![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| | |||||||
| Robotics Chat Specific to discussions about robots and the making of. |
| | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| | (permalink) |
| Experienced Member | If one solar cell gives 20mA then many in series will also give only 20mA. If you connect a big one in parallel then it will just drain into the little ones and you won't have any output.
__________________ Uncle $crooge |
| | |
| | (permalink) |
| Moderator | I think that I will put the solar version on hold for a while. Still, the walker is in the works, and I am working on it
__________________ MechTronics |
| | |
| | (permalink) |
| Experienced Member | Today my solar garden lights were outside on an overcast day. Tonight they glowed for only about 20 minutes. There is a one-wheel robot on the internet. It balances itself. I don't think it is smart enough yet to turn around a corner.
__________________ Uncle $crooge |
| | |
| | (permalink) |
| Moderator | That is kind of pointless. A one wheeled balancing robot? Amazing!
__________________ MechTronics |
| | |
| | (permalink) |
| Moderator | what about what? I am going to just make a battery powered one now, and work on developing a solar powered one later. I want to build a sollarroller, so I am focusing on that
__________________ MechTronics |
| | |
| | (permalink) |
| Experienced Member | The solar-powered walking robot is entirely within the realm of reality for you to create. You made no claims as to the speed, duration, or other such specs of your robot, and as such there is little basis for derision of your vision. Claims that the robot will be "powerful" are entirely subjective - an ant can lift several times its own weight, does that make it powerful? The plan for a small model is a good one. I'd even go so far as to suggest the coin-shaped watch batteries over AAs to keep the robot light. The pager motor idea blueroomelectronics suggested is also a good one. I expect that it would be a reasonable (and thrifty!) plan to modify a wind-up walking toy with a pager motor, watch battery, and solor panel. Little helicopters like these are proof that "power" can come in small packages: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQez1-DxJOk That's more power than your walker robot will need, and it's just a matter of how often you want it to be able to perform. A constant, directly solar-powered robot is unlikely, but there's no shame in that. How far has NASA's latest Mars explorer travelled since it landed? One final note: the modified wind-up robot I mentioned doesn't have any plan for direction control, but how about this idea? You could mount a second pager motor vertically, with a rough sort of cam on the shaft. When the motor spins in one direction, it knocks the cam against a vertical post on the main body of the robot, hence bumping the entire robot slightly in the direction the vertical motor was spinning. When you want to rotate in the opposite direction, just reverse the vertical motor's direction so that the cam hits on the opposite side of the stationary post. No doubt some theorist on this forum will be tempted to tell you that this defies the laws of physics, but if those laws couldn't be defied, there'd be no way to spin in an office chair without your feet touching the ground. |
| | |
| | (permalink) | |
| Moderator | Quote:
The key is to get the friction and force in the right amounts. When more friction is needed you may want to stop the robot. Maybe time the strike to happen at a specific time/spot during its stride/step. Or spin up the motor while the robot is at rest and turn while moving. Or it may work without tinkering... It sounds fun. | |
| | |
| | (permalink) |
| Moderator | Yes I know! I found a solar walking robot schematic!!! ![]() My Idea was able to go into concept!!! I spent about 6 hours researching Nv Networks, and it is amazing. I can see robots coming together with the simple Nv network. I renamed the non solarwalker ARM2 Walker: Autonomous Reversing Motorized 2 (motors) Walker I may also name it if It isnt reversing just AM2
__________________ MechTronics Last edited by Krumlink; 20th October 2007 at 05:45 PM. |
| | |
| | (permalink) |
| Moderator | AM2 Walker (I am going to make it just walk forward for the first model, start out simple) Will use 2 standard sized servos that consume about 50ma at 5V. I have printed out about 200+ pages on Nv Networks, how they work, and how to use them. I highly suggest to any new hobbyist that they should definately research BEAM technology, because although the circuitry is simple, it can have very very complex behavior, such as Hider, the BEAM robot that is more complex than a microcontrolled robot in my opinion. It makes it look very attractive and very amazing: http://www3.telus.net/rfws/beam/hider/m_hidr_00.html AM2 Walker was concieved after I bought the book Junkbots, bugbots, and bots on wheels (chapter 7). I read the book throughly, gaining valuable knowledge of BEAM technology, and discovering Nv Nets. Nv Nets are a simple circuit, consisting of a capacitor, a resistor, and a inverter. It is incredible what it can do. There is just so much you can do with it, that It would be impossible for me to tell you all the posibilities you can do with it.
__________________ MechTronics |
| | |
| | (permalink) |
| Moderator | I ordered the parts last Monday and they still are not here. I wish they were, because then I could start working on it. I am going to attach solar panels in series all over the robot, then in parallel on the batteries, so it will walk and charge at the same time.
__________________ MechTronics |
| | |
| | (permalink) | |
| Experienced Member | Quote:
![]() And here's a "primitive" computer made with TTL ICs ![]() Just to do what this 1980s Z80 does ![]() | |
| | |
| | (permalink) | |
| Super Moderator | Quote:
More complex is really a very BAD point!. BTW - if you think complex is good, you might consider building an EMMA (Electonic Mime Mobile Animal) - this was a project in a VERY old issue of Practical Electronic (early 70's). As it predated logic IC's it was entirely descrete - and used a home made random noise generator - a little glass tube with some sort of silver chemicals in it (if I remember correctly?). EMMA was really the first 'robot' I'd ever seen in a magazine, and almost all of the current small robots seem based on it's design - two motors with 'tank' steering, and castors on the front. Last edited by Nigel Goodwin; 27th October 2007 at 08:15 AM. | |
| | |
| | (permalink) |
| Moderator | Yeah, I jumped the gun there. Once I get my Headers, I will solely work on uControllers, because they are so easy to manipulate. Just the programming is what will kill me in the long run. I need a good C book. Next time I go to boarders, I will look for one. Any suggestions as to what one to pick?
__________________ MechTronics |
| | |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
| | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Latest |
| My button works like magic, I only have to hover my finger over it | jimfraseruk | Micro Controllers | 31 | 13th August 2007 07:42 AM |
| IR beam circuit - need to know how it works | ant9985 | General Electronics Chat | 3 | 11th June 2006 12:53 PM |
| Randomness of 16F84 program - sometimes works somtimes doesn | FusionITR | Micro Controllers | 10 | 28th February 2006 09:05 AM |
| what works in the simulator does not work on hardware??? | spyghost | Micro Controllers | 7 | 26th May 2004 11:14 AM |
| How A Transistor Works | windozeuser | General Electronics Chat | 0 | 28th November 2003 05:04 AM |