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Member's Forum Best device(s) for this cosplay
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Forum Thread Details
  • Replies 32 replies
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  • cosplay
  • raspberry pi
  • Metroid
  • Samus
Related

Best device(s) for this cosplay

Amethyst
Amethyst over 1 year ago

I'm assuming many of us here are gamers, and I don't have a better clue where I'd put this. I plan to make a Samus cosplay, from Metroid. Not dedicated to one yet, but thinking Varia suit. 

I have honestly been planning this for many years, but funding left me lacking. On that note, I'm thinking of a Patreon or something, but not sure what rewards would be. Off-topic from the site, but feel free to give ideas!

For the main topic, I'd previously planned to use a mini RasPi and maybe a PICAxe, but an restarting my design with a clearer head:  but I fell behind on tech and don't know what's available. Here's the list I'd like to try to include if you have clever ideas to add, I'm all ears!

-An intake and exhaust fan in the helmet, like RasPi mini fans (5v), for temperature and breathing. I plan to fit these in the "ears" of the helmet that the hoses attach to.

-Some kind of screen in the helmet that can tell me information from the board. Looking at battery level, temperature, and possibly proximity sensor information.

I'm not sure how I can implement this though. I was previously thinking of an oLED display in the past, but they were expensive. I'm wondering if it's possible to create a reflection display off the helmet "glass" (acrylic) over the face? I've seen it work on car windshields, but what am I looking for?

-Some kind of "life form" detection I can use, eg infrared or other ideas? I would feed that input into my display.

Arm Blaster:

-Ice Beam using compressed air, unless there's a good electronic alternative? 

-Ping pong or Airsoft pellets. Which would be cheaper to build? Doesn't need to be high pressure, of course. 

-Fireballs by flash paper and cotton with a glow plug. Suggestions on safest way to control it? Not sure I want a 12v stepper in my arm cannon, not sure if a lower voltage would do the job?

Overall, what electronics do you think are the best ideas to try for something like this that's generally low power, but collectively can be demanding?

The suit is planned to be built with overlapping panels, eg outer thigh strapping over inner thigh armor. I will probably hot glue the wires on the outside of the lower layers and use connectors for LED wiring and any possible sensors I may use (eg motion sensor for behind me). Looking for what your experience is on best budget connectors for that.

image

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Top Replies

  • beacon_dave
    beacon_dave over 1 year ago +3
    Some images of the character might help people here visualise the costume. There appear to be several variations as the character has evolved. Looks like their might be plenty of room in the shoulders…
  • beacon_dave
    beacon_dave over 1 year ago +2
    There is a head up display project on Hackaday that may be worth a look https://hackaday.io/project/12211-arduino-glasses-a-hmd-for-multimeter Alternatively there are some off-the-shelf HUD systems…
  • beacon_dave
    beacon_dave over 1 year ago in reply to cstanton +2
    The car windshield (and the theatre stage for that matter) has the advantage that it is far enough away for the human eye to be able to focus on it. Anything inside a helmet will likely require some…
  • tsandler
    tsandler over 1 year ago

    Sounds really cool! Disclaimer: I've played a lot of video games but not Metroid :-(

    For "life form" detection, what about something like YOLOv4-tiny?

    Please post links to your work when you get started!

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  • Amethyst
    Amethyst over 1 year ago in reply to tsandler

    I'm definitely looking into it, but.... from what I'm looking at, isn't that for object recognition? I'm not sure how I could use that for just detecting, can you explain your thought process, eg what to load it on to display? That would work if I had a miniature display in my helmet, and not just something simple.

    I'm def keeping that gadget in mind for other possible applications, eg creating a "Jarvis" type of system. My view for this project is I want to detect something that is specifically "alive", or maybe motion, so I can have a visual display and react to someone sneaking up behind me in example. That's why I considered heat; though at a comic convention, I can see heat signals being missed by some sensors if they're in a cosplay.

    Please fireball more ideas though, because that didn't exist the years ago I was last tinkering!

    Also I'll note, I like Metroidvanias for the exploration aspect. That said, I have only completed the first Metroid, and started two others. Thing is, I'm really tall and athletic, so I can completely rock this cosplay. 

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  • dougw
    dougw over 1 year ago

    Very cool suit idea.

    The fans are a great idea - need to get that CO2 out of the helmet, although putting fans at the ears may make it hard to hear anything else.

    If you can find a cheap voice changer module, or rig a voice changer phone app to play from a speaker in the suit, nobody will know who you are.

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  • Amethyst
    Amethyst over 1 year ago in reply to dougw

    You have a very good point about the fans! Thankfully, I was using it for reference, since there's those circle bulgest at the side. I'm still not 100% on how I'm making the helmet, but I'm looking at using hose for the front part. If I keep the circle parts on the side open, I can push air through the hose, and keep the fan blocked by that layer in the helmet!

    So, thanks again for pointing that out, before I start! For voice changer, I got one for batteries (AAAs) years ago for this. I def could put it in and connect the 3v line to power it no prob. Then I also realized by maybe needing that area open for air as just mentioned: Nobody may know who I am anyhow if I mirror it: I used to practice voice acting and have a voice range that goes from Sailor Moon to Sir Integra Hellsing.

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  • cstanton
    cstanton over 1 year ago
    Amethyst said:
    -An intake and exhaust fan in the helmet, like RasPi mini fans (5v), for temperature and breathing. I plan to fit these in the "ears" of the helmet that the hoses attach to.

    Depending on budget and space available, I would have a dedicated microcontroller for fan control and combine that with at least a temperature sensor, could be combined with a humidity sensor and then alter a 'fan curve' for how fast the fans rotate depending on temperature and humidity, with a manual override for "just whack it up to full speed please".

    With the use of MOSFETs you can control fans that are 12v, though it then depends on your power supply, but that would allow you to use fans that were either larger, or more powerful to move the air as needed, while being controlled by a lower voltage microcontroller, say from an Arduino or similar.

    You may also find that you only need an intake , or that you need two exhaust, with no intake, or only one intake, depending on how you want to setup the air pressure.

    Amethyst said:
    -Some kind of screen in the helmet that can tell me information from the board. Looking at battery level, temperature, and possibly proximity sensor information.

    A small OLED or LCD screen can possibly do this for you, or if you find a small epaper/eink display then it only has to update and refresh the screen every few seconds or minutes rather than using power for the whole screen constantly. Again this could be a microcontroller or something 'beefier' with an operating system like a Raspberry Pi (such as a Zero or Zero W) but then that introduces battery drain and failure points and waiting for it to boot.

    Amethyst said:

    Arm Blaster:

    -Ice Beam using compressed air, unless there's a good electronic alternative? 

    -Ping pong or Airsoft pellets. Which would be cheaper to build? Doesn't need to be high pressure, of course. 

    -Fireballs by flash paper and cotton with a glow plug. Suggestions on safest way to control it? Not sure I want a 12v stepper in my arm cannon, not sure if a lower voltage would do the job?

    Hm, well if you're wanting more than a dummy 'push button, activate motor' or 'I'm reusing a nerf gun' then you're probably looking at using steppers and a microcontroller, because wouldn't it be cool to have it synchronised with sound and light actions too? It's probably easier to look at this from a 'what would it take to do each type of thing, does something already exist? does it need to be more complicated?' than trying to build it from the ground up off the bat.

    Compressed air is going to have a limit, but perhaps there's something like the airzooka that would work in a smaller confinement?

    Ping pong balls are relatively cheap, light. An alternative would be the nerf balls that blasters use, or a nerf blaster itself. Maybe the dog toy version.

    I'd avoid fire. If only because of health and safety paperwork at cosplay conventions. 

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  • beacon_dave
    beacon_dave over 1 year ago

    Some images of the character might help people here visualise the costume.

    There appear to be several variations as the character has evolved.

    image

    image

    Looks like their might be plenty of room in the shoulders for stuff.

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  • Christopher678
    Christopher678 over 1 year ago

    These look cool 

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  • robogary
    robogary over 1 year ago

    I'd consider making things modular to keep the battery size down and interconnections minimal. Button batteries can be used where power consumption isnt high. 

    I'd leave the fans on continuously to simplify things, maybe have a OFF switch when its not being worn. Get some slow itty bitty ones unless you are planning to have fight scenes with John Wick. 

    The trim could use WS2812 LED strings. They do hog power, but have the best flexibility, you can do rainbow effects or have the colors change, or variable flashing and dimming. 

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  • Amethyst
    Amethyst over 1 year ago in reply to beacon_dave

    Thanks! I didn't see an option to add a photo until you said something. It was late, and I was looking for an "attach image" button, not it to be in the interface on my phone like in MS Word lol! Thanks for posting yours, I edited my post to include the lose schematic!

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  • Amethyst
    Amethyst over 1 year ago in reply to robogary

    Thanks for the feedback! I'll definitely look into the LEDs! For the interconnections, I actually have multiple reasons for this method that you may find clever!

    First, I'm AuDHD, and will not constantly be looking to see if certain lights or on (that's just a mental drain). I don't want to risk a photo with someone that one leg died without us noticing, or them being nice. I also don't want to have to access these compartments to change them, or carry multiple batteries in case. 

    In fact, I plan to run all of these from a single battery in my back: I'm undecided if one of my large 5V packs I used for robotics, or a higher voltage battery. I grew up in karate exercising with a medicine ball, and used to section hike the Appalachian Trail with 60lbs in my pack. I def appreciate the alternative, but my bigger concern is how I would want to safely attach one to my back. That's leaning me towards my huge 5V USB battery, but I've not calculated if I'm going over 2.1A yet.

    The helmet power, I agree with just keeping it on: The Kiss Method. I plan to have it connect to the battery as well, so it's only on while connected.

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