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Flattening the Exhaust of a Laser Cutter to Save Space

2026-04-15 02:30:20

From laser cutters to 3D printers, having an exhaust duct at the back of a machine is a very common sight. However, these tend to be rather bulky, claiming many centimeters of precious space behind a machine even if you’d want to push it right up against a wall. This issue annoyed [TheNeedleStacker] over on YouTube so much that he had a poke at solving this problem with angled exhaust ducts, all hopefully without impairing its basic function.

Smoke machine and laser for some air ducting rave vibes. (Credit: TheNeedleStacker, YouTube)
Smoke machine and laser for some air ducting rave vibes.

Although there are some online offerings for angled exhaust port extenders, these do not quite fit the required 6″ diameter. Reducing the problem to just a matter of cross section area for simplicity’s sake, that means a 19″ wide duct at a depth of 1.5″. Making sure the transition from the tube to the flat duct doesn’t become an impediment is the tricky part, so the approach here was to mostly ignore it and just make a functional prototype to get an idea of how a direct approach worked.

Installing the contraption worked out fine, and subsequent testing showed that although it seems to slightly reduce the effective airflow compared to the flex tubing, it is absolutely rad to look at with the transparent cover and some laser light to illuminate all that’s happening inside.

While some optimization work on the duct transitions can undoubtedly eke out more performance, it’s certainly not bad for a quick project.

China is Shooting For The Moon Sooner Than You Think

2026-04-15 01:00:23

Humanity first reached the moon in 1969. We went back a few times, then lost interest within three short years, and we haven’t been back since. NASA has just flew a quartet of astronauts around the moon last week, and hopes to touch lunar soil by 2028. But the American space program is no longer the only game in town.

China has emerged as another major player in the second race for the Moon. Having mastered human spaceflight 23 years ago, the country’s space program has been moving from strength to strength. A moon landing is on the cards, with the country hoping to plant its boots, and presumably flag, in 2030.

Red Moon

Over the past two decades, China’s space program has racked up a number of impressive feats. It sent rovers to the far side of the moon, landed a rover on Mars, and constructed a liveable space station in Earth orbit. The next obvious crowning achievement would be to land on the Moon, a feat humanity hasn’t accomplished in over 50 years despite endless advances in our technology since.

A mockup of the Long March 10. Note the three stage design, complete with twin boosters on the first stage. Credit: Shujianyang, CC0

The China National Space Administration (CNSA) stated late last year that it was on track to land astronauts on the Moon by 2030. It’s an ambitious timeline, just four years away.

Core to the Chinese effort is the Long March 10 rocket. Developed from the workhorse Long March 5, the super-heavy-lift launch vehicle is to be capable of delivering 70 tonnes of payload into lower Earth orbit, or 27 tonnes on a trans-lunar injection (TLI) trajectory. These figures are comparable to NASA’s Space Launch System (95 tonnes LEO, 27 tonnes TLI), though somewhat in the shadow of the mighty Saturn V that launched the Apollo astronauts to the Moon (140 tonnes LEO, 43.5 tonnes TLI).

In standard configuration, the Long March 10 features two boosters, along with first, second, and third stage rockets. Each booster, along with the first stage, features 7 YF-100K rocket engines burning RP-1 and liquid oxygen, for a total of 21 engines firing together at liftoff. The second stage features just two YF-100M engines, again burning RP-1 and liquid oxygen, while the third stage has three YF-75E engines burning liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen.

A test launch of the first stage of the Long March 10 rocket, sans boosters.

Thus far, the Long March 10 has not yet been fully launch tested. A test launch took place in February to verify the performance of the first stage, with the rocket successfully splashing down in the South China Sea after reaching an altitude of 105 km above the Earth’s surface. The first full orbital flight of the Long March 10 is scheduled for later this year.

 

The proposed profile for the Chinese lunar mission. Note that the lander and crew vehicle are launched separately, reducing the need for a single large rocket that could place both on a trans-lunar insertion trajectory all at once. Credit: Kaynouky, CC BY-SA 4.0

Of course, the rocket is just one part of the lunar mission. The Mengzhou spacecraft is the analog of the Apollo Command and Service Module (CSM), responsible for putting the crew in orbit around the Moon, with a crew of up to six or seven depending on configuration. It’s designed to then deploy the Lanyue lander, which will actually carry astronauts to the Moon itself.

It will also potentially carry a lunar rover to give Chinese taikonauts the ability to explore a broader area of the Moon. Notably, Lanyue and Mengzhou are designed to be delivered by separate Long March 10 launches. They are intended to rendezvous in a low lunar orbit, with crew transferred from Mengzhou to Lanyue for lunar landing, and then transferred back to Mengzhou for the journey back to Earth. Landing will be akin to the Apollo program, with the crew section of Mengzhou descending under parachutes to an ocean splashdown.

The Same Stuff

The Chinese mission does not differ so severely from any other plan to get to the moon. This is not particularly surprising. The basic physics of the problem has not changed in 50 years, it’s just a matter of building the vehicles to actually do the job and get there. Which is not the same as saying that it’s easy: there is still plenty of work to be done to get the Long March 10, Lanyue, and Mengzhou all ready for the big trip up, and whether or not that can be completed in the next four years remains to be seen.

The timeline might be optimistic, but in some ways, it still sounds more realistic than NASA’s previous 2028 target. Time will tell whether the flag that next waves on the Moon is red and yellow, or red white and blue. Or, perhaps even green, lest one of the countries randomly change their flag in the intervening years. Anything could happen.

 

Ski Slopes for Laser Imaging

2026-04-14 23:30:26

Lasers are cool and all, but they can be somewhat difficult to control at times. This is especially true when you have hundreds, thousands, or millions of lasers you need to steer. Fortunately, the MITRE Corporation might have created exactly what’s needed to accomplish this feat. While you might expect this to be done in a similar fashion as a DLP micro mirror array, these researchers have created something a bit different.

A ski slope like a MEMS array is used to contort light as needed. Each slope is able to be controlled in such a way so precise that entire images are able to be displayed by the arrays. This is done by using a “piezo-opto-mechanical photonic integrated circuit” or (POMPIC). Each slope is constructed from SiO2, Al, AlN, and Si3N4. All of these are deposited in such a way to allow the specific bending needed for control.

While quantum computing hasn’t hit these slopes yet, that doesn’t mean you can’t look into the other puzzles needed for the quantum revolution. Quantum computing is something that people have been trying for a long time to get right. Big claims come from all the big players. Take Microsoft, for example, with claims of using Majorana zero mode anyons for topological quantum computing.

Four Choppers and a Blimp: The Bizarre Piasecki Helistat

2026-04-14 22:00:43

Over two decades after it was last deflated, detached from its gondola, and crated up at Lakehurst, the gas bag of an N-class ZPG-2W blimp was broken out and dusted off for what might have been the most bizarre afterlife in aviation history: as a key building block for the U.S. Forest Service’s Piasecki PA-97 Helistat.

Just look at it! It’s an antique blimp gas bag, four war-surplus helicopters pulled from the boneyard, and a whole maze of aluminum tubing. That the U.S. Forest Service, of all agencies, was the one building what amounts to the airship version of an X-plane is also weird enough to be called bizarre. Getting Frank Piasecki to design this thing, a man who did as much as almost anyone else to kill the airship, might be considered ironic, but to stay on theme, I’ll call it bizarre.

If you’re not already a quadrotor-blimp afficionado, we have some explaining to do.

How Frank Piasecki Killed the Blimp

Piasecki didn’t set out to do in the last airship program in the world, but that is, arguably, what he did. He was a pioneer in the world of helicopters. More specifically, he was a pioneer in heavy lift helicopters, the ones that could compete most directly with airships.

The small PV-2 was Piasecki’s first helicopter design, and took flight in 1943: the second ‘successful’ helicopter design flown in the USA, after Sikorski’s VS-300 of 1939. At the time, Sikorski and Bell were the big names in the helicopter business, but their helicopters were both small. Piasecki wasn’t positioned to compete with Sikorski and Bell in the small, lightweight helicopter market, so he went big.

The prototype XHRP-1, demonstrating its lift capacity in 1947.
Image: Public Domain, via Vertical Flight Society

For his next design, Piasecki needed all the lift power he could get in order to outflank Bell and Sikorski. By using two counter-rotating rotors, Piasecki’s design got the maximum lift for its power output. Dual rotors also took up less space, an important consideration on the small aircraft carriers then active.

The prototype of the HRP-1 “flying banana” first flew in 1945, and so missed out on wartime service. The Navy ordered 20 and then handed them off to the Marines and Coast Guard in order to buy the improved HRP-2 version. It was still referred to as a flying banana, especially when painted high-vis yellow for search-and-rescue missions, but the official name was “Rescuer”.

The Bell 47 could lift one passenger, or two wounded men on litters mounted somewhat frighteningly outside of the aircraft. The Rescuer could hold six stretchers, or eight passengers– and double the cargo capacity of the Bell 47. It was a separate niche, and one that would prove successful for the Piasecki Helicopter Corporation.

The HRP-1 was the first in a line of two-rotor helicopters that lives on in the CH-47 Chinook, whose design was begun in 1956, the same year that Frank Piasecki was ousted from Piasecki Helicopters. For obvious reasons, the firm rebranded itself, taking the name Vertol until it was purchased by Boeing in 1960. By that point, the damage to the airship industry had been done.

Then It Got Bizarre

This looks even weirder than the one they built.
Image: Frank Piasecki, from US Patent 3008665A.

Even before the Navy wound up its lighter-than-air (LTA) program in 1962, Frank Piasecki was thinking of airships. In his quest for heavy-lift helicopters, he couldn’t help but notice the potential of LTA– after all, every pound carried by the static lift of a lighter-than-air gas bag is one less pound the helicopter’s rotors need to be concerned with.

What would eventually become the Piasecki Helistat was first described by U.S. Patent 3,008,655A “Helicopter and Balloon Aircraft Unit”. It differs from the craft that was eventually built mainly in using a spherical helium balloon rather than the aerodynamic gas bag of a blimp. The diagrams in the patents even include a load of logs, an inspired choice given the design was eventually taken up by the U.S. Forest Service. The patent was submitted in March 1958, granted in November 1961, and then absolutely nothing happened with it for over a decade.

In the text of the patent, we see that Piasecki was mostly concerned with increasing the lift capacity of his helicopters using the attached balloon, rather than thinking of this as a new type of airship. That would change with his next patent filing, in 1975, US4,591,112A “Vectored Thrust Airship”. Here the concept is no longer about increasing the lift capacity of helicopters, but explicitly recognizes itself as a sort of airship– and is recognizable as what would be built as the PA-97 starting just five years later.

Now that’s an airship.
Image: Frank Piasecki, US Patent 4,591,112

The gas bag is elongated and aerodynamically suited for higher-speed flight. Gone are the twin ‘flying banana’ copters; instead we see a quartet of gondolas with helicopter-type rotors. Notably the patent specifies “two or more”– but it’s the quadcopter configuration that appears in the figures of the patent and was ultimately built. These rotors are to provide propulsion and direction to the craft, as much as lift– that was to be handled by the gas bag, though like the long-lost Navy blimps the intention was to “fly heavy” and let much of the load be taken up by the rotors.

The key reason to use helicopter rotors on an airship, as the patent describes, is for controllability: by altering the collective and cyclic pitch of multiple rotors, instant torque is available to control the pitch, yaw, and roll of the aircraft. It looks like a modern hobby quadrotor, but because the helistat has cyclic control, it can fly forwards without leaning the whole blimp forwards.

The Piasecki corporation proposed two variants of the concept in 1975: a smaller 75-ton version, designated project X-97-0004, and the X-97-0011 “Gargantua” which was actually pitched to NASA for the Shuttle Carrier Aircraft project. “Gargantua” would have used four CH-53E “Super Stallion” heavy-lift helicopters with a gas bag just slightly smaller than the USS Macon– indeed, internal documents have the caption “four CH-53 and Macon”. In spite of that caption, it was actually shorter than the Macon by a full hull section.

It is likely that this would have been a rigid design, though the only figure I was able to track down only shows two ring girders, fore and aft of the cargo bay that– I cannot emphasize enough–was meant to hold an actual Space Shuttle Orbiter. Well, most of it: the wings would have been flush with the bottom of the gas bag. The 140-ton capacity “Gargantua” was of course never built, which is both immensely disappointing and probably for the best. The design for the 75-ton version also sat on a shelf until it was scaled down far enough to interest the US Forest Service in 1979.

Note the Orbiter for scale, and allow your mind to boggle.
Image: Piasecki Aircraft Corporation

The Flying Forest Service

With concept art this good, what could go wrong?
Image: Piasecki Aircraft Corporation, via the Lyncean Group of San Diego

I did say everything about this aircraft was bizarre, including the agency that commissioned it. As near as I can tell, this is the first and only time the US Forest Service has gotten into the business of building aircraft. Teething problems were perhaps to be expected.

The idea isn’t crazy– by 1979, helicopter logging was a proven concept, limited largely by the lift capacity of existing helicopters. Most of the old-growth timber in the USA was, even by that point, located in the mountain west where building logging roads is prohibitively expensive or downright unsafe. Helicopters are, of course, thirsty beasts when lifting large loads. The hope was that the Helistat would be far more fuel-efficient and pay for itself thereby.

Indeed, the Forest Service optimistically anticipated making most of their money back off the development programme. It was believed that over a three-year test period, the 25-tonne lift Helistat would be able to harvest $19.7 million worth of timber, against a total programme cost of only $25 million.

Twenty five million, to develop a whole new class of aircraft. Even in 80s dollars, that seems absurdly optimistic, doesn’t it? Well, we did say the Forest Service really hadn’t done this before. Teething problems were bound to happen, and those teething problems drove the cost up to a hundred million by the end of the project in 1986.

It’s hard to see where the money went, though: it certainly wasn’t into the airframe. The gas-bag, as mentioned above, was essentially dumpster-dived from US Navy stores. The four piston-powered Sikorski H-34J helicpoters had been retired over a decade before, and it’s alleged that they were pulled from the boneyard specifically for this project. There are even allegations online that the rickety-looking aluminum framework holding the helicopters to the gas bag was made with scrap metal! Given that Frank Piasecki was apparently into his Red Green era, I would not at all be surprised to find out that holes in the ex-Navy gas bag had been patched with duct tape.

The PA-97 in its hanger at Lakehurst
The light-coloured patches probably aren’t duct tape, but it would be on-theme at this point. That might be why the gas bag reads “Forest Service” — the US Navy was distancing itself from the project by the end.

The ZPG-2W gas bag that they found had a volume of 1,000,000 cu.ft (28,317 cu.m), providing up to 55,851 lb (25,334 kg) of aerostatic lift when inflated with helium. The remainder of the Helistat’s 107,051 lb (48,558 kg) gross weight was accounted for by the dynamic lift provided by the four Vietnam-era helicopters. Since the empty weight was less than the aerostatic lift– only 54,885 lb (24,895 kg), the helicopters would be responsible only for propulsion and vectored thrust until the helistat picked up its first load of logs. Alas, that never happened.

The Last Flight of the Helistat

Unlike many new designs, the PA-97 did not crash on its first flight, or even its second. Fifteen untethered flights demonstrated that the concept worked: even without modern fly-by-wire to link the helicopters, the craft was controllable. With a pilot and four flight engineers at the controls, the Helistat could take off, it could hover, it could fly, and it could land.

So what happened? What it couldn’t do was withstand its own vibrations. On what was to be the last test flight on the first of July, 1986, a gust of wind started a shimmy in one of the four free-wheeling casters that the craft used as landing gear. Think of a shopping cart with a shaking wheel. Just like the shopping cart, there was nothing to dampen the wheel shimmy, so it progressed. The pilot took off, but by that point the vibrations had already started into the airframe, triggering some kind of resonance mode that the helicopter engine or rotor contributed to. It’s also possible that the shaking of the airframe triggered “ground resonance”, a destructive shaking of the helicopter rotor. In any case, the Helistat literally shook itself apart, as one helicopter decoupled from the airframe, followed quickly by the other three.

Like most accidents of this nature, it’s easy to diagnose the faults in hindsight. A proper vibrational analysis should have been performed on the airframe– that would be fairly trivial today, but Piasecki Helicopters hadn’t yet computerized in the early 1980s. Vibrational analysis of that nature is far from trivial to do by hand. Contemporary critics decried the “slide-rule engineering” at work in the project even before the accident, and it’s likely it contributed to the disaster. Even just fitting a damper to the casters, on general principles, could perhaps have avoided the crash.

There were two casualties that day: test pilot Gary Oleshfski, and the very concept of the Helistat. The program, which was already far over budget, was immediately cancelled. As the meme goes: if I had a nickel for every type of aircraft whose entire class was discredited by a single example crashing at Lakehurst, NJ due to an avoidable design fault, I’d have two nickels. Which isn’t a lot but it’s weird it happened twice.

No Second Chances

Rendering of a Skyhook helistat over a pipeline
The SkyHook might have flown by 2014, if it wasn’t for the credit crunch.
Image: Boeing.

Piasecki Aircraft Corporation sought to find another patron to finish the design after the crash. They had been shopping it around to the construction, oil, and shipping industries along with the military before things went pear shaped. Their patent expired in 2003, and a Canadian company called SkyHook attempted to revive the Helistat concept, but a combination of the history of the crash and the sheer weirdness of the concept kept investors at bay, in spite of a partnership with Boeing. The SkyHook was perhaps also a victim of remarkably bad timing, as they were ready to start construction in 2008, a year not known for easy credit.

Still, we recently saw [rctestflight] demonstrate what you can do with collective control on a quadcopter– all you’d need to do would be strap a balloon to it, and you’d be most of the way to reviving the Helistat. If anyone tries that, please send a tip, and we can argue which is more of a hack: that hypothetical project, or the time a guy bolted four helicopters to a busted old blimp.

New Linux Kernel Rules Put the Onus on Humans for AI Tool Usage

2026-04-14 19:00:39

It’s fair to say that the topic of so-called ‘AI coding assistants’ is somewhat controversial. With arguments against them ranging from code quality to copyright issues, there are many valid reasons to be at least hesitant about accepting their output in a project, especially one as massive as the Linux kernel. With a recent update to the Linux kernel documentation the use of these tools has now been formalized.

The upshot of the use of such Large Language Models (LLM) tools is that any commit that uses generated code has to be signed off by a human developer, and this human will ultimately bear responsibility for the code quality as well as any issues that the code may cause, including legal ones. The use of AI tools also has to be declared with the Assisted-by: tag in contributions so that their use can be tracked.

When it comes to other open source projects the approach varies, with NetBSD having banished anything tainted by ‘AI’, cURL shuttering its bug bounty program due to AI code slop, and Mesa’s developers demanding that you understand generated code which you submit, following a tragic slop-cident.

Meanwhile there are also rising concerns that these LLM-based tools may be killing open source through ‘vibe-coding’, along with legal concerns whether LLM-generated code respects the original license of the code that was ingested into the training model. Clearly we haven’t seen the end of these issues yet.

Audio Reactive LED Strips Are Hard

2026-04-14 16:00:45

Back in 2017, Hackaday featured an audio reactive LED strip project from [Scott Lawson], that has over the years become an extremely popular choice for the party animals among us. We’re fascinated to read his retrospective analysis of the project, in which he looks at how it works in detail and explains that why for all its success, he’s still not satisfied with it.

Sound-to-light systems have been a staple of electronics for many decades, and have progressed from simple volume-based flashers and sequencers to complex DSP-driven affairs like his project. It’s particularly interesting to be reminded that the problem faced by the designer of such a system involves interfacing with human perception rather than making a pretty light show, and in that context it becomes more important to understand how humans perceive sound and light rather than to simply dump a visualization to the LEDs. We receive an introduction to some of the techniques used in speech recognition, because our brains are optimized to recognize activity in the speech frequency range, and in how humans register light intensity.

For all this sophistication and the impressive results it improves though, he’s not ready to call it complete. Making it work well with all musical genres is a challenge, as is that elusive human foot-tapping factor. He talks about using a neural network trained using accelerometer data from people listening to music, which can only be described as an exciting prospect. We genuinely look forward to seeing future versions of this project. Meanwhile if you’re curious, you can head back to 2017 and see our original coverage.