Guides to DIY Educational Solar Toy
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Nowadays girls do not like to play dolls. They cannot be satisfied only with adorable dolls. Boys do no play ordinary toy cars or bbguns. They are favored with puzzles and some games which involve themselves and parents. Those are DIY toys. DIY toys involve kids and parents in a great degree, which need parent and kids work things out together. Discussions, encouragements and brainstorm. It can be a lot of fun.
Mini Solar Energy Smallest Racing Car Solar Powered Car Toy
Here is one popular educational solar toy: solar powered toy car.♦Solar Powered - No batteries required.
♦Solar panel covers the entire roof, and makes this baby fly.
♦Excellent for demonstrating solar power in action.
♦About the size of a quarter.

The Mini Solar Racer is a toy car which claims to be the world's smallest solar powered toy car. The solar panel allows the car to move from eco-friendly solar energy when the car is placed either in sunlight or under a bright artificial light. The Mini Solar Racer is a helpful toy to demonstrate both the abilities of solar power and the advancements in technology that allow a solar powered car to be made to such a significantly small size.
Steps to DIY Solar Powered Toy Car
A solar powered toy car can be built with materials readily available at any major hobby shop and is an excellent way to demonstrate the application of solar energy. The car is basically a piece of foam sitting on four wheels. On one side of one of the axles is a drive pulley. The drive pulley is connected by a rubber band to a motor shaft pulley on the motor, which rests on the top side of the foam. Above the motor, held at a 45-degree angle, are two solar cells connected to the motor by alligator clips.
1. Clamp the pager motor into a vice so that the weight at the end is held but the motor itself is free. Place a pillow under to motor to catch it as you work.
2. Cut a 1/3-inch section of a paper clip and hold it so that the uncut end rests on the center of the weight of the motor's axle. Give the sharpened end a light tap with a hammer to drive the axle back out. The motor will fall onto the pillow. Repeat these steps with the second motor. Use identical motors so your car does not spin in circles.
3. Solder wires to both connecting leads from each motor. Remove a wheel from the building block set and glue it over the axle with the glue gun so that it rotates freely. Make the wheel perpendicular to the motor's axis. Wait for the glue to cool. Repeat with the other motor using an identical wheel.
4. Glue the two motors to one end of the tongue depressor to form the front wheels of the vehicle. Glue them at the block to which the wheels are attached, not at the wheel itself, to allow them to spin freely.
5. Attach the 6 solar panels by applying the glue to the tongue depressor and then setting the panels in the glue. Make sure there are leads to these solar cells that allow you to hook them up without soldering directly onto the cell. Wire the solar cells in series and connect them to the motors. Do not solder or trim wires until you have tested the way in which the motors are spinning when the solar cells are in bright sunlight.
6. When the motors spin in the correct direction, solder all connections and trim off the excess wire.
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