Portable Arduino Project Valise

by CementTruck in Workshop > Organizing

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Portable Arduino Project Valise

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I spend an inordinate amount of time for any of my projects searching for tools scattered throughout the house that I never put away after the last dozen projects were done. This project aims to reduce that time when it comes to enjoying one of my hobbies.

For this project I used:
1 Metal Suitcase/Tool case
2 breadboards
1 Plastic sheet (approximately 1-1/2' x 1-1/2')
3 Plano Plastic Lure Cases
1 Arduino
1 Sheet of Antistatic foam (gleaned from an old piece of electronics)
Several strips of double back foam tape.

I had all these items on hand and spent nothing on this project. The plastic sheet was cut from a larger sheet and has been cluttering the garage for years. I already owned the Arduino.

The Inspiration

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I bought this Heathkit "Digital Design Experimenter ET 3200" at a yard sale and it was the inspiration for this project. It would be nice to eventually incorporate the on-board 12V/5V power supply as well as one or two more of these breadboard connections in my own project enclosure.

Finding a Suitable Enclosure

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I had a metal project case laying around from when I was in school. I purchased a piece of plastic from a local plastics supply house, cut it on my table saw to fit snugly inside the metal case, then using a large bit drilled a hole on one side of the plastic big enough for one of my fingers to fit in. This hole is how I extract the plastic sheet from the case.

Breadboard Disassembly

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I had a couple of these breadboards laying around, and they never seemed to be in the same place at the same time. My projects were always crammed onto one board.

I unscrewed the screws under the aluminum sheet and liberated the actual breadboard strips.

Find the Right Fishing Lure Cases to Fit Within the Project Enclosure

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Find some cases that fit nicely in the the main project case. They can't be too tall because the 1/4" plastic sheet I cut earlier needs to sit on these cases. 

Check Gap/clearance

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Test fit the plastic sheet.

Put It All Together

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The breadboards all had this peel and stick foam on the back. The protective cover had never been removed so I can reuse the foam once I figure out optimal positioning.

In retrospect I should have used a sheet of 1/8" or 1/16" 6061Aluminum. It does not flex and gives a shield mounted on the Arduino a little more headroom when the case is closed. 

This project is not 100% complete. I will be adding power supplies to the boards as well as some other accouterments. I have several other cases with soldering irons, helping hands etc. I'm going to need to mark them on the outside for easy identification.