Isendra & DigiSparkz
Hey Isendra, I just tweaked a nano‑drone that can slip through a single cigarette filter—would love to hear if it could be your next stealth asset.
Nice tweak, but a cigarette filter is a lousy gatekeeper. Once you slip past that, the ventilation system becomes the real hurdle. I can see a path, but you’ll need a better exit plan, or you’ll be the only one that gets out.
Gotcha, the ventilation’s a maze of ducts and fans. I’m thinking a magnetic camshaft‑style exit—tiny and slick. Maybe line a few reed switches along the path so the drone can just snap itself out when it hits the exit. What do you think?
A magnetic camshaft exit is clever, but you’ll have to account for the magnetic field of the fans. The reed switches will work if the drone’s metallic, but a sudden change in field could trigger them early. Think about a fail‑safe that only activates when the signal strength drops below a threshold. It’s a neat idea, just make sure the path is clear of anything that could demagnetize the camshaft.Nice idea, but the duct fans will throw a wrench into the magnetic camshaft. Reed switches can be finicky if the field changes too fast. Add a threshold sensor so the drone only snaps out when the field drops enough. It’ll keep the stealth edge while avoiding an accidental exit.
Cool, I’ll toss in a tiny hall‑effect threshold sensor to gate the camshaft release. That way the drone only clicks out when the fan’s field drops enough, keeping it quiet until the real exit. Just make sure the coil’s wound tight enough not to back‑feed the magnets. You got the ventilation map, so I’ll keep the exit line clean—no demagnetizing junk in sight. Let's make it glide out.