K
Kitchen Man
Guest
On Fri, 24 Jun 2005 10:42:31 -0700, william coleman
<william.coleman@asu.edu> wrote:
indicates relative rotation, not absolute position. His example is of
a digital volume knob on an inexpensive stereo. He's got some good
answers on that - most intriguing to me is the electric motor
(generator, actually, since mechanical motion is producing current)
idea. I think using one of the cheaper optical encoders is probably
the simplest implementation.
--
Al Brennan
"If you only knew the magnificence of the 3, 6 and 9,
then you would have a key to the universe." Nicola Tesla
<william.coleman@asu.edu> wrote:
I don't think so. The poster appears to be looking for a device thatKruminilius W. wrote:
I'm trying to find the type of dial that you can turn in one direction or
the other without it stopping (unlike a potentiometer). I have no idea what
this part is called. Any thoughts?
Thanks.
It is called a pot without stops
indicates relative rotation, not absolute position. His example is of
a digital volume knob on an inexpensive stereo. He's got some good
answers on that - most intriguing to me is the electric motor
(generator, actually, since mechanical motion is producing current)
idea. I think using one of the cheaper optical encoders is probably
the simplest implementation.
--
Al Brennan
"If you only knew the magnificence of the 3, 6 and 9,
then you would have a key to the universe." Nicola Tesla