| Before on the right, after on the left. |
| Used a fan dial to allow manual operation if desired, and used a $3 eBay circuit board powered from a 5v USB adapter (clock is maintained by a coin cell) to turn the relay on and off. |
It's been fun to get a crash course in a whole lot of new equipment. I've worked on the following:
1) Timer controlled relays to manage motor controllers for pumps
2) Frequency derating for solar inverters to allow excess solar power to be properly controlled
I was also tasked with setting up internet at the farm. Recently, a 4G tower was put into operation a few kilometers away, and I discovered we could get fairly fast internet on top of the water tower. From there, I learned more about point-to-point 802.11n bridges, subnet masking and port forwarding, and have cobbled together a fairly reliable wireless network that provides internet access to 6 different areas on the farm, and automatically controls data usage through a quota system (using free software!)
When COVID-19 became serious, I was asked to adapt the concept of tippy-taps (touchless hand washing) to our local context. An afternoon of trial and error led to a cheap and effective solution using easily obtained materials. A set of two tippy-taps (one for soap, and one for water) costs less than $2. Through a gofundme type website in France, Beer Sheba was given around 10,000 euro to use for COVID-19 relief, and part of that was used to supply over 400 tippy-tap wash stations to families in villages around the farm. We organized the production and distribution of over 20,000 masks and many kilos of moringa powder (to support the nutrition/immune systems of elderly villagers).
| Tippy taps using 13¢ bottles, 17¢ foot pedals, 38¢ string, 5¢ rebar. |
I was amazed at the generosity of folks wanting to support relief efforts here when there was so much need in their own countries.
There's a lot more happening, but will have to wait for the next post (hopefully sooner than two years from now)
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