Several years ago I watched a viral YouTube video that starred Jerry the Dachshund, whose engineer owner had built him his very own automated ball launcher. I had two dogs at the time, and was also unemployed with some time on my hands, so I decided to try my hand at building one.
After a few days rummaging through some junk boxes, I hacked together a slingshot-style automatic ball launcher that actually worked! It was pretty busy with parts though, and nearly 5 feet long. I wanted to go simpler.
Then on Discovery Channel’s Prototype This I saw a small spring mechanism that I just “knew” would work in larger form for my launcher. It was based on a gearmotor that rotated an offset peg on a wheel. The peg pushed a whacker rod around the wheel and against a spring, until it reached a point where the rod could spring back freely the other way, whacking the ball. I had to build it, and build it I did. Now you can too.
The Fetch-O-Matic is the third and best version yet of this configuration. It will launch a tennis ball through the air about 25 feet with enough velocity to bounce and roll on for another 20–30 feet. It runs on 12–18 volts DC, so cordless drill batteries are an ideal rechargeable power source.
Steps
Step #1: Cut the wood pieces.
Next


- Download and print the PDF templates at full size.
- Cut the 1/2" plywood as shown in wood_cutting_ guide.pdf. Start by cutting the length of the 4' sheet and cutting out the two 20" squares.
- Mark points 1/4" in from all 4 sides of the top and bottom panels, 2", 6", 10", 14", and 18" from either edge. Drill a 1/8" hole at each mark.
- Decide on a top and bottom panel. Mark the center of the bottom piece and follow lower_motor_mount_template.pdf to mark the 3 surrounding holes. Or print the template, cut out the hole centers, and align and tape it over the board’s centerpoint, to mark the other 3 hole centers.
- TIPS: With the hole saw and spade bits, drill only halfway through one side, then flip the board over and use the center hole as a guide to finish drilling from the other side. This makes for a cleaner hole with no splintering.
- Drill as perpendicular to the surface as possible. For best results, use a drill guide block or a drill press.
Conclusion
This project first appeared in MAKE Volume 31, page 98.




































































The 1/2″ hole is centered on the aluminum tube.
Like so, eh? So that the center of the hole is 3/8″ from the top, left, and bottom edges?
_____________
|
| O
|____________
(3/8″ from the hole to each edge)
Many thanks!
ebay,
98-07 Lincoln Continental,Sable,Taurus Wiper Motor
Where can we get the pdf files?
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