Author |
Message |
derf
Minor Diety
Joined: Fri Apr 11, 2003 2:17 pm Posts: 7721 Location: Centre of the sun
|
Anyone handy with electonics?
|
Tue Mar 31, 2009 9:52 am |
|
|
Satis
Felix Rex
Joined: Fri Mar 28, 2003 6:01 pm Posts: 16662 Location: On a slope
|
_________________ They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
|
Tue Mar 31, 2009 12:51 pm |
|
|
derf
Minor Diety
Joined: Fri Apr 11, 2003 2:17 pm Posts: 7721 Location: Centre of the sun
|
|
Tue Mar 31, 2009 2:48 pm |
|
|
Satis
Felix Rex
Joined: Fri Mar 28, 2003 6:01 pm Posts: 16662 Location: On a slope
|
_________________ They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
|
Tue Mar 31, 2009 2:54 pm |
|
|
derf
Minor Diety
Joined: Fri Apr 11, 2003 2:17 pm Posts: 7721 Location: Centre of the sun
|
Okay...
Imagine a circuit with 1 switch and 3 solenoids. I would like the switch to fire 1 solenoid at a time, but also retract the up-coming solenoid. e.g...
Press button, solenoid 1 protrudes, solenoid 2 retracts.
Press button, solenoid 2 protrudes, solenoid 3 retracts.
Press button, solenoid 3 protrudes, solenoid 1 retracts.
Press button, solenoid 1 protrudes, solenoid 2 retracts.
Etc...
How could we do this?
|
Wed Apr 01, 2009 9:17 am |
|
|
Rinox
Minor Diety
Joined: Mon Mar 31, 2003 7:23 am Posts: 14892 Location: behind a good glass of Duvel
|
I obviously suck at real-world stuff, but I would say...use relays?
First relay should be obvious (A protrudes, B retracts), then link a second relay to the first one (when relay 1 activated, protrude B and retract C) and a third one (when relay 2 activated, C protrudes, A retracts, activate first relay again) to the second relay.
Erh...I don't even know what a solenoid is, so don't mind me if this is gibberish.
_________________ "I find a Burger Tank in this place? I'm-a be a one-man cheeseburger apocalypse."
- Coach
|
Wed Apr 01, 2009 11:33 am |
|
|
Satis
Felix Rex
Joined: Fri Mar 28, 2003 6:01 pm Posts: 16662 Location: On a slope
|
Are you wanting a purely electronic solution, or is mechanical ok too?
Given mechanical as an option, I'd probably link the button up to a circular wheel deal, so when you press the button it mechanically advances the wheel. The wheeel would have one spoke out that would contact the first solenoid. The three solenoids are equidistant and the wheel rotates 120 degrees per press.
That's the easiest way I can think of. err...unless I read that wrong, and you want 2 solenoids to contact while the third is offline. You could use the same setup, just with 2 contact points on the wheel instead of one.
For a purely electronic means, I'm not sure. My electronics class was basic.. we dealt with resisters and crap like that. Something that might help is some software we used... it's called MultiSim.
http://www.ni.com/multisim/
It allows you to play with electronic circuits.. create them, test them, measure them, etc. We used it extensively in my electronics course. If you come up with a purely electronic method you think might work, multisim would be how to test it, how to figure out specifically what components you need, and it would let you send plans to someone else to actually build the thing if you wanted to.
It's expensive, but there are alternative ways to acquire a copy. Like being a student.
_________________ They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
|
Wed Apr 01, 2009 4:02 pm |
|
|
derf
Minor Diety
Joined: Fri Apr 11, 2003 2:17 pm Posts: 7721 Location: Centre of the sun
|
Thanks man.
Unfortunately it has to be electronic. I don't have the energy, mechanically to help this.
|
Wed Apr 01, 2009 5:10 pm |
|
|
Rinox
Minor Diety
Joined: Mon Mar 31, 2003 7:23 am Posts: 14892 Location: behind a good glass of Duvel
|
I assume my suggestion made no sense whatsoever?
_________________ "I find a Burger Tank in this place? I'm-a be a one-man cheeseburger apocalypse."
- Coach
|
Thu Apr 02, 2009 1:57 am |
|
|
Peltz
Stranger
Joined: Sat Apr 12, 2003 1:14 pm Posts: 6362 Location: Estonia
|
_________________ When someone asks how rich you are, quote Rinox " I don't even have a rusty nail to scratch my butt with...!"
Be well or Get Help!!
|
Thu Apr 02, 2009 2:40 am |
|
|
Rinox
Minor Diety
Joined: Mon Mar 31, 2003 7:23 am Posts: 14892 Location: behind a good glass of Duvel
|
_________________ "I find a Burger Tank in this place? I'm-a be a one-man cheeseburger apocalypse."
- Coach
|
Thu Apr 02, 2009 3:23 am |
|
|
derf
Minor Diety
Joined: Fri Apr 11, 2003 2:17 pm Posts: 7721 Location: Centre of the sun
|
no no, none of that sillyness.
I think i need to go down the micro-controller route. Which I know squat about. I think there are kits of some kind that you can play with and program with your PC. I think actually you need 3 things..
- Programming kit (PC interface)
- Assembler language (free and simple apparently)
- Breadboards and shit
My god this is something that would take me personally maybe 20 hours, and an expert 1 hour for figure out.
I need an expert!!!
|
Fri Apr 03, 2009 9:38 am |
|
|
Satis
Felix Rex
Joined: Fri Mar 28, 2003 6:01 pm Posts: 16662 Location: On a slope
|
_________________ They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.
|
Sat Apr 04, 2009 8:36 pm |
|
|