S
steamer
Guest
--Howdy! I've been fiddling around with using a pot to position a
"servo". I'm using the teeny weeny one from Parallax that needs to be
turned with a screwdriver. The application is to drive one of those
surplus windshield wiper motors; I'm using the PWM output to send signals
to a Victor motor controller and this is working very well.
--The trouble is determining, with certainty, that the motor is in
"neutral", so to speak. What I'm trying to do is use the motor as a winch
to move a small load up and down on an art car I'm building. The winch
will position the load one way when the vehicle is in motion and in
another when it's parked. Although it's tempting to use a DPDT switch, I'd
prefer to control the rate of the load's position change with a big, easy
to grasp knob on a pot that could be located a few feet from the Stamp.
What's needed is a tactile feedback of some kind so that I know when the
motor is in "neutral", so that the motor isn't creeping. Text and photos
of project to date at: www.nmpproducts.com/artcar.htm.
--TIA,
--
"Steamboat Ed" Haas : The other night I
Hacking the Trailing Edge! : dreamed about wasabi...
http://www.nmpproducts.com/intro.htm
---Decks a-wash in a sea of words---
"servo". I'm using the teeny weeny one from Parallax that needs to be
turned with a screwdriver. The application is to drive one of those
surplus windshield wiper motors; I'm using the PWM output to send signals
to a Victor motor controller and this is working very well.
--The trouble is determining, with certainty, that the motor is in
"neutral", so to speak. What I'm trying to do is use the motor as a winch
to move a small load up and down on an art car I'm building. The winch
will position the load one way when the vehicle is in motion and in
another when it's parked. Although it's tempting to use a DPDT switch, I'd
prefer to control the rate of the load's position change with a big, easy
to grasp knob on a pot that could be located a few feet from the Stamp.
What's needed is a tactile feedback of some kind so that I know when the
motor is in "neutral", so that the motor isn't creeping. Text and photos
of project to date at: www.nmpproducts.com/artcar.htm.
--TIA,
--
"Steamboat Ed" Haas : The other night I
Hacking the Trailing Edge! : dreamed about wasabi...
http://www.nmpproducts.com/intro.htm
---Decks a-wash in a sea of words---