DiY Oxygen Concentrator based on the OxiKit platform.
Read about the project on Hackaday.
You can contribute on the Ketto fundraiser page
- M19 Oxykit Master sheet tracks the city-wise coordinators, tools, FAQs etc.
- BOM M19 Oxykit sheet lists the master Bill of Materials (BOM) along with city-wise BOM
- Starting a community lab document and Build List for Labs sheet for lab onboarding information and coordination.
- Labview testbench is a testbench executable developed by Fracktal Works, useful for tuning the performance of your concentrator prototypes.
- Computer-aided Design/Engineering for design, version control and simulation data related to the OxiKit and its iterations. Committed to open-source and open-innovation.
- Electronics for all things electronics, including comprehensive design and development data of DIY Oxygen Analyzer subprojects.
Open a terminal on your computer. Run
git clone https://github.com/MakersAsylumIndia/M19_OxiKit && cd M19_OxiKit
git submodule update --init --recursive
The repository shall be available on your computer. To periodically update the contents,
cd M19_OxiKit
git pull
git submodule update --init --recursive
Fork this repository. You can find the command for this on the top-right of the webpage. This shall create a personal, updateable copy of this repository on your github account.
On your computer terminal, run
git clone https://github.com/<your-username>/M19_OxiKit && cd M19_OxiKit
git submodule update --init --recursive
Add your contributions to this repository and save on github.
cd M19_OxiKit
git add .
git commit -m "<your-commit-message>"
git push origin
To contribute your work to the M19 Collective, open your repository in a browser and issue a pull request from your repository to the one at Makers' Asylum.
Licenses
CERN Open Hardware License Version 2 - Strongly Reciprocal (CERN-OHL-S-2.0).
MIT open source license.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.