The "ToAsTOr"
Introduction
I wanted to make a small
quiet computer for use as an MP3 server, DVD player, surfing,
and occasional gaming. I also wanted it to be small enough
to fit in a bag so that I could take it to friend's houses
or to work. When I set out to build this bread and butter
computer ;-) I found the Mini-ITX form factor motherboards.
I wanted to build something unique. I thought I would go to
the antique stores and find something cool to rebuild as a
computer. I wanted something built out of metal for RFI and
EMI shielding.
I thought that a toaster would be cool and
have the DVD/CDRW open out of the toast slot. The problem
is that all of the toasters were too small to use a full size
hard drive, video card, LCD, etc... Then I found a large toaster
(1960 General Electric) with a sizeable crumb tray/warmer.
This monster toaster used 1200 watts! So, I had to open a
business account to buy the EPIA motherboard at the only place
in Atlanta that has them. I then took it to the antique store
to determine if it would fit. It would fit but only if the
mobo was about an inch off the crumb tray. When I went to
purchase the toaster the salesman mentioned something about
whether or not it worked. I told him that it did not matter
I was going to toss the inner workings and make something
crazy. I pulled out the motherboard and he said, "You
are going to make it into a robot?" I snickered and said,
"no, only a computer!" I have skills, but damn -
a robot? :-) I never tried it to see if it still worked as
a toaster.
This is what the toaster looked like before
I started.
This shows the mailbox mounting straps I used
to strengthen the cdrw/dvd bracket. Also, The two fans are
blowing up directly above the two blue vents to suck in some
cool air and blow it out the toast slot. You can see the mounting
of the cold cathode and the LCD screen.
The narrow gap between the harddrive and the
cdrw/dvd is about 1/4 inch at one edge. The brackets that
are visible from the outside are covered in auto trim blackout
tape.
You can see the cold cathode light and the
edge of one of the fans blowing air up toward the toast slot.
The cold cathode and the transformer that
is mounted on top of a floppy blank to insure it never touches
the metal walls.