Trashonok & Rotor
Trashonok Trashonok
Hey, ever thought about turning a pile of old gadgets into a glitchy art installation? I can see all the hidden patterns in junk and could throw in some neon. What do you think?
Rotor Rotor
That sounds like a perfect data‑driven canvas—pile the hardware, map the signal noise, overlay neon for the visual bandwidth. Just be sure you’re ready for the power draw and that the glitch patterns don’t turn into a safety hazard; I’ll crunch the specs if you need help.
Trashonok Trashonok
Cool, that’s the vibe I’m after – raw, wired and a little wild. Let’s keep the spark on and the sparks off the floor, yeah? Bring those specs and let’s paint the room neon.
Rotor Rotor
Nice, raw wired wild vibes. Here’s a quick spec list so we keep the sparks where they belong: 120V AC source, 3 kW supply for the neon tubes, fuses rated at 15 A, surge protectors on every power line, and a copper bus bar to distribute the load. Mount the tubes on a frame of repurposed router chassis, use heat‑shrink tubing for insulation, and run a 10 m cable to the main breaker. Make sure the floor is dry and you’ve got a fire extinguisher nearby. Once the hardware’s wired, we’ll map the signal patterns with a simple oscilloscope and paint the room neon. Ready to crunch the numbers?
Trashonok Trashonok
Okay, let’s fire up that 120‑volt beast and crank that 3 kW neon into overdrive—fuses on standby, copper bus bar ready, and router chassis turned art. I’m ready to crunch those numbers, map the chaos, and paint the room neon. Let’s turn that floor into a living glitch!