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Hey all, I want to place a pickup truck on one of my roads, open the hood, and place a suitable smoke unit in the street below the truck so it appears to be steaming / broken down. (The tow truck will be there too with some people discussing /looking at the engine).  I'll have it on a timer so it runs 30 secs or so.  Do you have any recommendations as to smoke units (and if possible a link for a good resource where to get it)?   Do I need fan driven?  Seuthe?  I want sufficient production so guests will take notice of the breakdown without having to be right on top of it.   Also if you know of some figures that might be appropriate, leads on those also very much appreciated.

Thanks in advance!

Last edited by ScottV
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I would go with a fan drive.  You can mount it under the table and just drill a hole to have it blow out from under the hood.  Depending how blown you want the car to look, either drill a hole and run the hose to the top, or let the smoke unit exhaust under the car and have smoke from anywhere. The fan drive will also have some pressure behind it, so the smoke will look more like the radiator let go or something, as opposed to a seuthe which will just wisp out some smoke.

A Ps1 smoke unit board can take higher voltages (and AC) because the step down is on the board.  The later units get power from the command control circuitry, so you need to feed it small amounts of DC.

Last edited by Boilermaker1

Always a great scene, especially on older era vehicles. Do you want billowing smoke so that it appears the vehicle is engulfed with smoke? Or whisps of overheating? A Seuthe unit could be placed under the car, a blower unit with a hose you must be sure there is nowhere in the hose for liquid to puddle and block the airflow. To refill you just lift up the car in either case.

I'd go with the fan-driven PS1 unit if you can find one.  As noted above you can run it on 12V DC which of course is what you'll probably use for one of those eBay ~$5 timer modules that can be programmed to cycle 30 sec (or whatever) ON and 5 minutes (or whatever) OFF.  If you can only find a PS2/3 unit with separate fan and heater drive, you can use eBay $1 DC-to-DC voltage regulator modules to efficiently drop the 12V DC to the heater-resistor and fan-motor voltages.

Sounds like a fun project!  And speaking of "sounds", if you have figures standing about, why not have the timer also turn on a DC-powered sound module (eBay ~$5 in parts) with the hissing sound of a leaking radiator and dialog.

Just ordered the fan driven smoke unit and the truck.  The only thing that I haven't been successful finding are sound clips of some mechanics having a discussion about a breakdown, or of the broken down truck's radiator hissing.  (Found one hissing clip, but they want a minimum subscription to a site making it the most expensive component of the scene).  Not gonna happen.   

I readily found many "free" MP3 steam radiator hissing sounds.  Even a youtube video for which there are several "free" converter programs - search "youtube to mp3 converter":

Many choices in sound modules.  There are all-in-one modules where you press a record button and it has a built-in mic to record/save a 30 second (or whatever) sound.  Then press the play button and it plays the sound over a built-in speaker.  Simple and effective.

I was thinking of the ones that play MP3 files from a micro-SD memory card.  For example:

mp3 audio for a few bucks

In this case you apply DC power to the module and it automatically starts playing the MP3 sound file(s) on the memory card.  A 128 MB card is about $1 on eBay and would hold hours of sounds - more than you'd every need for a layout sound application.  Some modules can only drive earbuds so would need an external amplifier module (also about $1) but this has a built-in audio amplifier IC to drive a speaker.  

I assumed you'd need to mess with an audio editing program such as Audacity.  That is, you create your own layout sound by mixing the hissing sound with conversational clips.  Yes, finding "clean" audio conversation clips (without background music or whatever) can be hard to find.  I suggest making up some dialog and having some friends record it; hearing your own voice over and over can be un-nerving!  There is a learning curve to using audio editors so if this is a one-off, then probably not the way to go.

 

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The smoke unit is just below the truck below a flap of landscaped plaster cloth, with holes for the exhaust and fan draw.  I carefully drilled a hole from the underside of the vehicle into the engine space, cut a short piece of tubing (maybe 1/4")  on which the the truck sits to direct the smoke from the tube of the smoke unit into the engine space.

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  • forestry truck in trouble
Last edited by ScottV

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