Posted on 11/01/2007 4:15:39 PM PDT by SandRat
SOTO CANO AIR BASE, Honduras, Nov. 1, 2007 In the spirit of Halloween, an airman here built his very own version of Frankensteins monster.
Tinkering with computer hardware is one of my hobbies, he said. Usually Ill upgrade my (personal) computer one piece at a time and keep all of the old stuff. Russell has a treasure chest full of spare parts -- hard drives, video cards, motherboards -- in his bedroom. He was lacking only one critical piece to bring his creation to life. I had all of the pieces, but I didnt have a case, he said. But its really expensive, because it costs just as much to ship a case here as it does to buy it. And why spend 50 bucks when I can just use what I have? With Plan A being an expensive off-the-shelf computer from a retail store, Russell nicknamed his creation Plan B -- any good monster has to have a name right? After a quick sketch-up of his project, the Seattle native headed to the base exchange to purchase the remainder of his supplies: glue, three cardboard shipping boxes and a box cutter. Inside the box, Plan B sports an 80-gigabyte hard drive, a DVD burner, a gigabyte of memory, a laptop mobile processor and an AM/FM/TV tuner card. The computer took about two weeks to build, since he had to wait for the glue to dry and cure after each computer component was added. The irony is that the computer, built from a shipping box, may not survive the trip to his wifes address in Texas in once piece. Im afraid to send it, because Im afraid it will break in shipping. It will just be a box of parts when it gets there, he said with a laugh. For now, the computer serves as his personal juke box and an interesting conversation starter. Russells regular duties as chief engineer include maintaining the technical radio and television equipment for AFN. He and his co-workers maintain 24-hour broadcast capabilities for Soto Cano. Adding to his resume, Russell also has started sitting in as a co-host for the afternoon rock show. At 6 feet, 5 inches tall, the sergeants unofficial disc jockey name is The Big Show. Russell joined the military on April 17, 1996, and enlisted as a broadcast maintenance troop. Joining the Air Force, he said, seemed like a natural choice to build on the engineering skills he learned in community college. I didnt want to landscape for my uncle any more, and I wanted to use my engineering skills, he said. My step-dad was an Air Force pilot, so I grew up on a lot of Air Force stories. Although he cross-trained a few years ago to work as an intelligence analyst, Russell was pulled back into his old career field to take this remote tour to Honduras. Hes slated to leave here in December for Menwith Hill, England, where hell work in intel again. Fortunately, after his move, Russell will have plenty more boxes to go with his extra computer parts; maybe a bride of Frankenstein is in the future. (Air Force Tech. Sgt. Sonny Cohrs is assigned to Joint Task Force Bravo Public Affairs.) |
Related Sites: Joint Task Force Bravo |
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But can it swing an 9 iron? (USAF dad bump)
Hey, that doesn’t meet FCC Class “B” interference regulations.
Air Force Sergeants ROCK! (From a former TV tech @ AFN Frankfurt...)
‘Although he cross-trained a few years ago to work as an intelligence analyst, Russell was pulled back into his old career field to take this remote tour to Honduras.’
He re-trained, only Chaplain assistants can “Cross Train”...Just one of my old AF pet peeves.. Retied AF Chief
You may not have it in a case yet, but at least you have it breadboarded.
Did you ever have to go to Heidelberg on a radio maintenance job? I think that I was listening to AFN on 1143 out of Heidelberg in 1997, from the Stuttgart area. Lots of local news from Kaiserslautern, Ramstein, Patton Village, etc...
...had the first hour of Rush @ 1900 local.
I visited an office where one of the people there had constructed a PC case out of LEGOs. It was really cool.
A standard PS won't fit, either.
So...I'm moving the hard drive and internal modem to an old Athlon 1700 I have, taking up space. That chassis is only slightly stronger than card board, but it is metal. Almost as soft as lead, but not as heavy.
It’s in a case now... an old K-6-2 case... it was too big for a Packard Bell case I fished out of the dumpster!
Just get a fancy piece of plywood and screw the motherboard to the plywood...
Yeah, I was going to say “big deal” as well. Computers aren’t that complex to put together.
lol yeah, I had my mobo, PSU, HDDs, laying out on my desk for a while until my wife got pissed and made me either get a case or get rid of it.
yes the computer’s name is HAL, and its first words were; “Dave, what are you doing Dave?”
Plywood? I’ve been using a couple of scrap 1x12s...
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