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Switching to lollipops

It is one of those things many of us take for granted – turning on the lights when we walk into a room, flipping on the radio or the blender, but for children with disabilities that impair dexterity, these are challenging tasks.
Enter a team of Kettering students from Dr. Henry Kowalski’s Experimental Mechanics class. Armed with four and half years of engineering education, they took on the challenge of making electrical toys and common household appliances more accessible to handicapped children enrolled at Webb Elementary School in Hazel Park, Mich.

Lollipop switches, which look just like they sound—large and round and flat—normally require constant pressure to remain active, so the group modified them to include a relay with two inputs, one for “on” and one for “off.”
In analyzing the range of switches available, the group tried a variety of switch styles. “The biggest hurdle for us as a group was to find what kind of button would work best,” Denis said. “We ordered ‘lollipop’ switches that would work well because they were large and very sensitive to touch, but the switch was a momentary switch and would not keep the object turned on,” she added.

“We decided to modify the dimmer switch by removing the dimming application and adding a larger top to the switch,” said Denis, adding “we used larger lids from food containers, such as the lid off of an animal crackers container. We manufactured a larger base for the new larger button and mounted the electrical parts inside of the new base.”
The toys they adapted with modified lollipop switches included a rotating disco ball with different colored flashing lights and a mechanized butterfly with optic fiber wings that lit up, changed color and moved. “We tried to find toys that would ‘do’ something and keep their attention to help facilitate mental development,” Denis said.
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