The Steampunk Workshop

  • Home
  • About
  • Instagrams
  • Shop Amazon
  • Welcome!
  • Art
  • Books
  • Fashion
  • Favorites
  • Instagram Posts
  • Music
  • Projects
  • Steampunk
  • Uncategorized
  • Video
Home  »  tg-kb-1

tg-kb-1

Comments
  1. Posted by John Bauman December 14, 2014

    where didi you get the cotton magnetic wire?? what gage is it

    thanks John Bauman

    • Posted by Jake von Slatt December 14, 2014

      Note sure! It was found at a garage sale. I’d guess it was about 26 gauge.

  • Find me on Mastodon!

  • Favorites

    A Victorian RV
    A Victorian RV
    Bus Tour: In 1982 I was a sophomore at a small college in the Midwest. Continue Reading →
    Dave Veloz
    Dave Veloz’s Mac Mini Mod, Monitor, & Keyboard
    There is nothing in the world that I like better then receiving pictures of Continue Reading →
    Electrolytic Machining of Brass - Part II:
    Electrolytic Machining of Brass – Part II:
    After the perhaps overly optimistic attempt at electrolytic machining in Part I, I decided to Continue Reading →
    Steampunk Flat-Panel LCD Mod
    Steampunk Flat-Panel LCD Mod
    The Steampunk Keyboard looked terribly anachronistic sitting in front of my Dell 1907FP flat panel Continue Reading →
    Putting Old Lenses on a Canon DSLR
    Putting Old Lenses on a Canon DSLR
    While digging through my old camera equipment I came across my Grandfather's 35mm Exa Continue Reading →
  • Recent Comments

    • Jeff Del Papa on Oooops
    • Jake von Slatt on TIL: you can totally use a Ford regulator on a Toyota alternator, it bolts right on!
    • Constance on TIL: you can totally use a Ford regulator on a Toyota alternator, it bolts right on!
    • Jake von Slatt on About
    • Prof. Atomo on About
  • That bittersweet moment when an old favorite tool is so thoroughly surpassed by the performance of a new tool that you realize you will probably never use it again. This is the Hog-ring Anvil version of the DeWalt 1/2” impact wrench and it’s capable of something like 1,200 ft/lbs.
    That bittersweet moment when an old favorite tool is so thoroughly surpassed by the performance of a new tool that you realize you will probably never use it again. This is the Hog-ring Anvil version of the DeWalt 1/2” impact wrench and it’s capable of something like 1,200 ft/lbs.
    That bittersweet moment when an old favorite tool is so thoroughly surpassed by the Continue Reading →
    A 400 Amp 1600 Volt 3-Phase rectifier bridge arrived for me in the post today
    A 400 Amp 1600 Volt 3-Phase rectifier bridge arrived for me in the post today
    A 400 Amp 1600 Volt 3-Phase rectifier bridge arrived for me in the post Continue Reading →
    Huh. I didn’t think that was going to work. These are temporary printed gears for the feed/threading drive on my lathe to use while I await delivery of new ones.
    Huh. I didn’t think that was going to work. These are temporary printed gears for the feed/threading drive on my lathe to use while I await delivery of new ones.
    Huh. I didn’t think that was going to work. These are temporary printed gears Continue Reading →
    Organizing All Of The Things
    Organizing All Of The Things
    I have limited space in my shop and am constantly trying to condense the volume Continue Reading →
    Franklin’s Bells – Demonstration of Electrostatics with Wimshurst Machine
  • Recent Posts

    • Fingers in the cogs
    • Vintage Receiver Repair – finding a noisy transistor
    • How to build, bright, high-quality flickering LED lanterns!
    • WTF is a Saturable Reactor?
    • Oooops
  • Archives

  • Categories

    • Art
    • Books
    • Fashion
    • Favorites
    • Instagram Posts
    • Music
    • Projects
    • Steampunk
    • Uncategorized
    • Video
  • Tags

    Artist Artists bicycles Bike Bikes Brass Car Casemods Comics Culture DIY Electronics Ephemera Etching Finds Goth Guitar Instagram Instruments Interviews Jake von Slatt Jigsaw Renaissance Kerosene Lamps Keyboards Labs Projects Lamps Libby Bulloff make make magazine maker makers Meredith Scheff Mods Monitors Photography Project Science sculpture Steam Sub-culture Tools Upcycling Vehicles videos Wimshurst
  • Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org
The Steampunk Workshop Copyright © 2026.
 Back to Top ↑