While it wasn't really a good kit for a small child to do, I thought it would be fun to do it together, and great to play and explore with later too.
When I first saw it, I thought it must run on a little micro (like ATtiny), and after looking at the site, I discovered it was a set of op-amps. This helped to get me excited, mostly because I dislike this online trend where everyone just throws a microcontroller at all of their problems.
We have a few things here that I like:
Things that blink!
Things that move!
Op-amps!
Transistors!
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So basically between the pictures online and the schematic, I was able to assemble it. The motors don't come with wires already on them, I used the slack from the battery pack to make wires to go from the motor terminals to the PCB, no issues with that whatsoever.
I also had a little difficulty soldering the photo-sensor and LED's onto the board backwards, as they need to be left long and sticking out so
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Precision resistors are also a little different than what you may normally have. They have three digits with a multiplier behind it, so the 3.3K resistor is banded as orange orange black red (330 plus 2 zeros on the end or 33000 ohms), rather than orange orange orange (33 plus 3 zeros or 33000ohms)... geh, you'll figure it out I'm sure!
One packing issue was that all the parts were dumped into one bag together, but it did cause the op-amp to somehow get stuck inside of the spring on the battery holder. I needed to carefully remove it with a pair of tweezers. All the parts were there, and nothing was broken, but I am a fan of bags for little bits. Anyway, here are a bunch of pictures of the building process.
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