@mikejollie661751 - this was just on breadboard... My advice is to try each step at a time... first make sure you are driving the digipots correctly from arduino by using a meter on them. Try using a normal pot of same resistance to check you can make the motor move before trying with digi pot.
I was using 5V... but these particular motors have a low number of steps (I think only 12 step in a full turn) so a single step gives a useful deflection. Does your step motor have more steps? I guess 100 or more is more usual, but would not be very usable for something like this
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AnGeL21689 8 months ago
oo thanks you hear from me
mikejollie661751 1 year ago
I try to do the same but it does not, what do you use for pcb?
mikejollie661751 1 year ago
@mikejollie661751 - this was just on breadboard... My advice is to try each step at a time... first make sure you are driving the digipots correctly from arduino by using a meter on them. Try using a normal pot of same resistance to check you can make the motor move before trying with digi pot.
hotchk155 1 year ago
I was using 5V... but these particular motors have a low number of steps (I think only 12 step in a full turn) so a single step gives a useful deflection. Does your step motor have more steps? I guess 100 or more is more usual, but would not be very usable for something like this
hotchk155 1 year ago
Wich voltage did you put to energising continually?
I try to do it too, but I can't get '1 Step`. just a little movimente - like a vibration.
Help-me here please?
Fredasp 1 year ago