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| Robotics Chat Specific to discussions about robots and the making of. |
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#1 (permalink) |
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New Member
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Anyone know of a reasonably priced velocity sensor to be used on a hobby-grade R/C car?
We're trying to program the car to go specific distances, but any elevation change makes a timing structure fall apart. I'm stumped... |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Experienced Member
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Alberta, Canada
Posts: 3,775
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As in measuring the number of wheel rotations? Is this an electric or nitro? If it's electric, brushed or brushless?
THe most power plant independent way of doing (best simple:reliable ratio) is to sense the number of wheel rotations and take into account the radius of the wheel and assume no slip. At the speeds and accelerations of RC cars though, no slip may not be such a valid assumption.
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Disclaimer: Avatar for entertainment purposes only. Last edited by dknguyen; 29th April 2008 at 08:56 PM. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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New Member
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It's electric, and we're running it at relatively slow speeds, so no-slip conditions would be a safe asumption.
And yes, the number of wheel rotations, or even some ratio of it would be fine. The only velocity sensors I can find so far seem to be relatively proprietary and work only on specific robot kits offered from some hobby establishments. Last edited by ZX3ST; 29th April 2008 at 09:39 PM. |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Experienced Member
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Alberta, Canada
Posts: 3,775
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Since the wheels on hobby grade cars are on suspension, it might not be so easy to mount something stare at the wheels and watch their rotation- dirty and dangerous for whatever is doing it. Your best bet might be to watch the motor's rotations and take into account the gearing and wheel radius. THere will be of course errors in the initial measurements of the gearing and wheel radius as well as changes in those measurements as they wear and deform. This will cause an unbounded error that will go to infinite over time swamping the actual measurements- but that's always the case when you are making relative measurements.
What does your motor look like? It probably has a tiny little shaft coming out the rear end that you could probably mount an encoder disc to, then you mount a sensor to watch it to see how fast it spins. http://www.geology.smu.edu/~dpa-www/.../encoders.html Or use GPS if you are outdoors +/-10m is small compared to the distance being travelled.
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Disclaimer: Avatar for entertainment purposes only. Last edited by dknguyen; 29th April 2008 at 09:56 PM. |
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