“The big risk for me was that since everything needed to build the projects was already free would enough people want to buy kits? As it turns out this has worked quite well. I sell enough kits to make it viable while not getting so busy that it would become a full-time job.”
His website, he says, “is here for all those people today who were like me back in the day; hungry for knowledge, keen to learn and enjoy building things and experimenting themselves.” You can see why his site is so popular with designers, hobbyists and electronics students – each project page scrolls and scrolls with tips, step-by-step instructions, snippets of code, schematics, diagrams, photos, video, web screengrabs – anything, in fact, which will help people build and understand the projects.
One also only has to glance at Pete's YouTube channel to see the fanbase he has built; several of his videos have received over 100,000 views, and he is proud that many of his projects have found their way into some interesting end products. His LED chaser projects have been incorporated into automotive lighting and fancy dress costumes, such as a 2,400 LED suit worn at the Burning Man festival in Nevada, while the Gantry Race lighting system has started kart and car races at circuits on both sides of the Atlantic.