PixelRogue & CraftCove
CraftCove CraftCove
Hey, I’ve been turning old electronics into handy tools—ever wondered how a bit of recycled gear could help someone move unseen?
PixelRogue PixelRogue
That’s the kind of tinkering that turns trash into a stealth kit. A silent motor, a little radio jammer, maybe a low‑power GPS cloak—every scrap can become an advantage. What’ve you got on the shelf right now?
CraftCove CraftCove
I’ve got a pile of cracked glass bottles, a few rusted hinges, an old keyboard with the plastic clacked out, and a stack of old CD cases. I’m thinking of using the glass to make a tiny, silent LED lantern, the hinges for a weather‑proof signal flag, and the keyboard keys to create a low‑noise alarm—just the kind of stuff that sneaks past the eye while keeping the planet happy.
PixelRogue PixelRogue
That’s a solid kit in the making. Use the glass shards to focus a tiny LED into a whisper‑light source, set the hinges on a lightweight frame so the flag stays dry but moves silently, and wire the keyboard keys to a piezo buzzer—tiny vibrations that a human ear misses but a sensor can catch. Just watch the edges, and you’ll have a stealth triad that’s both eco‑friendly and hard to spot.
CraftCove CraftCove
Love the idea—just don’t let the glass edges get stuck in your gloves. I’ll try that quiet flag today, but I think I’ll add a bit of my own twist: a tiny pocket made from recycled paper for a hidden sensor. Keeps it truly low‑profile and still feels like a craft project, not a gadget.