You know, we hadn't realized how tired we were of vertical laser harps until we saw [Jonathan Bumstead]'s entry into the 2019 Hackaday Prize. It's all well and good to imitate the design of the inspiring instrument. But the neat thing about synths is that they aren't confined to the physics of the acoustic instruments they mimic. This project elevates the laser harp into functional sculpture territory. It's a piece of art that produces art.
And this art harp is entirely self-contained, with built-in MIDI, amplifier, and speakers. The brains of this beauty are an Arduino Mega and an Adafruit music maker shield, which give it twenty different instrument voices. Each of the six layers has two lasers, two mirrors, and two photo-resistors mounted in the corners of the plywood skeleton. The lasers and photo-resistors are mounted back to back in opposite corners, with mirrors in the other two corners to complete the paths. [Jonathan] cleverly diffused the laser light with milky slivers of film canister plastic.
This isn't [Jonathan]'s first optical rodeo. Previous experience taught him the importance of being able to readjust the lasers on the fly, because every time he moved it, the laser modules would go out of alignment. This time, he built kinematic mounts that let him reposition the lasers using four screws that each push a corner.
There are a lot of nice touches here, especially the instrument selector wheel. [Jonathan] explains it and the rest of the harp in a fantastic demo/build video that's just burning a hole in the space after the break.
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