This Flux Capacitor Alarm Clock Means You'll Never Be Too Late to Get Back to the Future

Powered by an Espressif ESP32 in a 3D-printed housing, this flux capacitor at least means you won't miss the next lightning strike.

Semi-pseudonymous maker Jéjé l'ingé (Jéjé the Engineer) has published a guide to building your very own flux capacitor from Back to the Future — but one which operates as a functional alarm clock, rather than driving the user backwards or forwards through time.

"It's an alarm clock and once the alarm goes off," Jéjé explains, "it randomly plays sounds from the BTTF [Back to the Future] soundtrack. Setup/Stop button set[s] the alarm time, hour + minute button activate[s] or deactivate[s] the alarm ('0' alarm off, '1' alarm on)."

If you've ever wanted to wake up to the dulcet tones of Doc Brown, this flux capacitor clock is exactly what you need. (📹: Jéjé l'ingé)

The body of the flux capacitor is, naturally enough, 3D-printed then painted to give a metallic finish roughly matching the prop seen in the film franchise. Short addressable RGB LED strips are inserted in the iconic Y shape, then placed behind diffusers and decorated with fake coils.

The electronics are driven by an Espressif ESP32 module, connected to an MP3 board with its own microSD storage and a 40mm speaker plus a red seven-segment four-digit display for the time. Buttons are also included for controlling the clock, including a five-minute snooze mode should you not be quite ready to get back to the future when the alarm triggers.

The full build guide is published to Instructables, with downloadable STL files for the 3D-printed parts; the source code, which includes a choice of hard-coded offline operation or a connected web portal version, is available on GitHub under an unspecified license.

Gareth Halfacree
Freelance journalist, technical author, hacker, tinkerer, erstwhile sysadmin. For hire: freelance@halfacree.co.uk.
Latest articles
Sponsored articles
Related articles
Latest articles
Read more
Related articles