[General] Cheers from C7 space in Atlanta

ryan martin ryan.jason.martin at gmail.com
Sun Jun 12 18:31:04 CDT 2011


Long answer: Freeside has made it very clear that they want nothing to do
with C7, even though we are next door to each other. Our members are denied
membership at Freeside and it's to the point of Freeside billing themselves
as Atlanta's Best Hackerspace and multiple posts on the hackerspaces mailing
list complaining that 'not real hackerspaces' are listed on the wiki. Ah
dunno, we send them stuff here and there (like lumber and the like) but
never have gotten a thank you.  What can I say?

Short Answer: We tried to work with Freeside. We opened shop next door to
them in the hopes we would work together. It failed.

On Thu, Jun 9, 2011 at 2:54 PM, Tim H <crashcartpro at gmail.com> wrote:

> I'm very glad to hear from you guys again! welcome to the movement of
> hackerspaces. lol
> Looks like your doing pretty well. We have a member here who has been
> playing with forging and casting, but hasn't got anything perfected yet. I
> wouldn't be surprised if he hit you guys up for some advice. (especially
> with the sand casting.)
>
> I hope this isn't too touchy, but I have to ask why you guys didn't join
> Freeside. I recognized the buildings right away. I'm not suggesting you
> should have, but I'm very interested in the process of those who start vs
> join spaces. I hear some of the stories, the difference of opinions, the
> different visions, the fights. It has torn spaces apart before. BUT for the
> most part those splits end up being the best thing for both parties, and it
> creates a broader ecosystem that can sustain more styles and more people, as
> opposed to a single system trying to fit everyone.
>
> Anyway, it's just totaly great that you thought to look us up again. We
> should definitely find some excuses to hang out again. Your place or mine.
> ;)
>
> -Crash Cart (Tim)
>
>
>
> On Thu, Jun 9, 2011 at 1:19 PM, ryan martin <ryan.jason.martin at gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> As for our foundry:
>>
>> We have a Johnson Gas 900SS (
>> http://www.johnsongas.com/industrial/manuals/pdfs/900SSDirectSparkUVSafety.pdf)
>> with 2 control boxes. One uses LP gas, the other uses natural gas.
>>
>> This includes having 6 different crucibles in various sizes, up to and
>> including a gallon. We also scored the tongs, casting boxes (dozens of..),
>> and other steel implements for dealing with red hot graphite and liquid
>> metal.
>>
>> We've been working with various techniques for making molds.  We started
>> with making our own green sand and pressing patterns, then upgraded to
>> petrobond (
>> http://www.budgetcastingsupply.com/Jupiter_Blend_Foundry_Sand.php) and
>> are pretty happy with it.
>>
>> We have also been playing with lost wax and lost foam casting.
>> The surprising secret to lost foam seems to be dipping the foam pieces into
>> drywall texturizer before casting. This stuff hardens into a thin shell of
>> limestone which has been giving us some pretty spectacular results. We've
>> also tried casting foam that is painted with wax to create a smoother
>> texture, which worked out but needs more testing.
>>
>> We are eager to try investment casting ABS parts from a 3d printer, if
>> possible. We don't have access to a printer so we're on hold on that little
>> experiment.
>>
>> Our entire foundry operation is mounted onto carts and is mobile, so we
>> hope to be able to take this little operation on the road sometime.
>>
>> Another neat tool we've been using is a wood block with a steel plate
>> attached as a bit in a palm nailer. This is our ghetto-rigged attempt to
>> create an alternative to a pneumatic shake/jolt machine.
>>
>> Lots of pics on the FB page of our tools and tests.
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Jun 7, 2011 at 12:54 AM, ryan martin <ryan.jason.martin at gmail.com
>> > wrote:
>>
>>> Ooops, I forgot the goods!  We have a facebook group here (
>>> http://www.facebook.com/c7atlanta) with tons of pictures. Take a look.
>>>
>>> One of our operating principles is to provide semi-daily meals for
>>> members. We announce what/when on the FB group. It's been pretty interesting
>>> trying to feed our entire membership as part of our space, and our croc pots
>>> have become pretty sophisticated.  It's definitely one of the biggest draws
>>> from the folks that operate out of the commercial space we are in.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Tue, Jun 7, 2011 at 12:12 AM, strages <strages at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> First off, congrats on starting a new hackerspace!  Despite the
>>>> growing numbers, there just aren't enough in the world yet.  I'm
>>>> interested to hear more about your sand casting station and the hot
>>>> air balloons!  We just moved into a new space that's about ~1000sqft
>>>> more than the one you visited us in.  We're still working to get it
>>>> back into a usable configuration, but making good progress.  We'll
>>>> likely do an open house style event when it's done, which you're all
>>>> welcome to.  July 2nd we're doing our annual Retro Gaming & Computing
>>>> Night which you're also welcome to attend.  We'll certainly do our
>>>> best to be hospitable .
>>>>
>>>> Raymond
>>>>
>>>> On Mon, Jun 6, 2011 at 10:52 PM, ryan martin
>>>> <ryan.jason.martin at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> > Howdy Makers!
>>>> > My name is Ryan and I came through Makers Local 256 some year and a
>>>> half
>>>> > ago. I was with Freddy, Justin, and Bethany and we where at the time
>>>> > travelling and speaking about the Pirate Party. Freddy and Justin
>>>> spent some
>>>> > time hanging the sign at the old space, and in general we still speak
>>>> of
>>>> > your community there as being one of the most open and awesome spaces
>>>> we
>>>> > ever saw.
>>>> > After nearly a year travelling we decided we wanted to plant roots and
>>>> start
>>>> > a space up on our own. We discovered during the tour that most
>>>> hackerspaces
>>>> > aren't as politically interested as we are as individuals, so we
>>>> decided the
>>>> > best bet was to start a new space around us rather than try to join an
>>>> > existing space. We scraped and recruited and found enough members for
>>>> a
>>>> > pretty good sized space in Atlanta.
>>>> > We've been in our space a year now and we really want to 'step up our
>>>> game'
>>>> > a bit. We have talked about it and we are looking for a sister space
>>>> to work
>>>> > with. We'd like to find a space that would like to do some
>>>> > remote conferencing with us; to let us remotely participate in talks
>>>> and
>>>> > classes, and maybe even to do the same back.
>>>> > We have an operational foundry and sand casting station, about 200
>>>> > firebricks, 2 hot air balloons, and about 14 members. The trip between
>>>> the
>>>> > spaces is only about 3 hours long, so it's totally reasonable that
>>>> sometimes
>>>> > we might even be able to bring most of our membership that-a-ways for
>>>> > events.
>>>> > Either way, there is a bit of an update to anyone who wondered what
>>>> happened
>>>> > to 'those pirate guys'. Hope to hear back sometime :)
>>>> > Ryan Martin
>>>> > _______________________________________________
>>>> > General mailing list
>>>> > General at lists.makerslocal.org
>>>> > http://lists.makerslocal.org/mailman/listinfo/general
>>>> >
>>>>
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>>>
>>>
>>
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