The DC motor's speed is controlled by PWM. You need to experiment around with different frequencies. Timing, if you can call it that,is taken care of by the IR led and detector setup actually. The lasers trigger when the IR beam is blocked so you don't really need to do any synchronization
well, a fan motor is quite efficient and dirt cheap. no contacts, no friction. and they are designed to run continuously practically for ever. you'll be surprised at how torquey these things are actually.another good thing is that they give u a large rotating platform on which to mount the mirror, as long as you can center the thing(tricky)
i used acrylic mirrors- they weigh next to nothing. and the hexagonal former is a hollowed out aluminium hex bar turned on a lathe.
well, its about 1800 rpm. i tried something along those lines too initially- i tried using a cd rom drive motor but settled for a cooling fan in the end.. let me know how your project shapes up! i'd be very interested to know :)
Thank you! THe text flickers because of the refresh rate of my camera, just as it might when aimed at a CRT monitor. It is pretty stable to the naked eye.
I don't understand how you got the timing working... it seems as though DC motors are unreliable at keeping constant speeds.
vdub350 2 years ago
The DC motor's speed is controlled by PWM. You need to experiment around with different frequencies. Timing, if you can call it that,is taken care of by the IR led and detector setup actually. The lasers trigger when the IR beam is blocked so you don't really need to do any synchronization
shakirfm 2 years ago
heres a great task for ya. make the digits display near multi color using 5 green lasers as well as the 5 red. should be interesting!
hellsmaw84 2 years ago
GREAT work!
youngnewtonian 2 years ago
This makes me happy that I chose EE, very inspiring. Thanks!! Very cool project!
MrWampus 2 years ago
@MrWampus: Thank you. Your comment made my day :-)
@rwert41: Thanks :)
@mamamaster2: I have absolutely no idea, sorry. Some generic trance mp3 I discovered on my hard disk a long time ago
shakirfm 2 years ago
nice work :)
qwert41 2 years ago 3
name of the song
mamamaster2 2 years ago
well, a fan motor is quite efficient and dirt cheap. no contacts, no friction. and they are designed to run continuously practically for ever. you'll be surprised at how torquey these things are actually.another good thing is that they give u a large rotating platform on which to mount the mirror, as long as you can center the thing(tricky)
i used acrylic mirrors- they weigh next to nothing. and the hexagonal former is a hollowed out aluminium hex bar turned on a lathe.
shakirfm 3 years ago
well, its about 1800 rpm. i tried something along those lines too initially- i tried using a cd rom drive motor but settled for a cooling fan in the end.. let me know how your project shapes up! i'd be very interested to know :)
shakirfm 3 years ago
Whats the reason you went with fan motors instead of cd rom motors?
The device I'm spinning is probably going to be pretty heavy so i need a strong motor, I'm not sure a fan would cut it.
hapoo82 3 years ago
Whats the rpms on the motors? I was working on a similar project and wanted to use a hard drive motor.
hapoo82 3 years ago
Sweet! Does the text blink or is it just some interference with your camera?
Love this type of projects :)
Adolphsson 3 years ago
Thank you! THe text flickers because of the refresh rate of my camera, just as it might when aimed at a CRT monitor. It is pretty stable to the naked eye.
shakirfm 3 years ago
Pretty cool . Good job
Charanms 3 years ago
splenind stuff shakir!!!
ADI1987TYA 3 years ago