Dave at work in his studio |
Dave Cranmer is one lucky man. He is doing the job he loves and has dreamt about since he was 8 years old. In his workshop in East London he designs and builds all kinds of remarkable, bizarre and beautiful machines – an orrery composed of 1970s calculators, a badger-based theremin, a shocking pink metallic musical pig, a rack of gently bobbing gnomes and a synthesiser propelled by pedal power being just a few.
Almost all have music or sound at their heart, and include a fine menagerie of animals. Dave’s creations incorporate owls and kestrels, pigs and badgers, some expertly stuffed – and not just with electronics. He even works under the name ‘Nervous Squirrel’ – chosen for his website “because it wouldn’t be too descriptive, so that it could stay neutral as my interests changed over time. Thank goodness I wasn’t making knitted egg cosies at the time!”, Dave says.
Badger theremin |
So who exactly commissions musical stepladders or pyramid synths? Some of Dave’s work is for a workshop that provides special effects for film and TV, while others are projects for commercial clients, marketing and advertising agencies. For example, last year he made a dispensing machine for Southern Comfort involving drums, trumpets, LEDs, a high grade pumping system, copper piping and an Arduino microcontroller. The result was a unique piece of alcoholic engineering that irreverently captured the spirit of the beverage’s New Orleans roots.
Southern Comfort dispensing machine |
May contain nuts ... and bolts, and toggle switches
“My background is in product design and engineering, although I have always enjoyed making things”, Dave tells us. “I was lucky enough to have plenty of Lego as a kid, and also used to go to car boot sales to buy radios and things to take apart. I am inspired by learning about new materials, tools and manufacturing techniques, and also the fun of making things to entertain people.”
Each Nervous Squirrel invention features intricate circuitry, audio visual components, gears, motors, fasteners and fixings. They are also all finished to an incredibly high standard, so it is not surprising Dave has a huge requirement for products from Rapid. “The main reason for buying from Rapid is the price, particularly buying parts in bulk. For example, stereo switching audio jacks work out incredibly cheap if I buy over 100”, says Dave. “I try and keep a good stock of everything I commonly use, and replenish in plenty of time before running out of parts. This is often a good way of building up an order so as to take advantage of free delivery over £30, which usually arrives the next day. Repeatability of orders is useful, and so I often design with parts stocked by Rapid in mind.”
In recent years Dave has been getting to grips with new prototyping and microcontroller hardware, and he is excited by the role ‘the internet of things’ could play in his work in the future. But you sense there will always be an analogue spirit to what he does. With such an array of toggle switches, controls, buttons and sockets, there is something about Dave’s inventions that appeal to the knob twiddler in all of us; the urge to turn it up to 11, create strange new sounds and celebrate ‘the art of noise’.
www.nervoussquirrel.com