long and I don't do as much as this one does!
The more I watch you videos the more I understand how it's important to have a proper tools to create such beautiful things
zentimeters
centimeters
senttiä
I always measure the inner pieces with zentimeters
I heard that too...
Zen....... timeters
(As a lazy man, I'd really want to make these in a grid size that is exactly matched to the spacing of the led strip. Holy reduction in soldering, batman!)
Very easy, just buy the stripe with the fewer LEDs/metre and thats it.
why not just use pre-wired led strings
I had the same thought 30 LEDs/m would probably work fine with just some solderings between different strips
Ya wow, I have no idea why he did so much extra work. Low density (addressable) led strip then cover with a grid like he did....same result
@@shiftyjesusfish right? It’s what I’ll be doing 😎
There is no way i can make this.The amount of patience this man has is incredible.
A tetris game on this matrix would be awesome
I thought the exact same thing as soon as the video started!
My professor made that and oh boy is it awesome.
@@Shaggyfauvorite how?
Arduino, bluetooth and a bit of brain magic
it could be turned into a looping animation.
Nice looking display. I admire the amount of effort you put into building the matrix and its enclosure
OMG, your work is an inspiration to me. I am 14 years old and I want to get into computer programming and electrical engineering. All I have to say is stay creative!
This is Electronics.
It's not electrical engineering or computer science.
@@pauloyeghe1637 well yeah, sometimes though.. if you're not nitpicking.
Programming, and making considerations for power dilevery, sequencing this stuff, as well as subtle little factors that require a lot of attention to detail electrically.
Would just about qualify of put it on the fence of electrical engineering.
I still miss the "Lets get started" line in the intro :(
Now it's "Let's get started with the build" :) Almost the same
+michalpajor but it's still not the same D:
+KaienSander10 Everytime he says "let's get started!" it puts a grin on my face. This time it was not the same
Et's get zdarded.
KaienSander10
Idea: if the acrylic was raised slightly away from the underlying grid, allowing a little bit of light to escape through, the light bleed could mask the dark spots caused where the grid is touching the acrylic. The distance between the grid and the acrylic could be adjusted so that a balance is found where the light bleeds enough to cover the gap between "pixels", but not so much that it bleeds significantly into the next pixel over.
i just finished my 8x8 grid of random blinking lights. this is labor intensice, respect brother
3:33 my inner perfectionist is happy 😍
for the acrylic glass I usually just go through ally ways in my neighborhood until I find a flat screen TV. Plenty of useful parts, and a pretty big sheet of acrylic.
Try to Build 1920x1080 LED screen
Edit after 2 yrs:
Thx for likes!
oof
it would need like 300kw
1.21 Gigawatts to be exact.
@@69Accord69 When a typical screen is just tens of watts...
@@zUltra3D Back to the future... nothing?...
Wow, that is beautiful. I did a small solder job tonight after not soldering for the best part of 20 years and I think I did well. Wouldn't it be beautiful if there was 100 of these, all on one wall in a house! Imagine that in a games room, or a room with a nice stereo.. Or better still, under the floor with a clear Perspex floor omg that would be amazing. So it's settled. When I'm super rich, I'm having LED matrix floors. Sweet project man, very very cool.
Hey GreatScott! Your previous led matrix bar inspired me to make a similar project that will look very similar to this when its finished! Keep up the amazing work cuz you do some great projects for electronics beginners (such as myself)!
There is a really nice startup that creates these cubes aswell, but theirs can do a lot of really cool stuff, like showing notifications and stuff, add that, would be awesome.
good explanation, thank you, Saludos amigo.
I found your RUclips channel a few weeks ago , your work is great! I 'm studying industrial engineering and I love eletctricity and electronic . Furthermore, I come from Belgium , so watch videos in English is so good for my English , your accent is neutral and perfect understanding. Keep on going! :)
Good job, but what about the programming side? Didn't you mention something at the beginning about showing us how easy it is to use? If not, what did you use to program the light patterns featured in this video?
I think it's the same software used in his video of a large scale one
FastLED. I think he shows how to use it in the large scale LED matrix video..
He used the arduino IDE(whatever it's called) with a library for the LEDs. There is a download on instructables.
Hey, you should take that up to the next level. a cool electrical project should get a cool outer look as well. saw off anything sticking out, wood filler the holes. sand it nice and smooth then glue down some nice veneer and stain it, or prime and paint it!
my next projet!!! xD cheers
I noticed that you are getting better in woodworking and I like it nice work :)
reading the comments makes me feel really stupid
Hey Scott! Me and my brother got a Raspberry pi 3 and made your matrix board, we did however make it a 10x20 grid and programmed it so we played tetris. Pretty cool huh? The most tedious process was the hole drilling by far. The wiring got to the point of just being a routine and we took turns making it. It was totaly worth it and we really like your projects. Good luck with future plans
If you use 30 LED/m LED strip, you can just drill holes in the backing material for the LEDs to show through and use strip for each row, only requiring soldering for the row connections. In your case, this would reduce the number of solder joints by a factor of 20.
This is my favorite video/project you've done. I'll definitely be making one of these in the future. Great Job :)
Thanks
you added extra effort to the video .... salute to you. !!
keep making videos scott.
love how you pronounce things like "zentimeter"!
If you want to get technical, you could buy a small pixel controller (from a website like Holidaycoro) and use it to control this matrix over DMX. Basically so you can control it in real time and integrate it with other panels.
haha, I made one of these out of wood and RGB LED strips for my High School Final Project it was 13x13 leds and a LOT more big and heavy. Nice video man btw
I was making a desk using frosted glass and a matrix like this underneath, using wood as the dividing material and I ran into that weight issue, too.
sounds cool. did you finish it?
I finished the structural portion and dividers of the top and wiring up the LED matrix, but I moved from Germany back to the US and still have the rest of the portion on hold while I get settled in. SMD LEDs were not the way to go and took way too long to wire up.
It is so nice to see this kind of videos in milimeters!!!
Now make it run pong :D
Omg.
Pong? On a 100 Pixel matrix?
Ja... neee... is klar!
+Dirk Mader oder tetris =)
yesssss
Funny, I was thinking Tetris!
@1:22 interesting to see the ground from the external power supply shared with the ground on the Uno to provide the data pin from the Arduino with a common reference ground. I thought this would be more involved, eg MOSFETs to relay the data pin, but if this works then it gets over the hurdle of finding 43w+ to drive those LEDs.
You'd have much brighter and vastly more diffuse "pixels" if you'd used white separators.
killerdalek i was wondering about the same thing but do you really think it makes that much of difference?
i currently make because of your video a led matrix with 24x12 :) will look awesome i hope, got the leds today but already drilled 1800 holes :D
I love how you took time to install each individual LED, but wouldn't it be easier if you kept the rows of 10 LEDs (instead of cutting single ones) and wired each row to the next one?
Or does that make the LEDs look too tightly spaced?
Exactly what I was thinking...
My thinking was that he might not be able to control them individually if they were attached together still.
THey're all connected the same in the row as they are in the matrix. He showed that when he did the test to control the spool of LEDs. ;
The spacing would have been a nightmare to deal with but the setup would have been easier. he wanted a specific grid size so he made it work with a little effort.
I've been watching your videos for a while now. Love what you do and the creativity. Your videos inspired me to go out buy a few things come home and build a portable phone charging box. Since the first version I'm already planning on adding a on board charger (had removable recharge able NIMH battery's), a volt meter, and a few others. Keep up the amazing creativity, cant wait to see it in the next video!
Now convert that into a audio spectrum analyzer.
Good Idea, but how to do that ?
@@bharata101 idk but he knows anything
Akshay Patel add the proper code and a microphone. Actually pretty simple
This is actually pretty cool! You should get one of those cheap 40 watts 400$ laser cutters. I got one a couple of month ago and it cuts 6mm MDF and Acrylic and stuff with a very good ventilation and a custom air support that you need to add yourself.
Do you have a Video explaining the software part?
I might do a video on how to create a simple game with such a matrix.
GreatScott! Nice.
Could you tell me how to do animations as shown in a nutshell?
Nicolai Weitkemper
Visit the FastLED website. There are plenty of information.
+GreatScott!
Hi Scott,
whenever i See at my Phone New Form great scott, Nothing is more important then watching your Video
great Job 👍
Steve
+Stefan Bramel me too ;) greatscoot is the only channel that i have notifications turned on ;)
you deserve a thumbs up just for going through the wiring madness, haha
How is it controlling 100 leds with so many colors, on just one single data pin?
Asynchronous Serial Data
xubor But there doesn't appear to be any for of microcontroller to read the Serial Data and convert it?
0:18, why would you "read" Serial Data? That makes no sense at all.
+Rasmus Tollund There is chip inside the LED itself. Lookup WS2812.
Daniel Astbury Ah okay, thanks a lot!
Next time do: Make your own Talkbox!
"afterwards i drilled 400 holes" fml, xD
thanks for the great work you put in ur videos!
nervenjere i work at my led matrix with 1152 holes xD 24x12 led matrix if you want i could make a video
This is something i might try in the future although i have not done any electronics type stuff since i was in high school
Hey Scott, you covered the basic (passive) components in your videos, but will we see tutorials with active components i.e. (photo)transistors?
Soon
Nice
does it work with arduino uno
?
okay,
@@sem8776 I'm aware it's been 6yrs since you asked this, but yes it should work.
I would suggest using the ws2811 string type LEDs instead, that way you dont have to do so much snipping and soldering!
Just drill the 8 or 12mm holes in the backing wood and slot the LEDs through.
how much leds can you connect on the arduino, I'm planning to do 240 leds. Is that possible?
Yes
long story short :D ... After a quick test i can say that the connection of up to 65 LEDs is no big problem. But you have to take care of how bright you want them to be and which color!!
You can do any amount of LEDs(well not really, but a lot) it's the power supply that needs to be beefier the more LEDs you have, not the arduino which is just data.
LucasMoviesmaker yes
I don't think you can use an Arduino Uno for that many LEDs. You'd have to get a higher Arduino model.
Tips: 1) Carve the acrylic (and similar plastic) plate with a sharp knife instead of drawing / sawing it. Then simply break it over the edge of the table. Easy, precise and fast. 2) Use white (or even mirroring, like aluminium (foil)) inserts / maze walls instead of black. Black absorbs light.
You always surprise me with a nice idea. Do you still have many of them in to do list?
Yes, too many.
Always a great project. I suggest to make the frame and also the divisions using MDF cutting by CNC laser. Thumb up👍
Are you from Germany?
Yes
+GreatScott! Ich wusste es! :) wo in Deutschland wohnst du?
+_who_cares_ klar die stehen dann vor jedem Haus im gesamten Bundesland....
+GreatScott! OMG Wien das raushört xD 😂
+Mats Pager wie*
Nice project. I would use 10 strips of 10 LED's to reduce the wiring by 1/10 and base the spacing on the LED center to centre spacing on the strip.
What are the expected costs?
Around 60-70$
+GreatScott! thx for the fastest response EVER 😅
+Nicolai Weitkemper next you have to make 1920x1080 size matrics
+CatKitty matrix
+CatKitty you mean +GreatScott! ?
awesome build! I never thought of using the foam board to make the square shapes.. brilliant and simple :) I've been mulling somethig like this over for awhile. Thanks for the video!
diy launchpad pls
oh yes pls
YES
Amazing build, just what I'm looking to do too
Zentimeters!
genau :)
I'm getting pure nightmares out of watching the helluva amount of repetitive process itself. Whoa, respects to you, sir!
Also, why slice them up? couldn't you achieve the same result by cutting 10 strips with 10 on them and connecting the strips data in to the next strips data out? ( And power of course)
claydioactive it'd be harder to isolate the LEDs into 'pixels' that way
That's what I was wondering as I watched this... using strips is a *LOT* easier. The only drawback to using strips is the LED per meter density is what sets the size of your 'pixels' as the spacing is preset... still, saves a *ton* of time and it really isn't hard to figure out... this seemed way overly complicated.
wouldn't it still get the pixel effect with strips if he just separated them using that foam matrix? seems like it could to me
That's a cool idea! Let's build a 4k screen with those LEDs :)
Zentimeters : ^)
I'm working on a similar project at the moment using nodemcu, allowing you to switch between patterns by curling a URL. This looks great and has inspired me more!
Nochmal auf deutsch und mit mindestens 1080p60fps wäre besser, nech.
you are very demanding
@@finnthefrog4354
"you are very demanding"
Yes, I am, sometimes, but in a good way!
RUclips damysticalone87
You make it sound so easy!
"zenitmeter" xD no hate
Great stuff, something I wanna try to do.
*But a question:* _Why (in some of such Tutorials) none using a _*_white_*_ layer of the "walls"?_
The black (or brown, as in one with a cardboard was shown) swallow a lot of the light ... and "yes sure, the wall must blocking the light to the neighbours" ... but sone white paint or any other way ...?
I want to Tetris on that shit
I would go insane half way through that soldering job. Well done sir.
you didnt show the programming
I might do it in another video
please do
build enough of those grids and you can build a glowing disco dance floor!
I'm going to be making a 31x31 LED matrix and I'll definitely show you what it looks like in the end
a real PRO instruction video - you should moderate a DIY show on the TV!
thx a lot
really good project! the result is very pretty
Why didn't you use your cnc for the 400 holes and making the sides perfect? I like how you showed it how to make it with common tools so more people can make it their selves!!! Thumsb up.
Having the final plexi cover just a bit bigger to start would be handy, to remove the slight gaps on the edges.
wow. tons of ellbow grease. i love the led projects.
thabk you,Scott.
Great video scott. Thanks for slowing down a bit with the explanation. Much more clear now
since nobody told you yet, cool project !
Thanks
i started my led matrix project today, right on time!
I JUST LOVE THAT GERMAN ACCENT
Hey maybe to fix that gap problem without doing too much work, I'd sand down all the edges until smooth then use veneer and cover everything. Maybe add some tung oil to it?
Awesome video Scott! I literally was just researching this exact project last night for a wall mounted spectrum analyzer to put above my computer monitors. :D
Scott, this was an awesome video! Cool matrix!
I like your led board which you solder in starting of every video
Yess, I was going to make one of these this summer. You're the best! Thanks for the vid
Gut das Du deutsch sprichst, da brauch ich jetzt nicht google translate benutzen :)
Wenn Du ein Stück Draht ganz besonders gerade haben möchtest nimm zwei Zangen und ziehe den Draht auseinander. Bei kurzen Drahtstücken kannst Du den auch zwischenzwei Holzstücken hin und her rollen.
Nette Idee, werde mir so was auch malbasteln.
Too much work for most people I think with so many cuts and solders, but the end result is very appealing indeed. I would totally fill this thing with with lots of cool gaming retro pixel-art.
I think it would be a fantastic product idea.
If you could manufacture this thinner (and you undoubtedly could) and add a small bit of memory to make it programmable / wifi connected with an app it could act nice diffused normal lighting when you wanted and then switch to fancy mood-lighting according to timed program or instructions from app.
Then just add support for multiple panels to work cooperatively and it would sell like hotcakes I think :)
I have been making one of these but 16x16 at college. But I have an SD card that can display images that are encoded as text on it.
yeey new led matrix... they are awesome! I was looking for these LEDs like week ago.. It's great that you have made video of that.. ;)
Madness is an understatement.
Can you make that to replace the regular backlight of any LCD?
Biggest launchpad in history
Nice project man, keep it up
Very genius and hard work you are . 👍😁
What would you say, how big could I make one square for one LED, so the LED is still bright enough to light up the whole square?
Just wow, Appreciated your overwhelming efforts man.
kudos✌
You are God men!
Once again, greetings from Colombia!
This looks like it took FOREVER. I don't think I have the patience to do something like this!
Not forever. Maybe 30-40 hours.
GreatScott! Is that all. You're pretty fast then. My portable classic console projects take me about that long and I don't do as much as this one does!
You're someone's new hero!
thank you scott for your fantastic video.