Friday, November 29, 2013
Hello, what's this?
If there's a larger transparent water-tight container on the market, I haven't seen it. Looks like it'd need three ballast pods for a total of 30lbs. This electric heater pad would fit neatly inside on the second floor where air would insulate it from losing heat to the outside water. Should be possible to put together for less than $300. Right now all donations are going to more helium for Skyhab, but if someone wanted to be my secret santa and buy this drybox I'd commit to building a new 2-story Hampture.
Thursday, August 29, 2013
"Where no rat has gone before"
The crew of the Hydronaut project, a Czech Republic program to build a two man undersea lab for cosmonaut training, posted this photo on the front page of the Hydronaut website.
The implications are clear. Czech rats have initiated a competing rodent ocean colonization program. But by cunning, ingenuity and strength of will, our American hamsters will win the race to conquer the seafloor, now and for all time. Can rat and hamster share the blue frontier? Or will they build opposing fleets of 1/10th scale submarines, and assault each others' colonies? I feel a Dreamworks film coming on. Or the world's most demented RTS.
(Serious note: I'm sure they only had this set up for a few minutes to take the picture. I do not recommend replicating their design at home. It is open bottomed so the interior is miserably humid. There is no dessicant litter to handle urine or humidity. The weights are on top, meaning it is unstable and would up-end if tipped, instantly flooding. I see no wires so there is most likely no heater. There is also no wheel. If you intend to make your own small animal habitat at home please follow my design for Hambase Alpha. It has benefited from several years of design refinement and is about as close to ideal as a device of this nature can get on a reasonable budget. Doing it the way they did for longer than a minute or two is unsafe and uncomfortable for the animal.)
Update: Hydronaut crew members have contacted me to reassure me that it was only a temporary setup for the purpose of taking the photo. They have also invited an exchange of ideas regarding larger scale projects.
(Serious note: I'm sure they only had this set up for a few minutes to take the picture. I do not recommend replicating their design at home. It is open bottomed so the interior is miserably humid. There is no dessicant litter to handle urine or humidity. The weights are on top, meaning it is unstable and would up-end if tipped, instantly flooding. I see no wires so there is most likely no heater. There is also no wheel. If you intend to make your own small animal habitat at home please follow my design for Hambase Alpha. It has benefited from several years of design refinement and is about as close to ideal as a device of this nature can get on a reasonable budget. Doing it the way they did for longer than a minute or two is unsafe and uncomfortable for the animal.)
Update: Hydronaut crew members have contacted me to reassure me that it was only a temporary setup for the purpose of taking the photo. They have also invited an exchange of ideas regarding larger scale projects.
Monday, August 5, 2013
Hampture: Deep Sea
The technical capability to deploy Hampture to 8 feet has existed for some time. The deep water aquarium pump lists 8 feet as the max depth. Since Hampture equalizes through the seal, the pressure that the pump works against would be more like 7 feet, 3 inches. As I calculated the air throughput for hampture assuming max rated depth, it should still be about 5 times what's necessary with the hab at the full 8 feet.
I did this once, in about 7 feet of water with Hampture Mk. III. As I had only a snorkel and mask, deploying it was miserable, and recovering it was downright dangerous for me. That was part of my motivation to get scuba certified. 7-8 feet is just barely deep enough that, if you're hauling a big heavy object out of water, you're potentially endangering yourself. But with a small scuba setup, deploying and recovering a habitat to/from 8 feet should be much less miserable. As you can see in the diagram below it would be supplied air and power from a floating plastic storage bin, containing one 28ah agm battery, a 175 watt inverter, the 110v->5v2a adapters that power the heated pads, and the deep water aquarium pump. This setup is sufficient to supply air and heat for around 10-15 hours. I expect that I'd deploy it for around five hours, and call it a day. This should be ample time to take photos and video. I've also identified places nearby to submerge it with much, much better visibility (clear water!) compared to the pond I put Mk III. in. It'll be an inland lake or canal, not the ocean, as I need relatively calm water for safety reasons. "Deep lake" doesn't have the same ring to it though.
8 feet is about the point where you feel the need to equalize. Depth doesn't "scale" for hamsters (i.e. just because they're smaller doesn't mean 8 feet to them is like a thousand feet to us or whatever) they experience the same rate of pressure increase by depth as humans. So this is about as deep as I am comfortable deploying them, as the pressure on their inner ear should be gentle, and easy to equalize even for an animal not accustomed to having to do so. For added comfort I will be deploying the habitat very slowly, at the rate of two or three feet per minute, only possible now that I have access to scuba gear. Likewise when I retrieve the habitat: A slow ascent, to allow their eardrums to equalize gently on the way up and to ensure that they don't overexpand their lungs. I expect it will be remarkable to see in nice, clear water, for the habitat which is normally plunked down in a 2 foot deep aquarium to instead be so deep that I have to fully submerge myself to take pictures/video.
I did this once, in about 7 feet of water with Hampture Mk. III. As I had only a snorkel and mask, deploying it was miserable, and recovering it was downright dangerous for me. That was part of my motivation to get scuba certified. 7-8 feet is just barely deep enough that, if you're hauling a big heavy object out of water, you're potentially endangering yourself. But with a small scuba setup, deploying and recovering a habitat to/from 8 feet should be much less miserable. As you can see in the diagram below it would be supplied air and power from a floating plastic storage bin, containing one 28ah agm battery, a 175 watt inverter, the 110v->5v2a adapters that power the heated pads, and the deep water aquarium pump. This setup is sufficient to supply air and heat for around 10-15 hours. I expect that I'd deploy it for around five hours, and call it a day. This should be ample time to take photos and video. I've also identified places nearby to submerge it with much, much better visibility (clear water!) compared to the pond I put Mk III. in. It'll be an inland lake or canal, not the ocean, as I need relatively calm water for safety reasons. "Deep lake" doesn't have the same ring to it though.
8 feet is about the point where you feel the need to equalize. Depth doesn't "scale" for hamsters (i.e. just because they're smaller doesn't mean 8 feet to them is like a thousand feet to us or whatever) they experience the same rate of pressure increase by depth as humans. So this is about as deep as I am comfortable deploying them, as the pressure on their inner ear should be gentle, and easy to equalize even for an animal not accustomed to having to do so. For added comfort I will be deploying the habitat very slowly, at the rate of two or three feet per minute, only possible now that I have access to scuba gear. Likewise when I retrieve the habitat: A slow ascent, to allow their eardrums to equalize gently on the way up and to ensure that they don't overexpand their lungs. I expect it will be remarkable to see in nice, clear water, for the habitat which is normally plunked down in a 2 foot deep aquarium to instead be so deep that I have to fully submerge myself to take pictures/video.
As I already have all the parts needed for this, except the battery, it should be doable some time in the next year. And since doing anything more ambitious than this costs exponentially more than what I've done so far, I think once this 'deep sea' mission is complete, I'll call it quits. The Hampture project will then be considered successfully concluded. As the hamsternauts are getting pretty old, I'll be lucky to do this before they die of old age, and combined with the Skyhab project they'll have lived remarkable lives few humans can identify with let alone other small mammals. I'd fashion them some tiny little medals but they'd just eat 'em.
Sunday, June 30, 2013
Beginning open water PADI certification course in two weeks.
This should open up some interesting possibilities. With this license I'll be able to get tanks refilled at dive shops, stay underwater for extended periods (the helmet was only good for 45 minutes per charge) and emplace much larger habitats/experiments in much deeper water. I am also beginning the design phase of an inflatable single person habitat. Like, for humans. Stay tuned.
Saturday, May 4, 2013
Monday, April 29, 2013
Hampture update
For those wanting to see what the hambros are up to since going back into the water. This is about a week into their submersion.
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Monday, March 18, 2013
Beginning the design phase of a new habitat.
The feedback on the current Hampture has been mixed. The average viewer doesn't understand why it's so "small" or why I can't connect the various habitats, as it seems simple in their mind. Attempts to explain issues with ballast weight versus habitat size/buoyancy, and how connecting multiple habitats makes it impossible to remove them without putting all the stress of the weights on the spot where the tunnels penetrate the habitat hulls just kinda falls on deaf ears and is met with exasperation and impatience. "This is what I want to see you do. I don't care about the details of how you do it, that's for you to figure out."
Fair enough, I will. Gotta give the people what they want, right? So, from what I can tell, this is what the people want:
#1. More living space
#2. Multiple habitats connected by tunnels
That informs the new design. It will need to be several enclosures joined by tunnels. But, because they cannot be separate structures or the tunnels will break if I ever try to lift it, this means the enclosures will need to be bolted to a very strong, rigid platform to take stress off the tunnels. So in effect it will be a single structure, but with multiple enclosures. I'll be using the tried and proven X-Large lexan drybox for the enclosures.
The next question is, how many enclosures will satisfy viewers? My initial inclination was two, but why even bother if the improvement will only be incremental? Just one tunnel and two rooms isn't much of a step up. So, there will be three large enclosures in total, joined by two transparent acrylic tunnels. They will be mounted perhaps six inches apart on a one foot by 3.5 foot (or so) platform, either custom milled metal or waterproofed wood. On the underside, I'll bolt six of the standard ballast pods; shallow dry cases each containing two 5lb lead divers' block weights, for a total structure ballast weight of 60lbs, which conveniently is at the upper limit of what I can comfortably lift while hunched over an aquarium.
This leaves a bit of excess weight in case I want to add something like smaller clear drybox "lofts" atop the large enclosures accessible by vertical climbing tunnel. I'll experiment and see whether or not that looks too cluttered. The completed habitat will be ideal in a number of ways:
#1. It's the maximum size it can feasibly be and still fit into the fish tank, and be easily removable from it
#2. It's the maximum practical weight for easy placement, removal, and every day stuff like having to turn it over to empty out the soiled litter while cleaning and resupplying it
#3. It's the minimum number of enclosures and tunnels, I think, needed to satisfy people who want several linked habitats and excess living space for the hamsters.
#4. The excess space means more room for food and additional water bottles, which means they'll be able to stay down much longer than before.
I estimate the completed habitat should come in between $300 and $500. While it's an exciting and extremely practical/feasible design that I can absolutely build, it's also outside of my budget. If you'd like to see it get built in time for the weather to warm up and live streaming of the fish tank to resume, you know where the donation button is.
Fair enough, I will. Gotta give the people what they want, right? So, from what I can tell, this is what the people want:
#1. More living space
#2. Multiple habitats connected by tunnels
That informs the new design. It will need to be several enclosures joined by tunnels. But, because they cannot be separate structures or the tunnels will break if I ever try to lift it, this means the enclosures will need to be bolted to a very strong, rigid platform to take stress off the tunnels. So in effect it will be a single structure, but with multiple enclosures. I'll be using the tried and proven X-Large lexan drybox for the enclosures.
The next question is, how many enclosures will satisfy viewers? My initial inclination was two, but why even bother if the improvement will only be incremental? Just one tunnel and two rooms isn't much of a step up. So, there will be three large enclosures in total, joined by two transparent acrylic tunnels. They will be mounted perhaps six inches apart on a one foot by 3.5 foot (or so) platform, either custom milled metal or waterproofed wood. On the underside, I'll bolt six of the standard ballast pods; shallow dry cases each containing two 5lb lead divers' block weights, for a total structure ballast weight of 60lbs, which conveniently is at the upper limit of what I can comfortably lift while hunched over an aquarium.
This leaves a bit of excess weight in case I want to add something like smaller clear drybox "lofts" atop the large enclosures accessible by vertical climbing tunnel. I'll experiment and see whether or not that looks too cluttered. The completed habitat will be ideal in a number of ways:
#1. It's the maximum size it can feasibly be and still fit into the fish tank, and be easily removable from it
#2. It's the maximum practical weight for easy placement, removal, and every day stuff like having to turn it over to empty out the soiled litter while cleaning and resupplying it
#3. It's the minimum number of enclosures and tunnels, I think, needed to satisfy people who want several linked habitats and excess living space for the hamsters.
#4. The excess space means more room for food and additional water bottles, which means they'll be able to stay down much longer than before.
I estimate the completed habitat should come in between $300 and $500. While it's an exciting and extremely practical/feasible design that I can absolutely build, it's also outside of my budget. If you'd like to see it get built in time for the weather to warm up and live streaming of the fish tank to resume, you know where the donation button is.
Monday, February 4, 2013
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