T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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394.1 | servo input signals (source and destination) | LEDS::LEWIS | | Thu Dec 10 1987 11:08 | 97 |
|
> First, could someone please explain a servo in it's intricate little
> details? I've seen somewhere in this file that you feed them power
> and a 'control' signal, but what is the control signal and what
> is the mechanical response?
In all of the servos I've used, you give them +5v, ground, and a
TTL level control signal. The control signal has an active-high
pulse once every 20 to 25 milliseconds. The width of this pulse
determines the servo position. In my Futaba, the pulses are roughly
0.75 microseconds wide for one end of the servo throw and 1.75
microseconds wide for the other end. WARNING : each servo manufacturer
has a different pinout for the 3 wires that go to the servo! It
is easy to apply reverse voltage if you're not careful.
Inside the servo there is a DC motor that turns the output shaft
and a pot linked to the output shaft. The resistance of the pot
is the feedback signal to the servo loop. The controller generates
an analog voltage proportional to the width of the incoming pulses,
compares that to the feedback and drives the motor accordingly.
With standard servos you get about 90 degrees of total throw, with
retract servos you get more like 180 degrees I think.
> Also, I imagine most of them have a
> rotary output, with a mechanical linkage to turn that into a push
> or pull, is this right?
Right.
> Also, I'd really appreciate a technical discussion of radio controls
> and what the control signals that are passed back and forth
> are.
For the non-PCM systems it's very simple. In the transmitter, each
channel has a pot whose resistance is proportional to the stick
position. The encoder creates a pulse for each channel, the width
of the pulse being proportional to stick position. The pulses for
each channel are time-multiplexed to a single pulse stream, and
this repeats every 20 milliseconds or so. I.E. - every 20 milliseconds,
there are seven pulses (for a seven channel system). The only other
thing the transmitter does is modulate a carrier (AM or FM) with
this pulse stream and transmit it. With the AM systems they use
100% amplitude modulation, i.e. when the pulse is "high", the
carrier amplitude is zero. I don't know what modulation frequencies
they use in FM.
The receiver demodulates the pulse stream from the carrier, then
demultiplexes it into one pulse stream per channel (a one-shot
is used to sync-up with the beginning of each new pulse stream
and start the demultiplexer at the right place). Each signal is
then sent to the appropriate servo, which will convert pulse width
to position (a linear relationship). The end result is servo arm
position proportional to transmitter stick position.
I can't tell you specifics about how they do it with PCM, as I
haven't opened one up. I would assume they have an A/D converter
in the transmitter which samples each stick position, producing
an n-bit binary value for each channel. This would then be time-
multiplexed to combine all channels in a single bit stream and
modulated on the carrier. The receiver would then demodulate the
carrier, sync on the signal, and D/A convert each n-bit value
for each channel. I assume the resulting control signal to the
servos is the same as the old way, but can't swear to it.
> 1 - Manual operator controls read by control point computer:
>
> 2 - Base computer talks to remote computer via radio link,
> maybe along something analogous to an RS-232 link (as
> I know how to handle that):
>
> 3 - Remote computer controls servos and such.
>
> Can this be done, and if so, what's the highest baud rate (or
> equivalent) I could get out of the link?
I'm not sure you need the remote computer. Just have the base
transmit the servo position information like RC transmitters do.
Then all you need remotely is the receiver and servos. You *could*
do a remote computer link using this kind of system at slightly
better than 300 baud, it just depends on how much effort you're
willing to put in. One word of warning - you must use ground
frequencies, not aircraft frequencies, and if you do up your
own computer link you must make sure the newly modulated signal
does not violate adjacent channels. Hope you have access to
a 100MHz spectrum analyzer!
Good luck, hope this helps.
Bill
P.S. look at the Signetics NE5044/5045 encoder/decoder chip set
for an idea of how the encoding and decoding schemes are
implemented. These chips are used in my Airtonics system
and are in my Signetics data book.
|
394.2 | question about RF path | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Thu Dec 10 1987 17:54 | 18 |
| Thanks, Bill, that was just what I was looking for! I do have access
to a spectrum analyser, but I'm not sure I want to play those kind
of games.
I always thought that each 'channel' used a different radio frequency,
but it sounds like everything is just time multiplexed onto a single
bit-stream. How fast is that single digital channel allowed to change
state? Would it be OK to use your own coding? I sort of doubt you
could stuff a bit-stream from a UART into it without some kind of DC
restoration (Manchester or something), so I guess maybe synthesizing
the pulses at the base end would be better. How many channels can you
get in a single radio?
Thanks, I'll look at those chips and see if this makes any sense!
Willie
|
394.3 | answer about bandwidth use | LEDS::LEWIS | | Thu Dec 10 1987 21:07 | 37 |
| > I always thought that each 'channel' used a different radio frequency,
> but it sounds like everything is just time multiplexed onto a single
> bit-stream.
Right! That's why they only need one carrier per system.
> How fast is that single digital channel allowed to change
> state?
If you want to stay within one channel you have 40Khz
bandwidth to play with until 1991, when it becomes 20Khz.
Of course you could use more channels if you're not going
to be sharing air-space with other RC'ers. Come to think
of it, I'm speaking for the air frequencies. I don't know
how the car/boat frequencies are spaced, or how 1991 affects
those frequencies. Any car/boaters out there know?
> Would it be OK to use your own coding?
Sure, the RC manufacturers don't own the encoding scheme. All
you have to do is stay within the bandwith limits.
> I sort of doubt you
> could stuff a bit-stream from a UART into it without some kind of DC
> restoration (Manchester or something), so I guess maybe synthesizing
> the pulses at the base end would be better. How many channels can you
> get in a single radio?
The most I've seen is 8 channels, usually for helicopters.
> Thanks, I'll look at those chips and see if this makes any sense!
No problem - if you need a copy of the specs let me know, I'll
send them.
Bill
|
394.5 | correction to text in .1 reply | LEDS::LEWIS | | Fri Dec 11 1987 11:31 | 11 |
|
There is an error in my first reply (.1) ...
> determines the servo position. In my Futaba, the pulses are roughly
> 0.75 microseconds wide for one end of the servo throw and 1.75
> microseconds wide for the other end. WARNING : each servo manufacturer
"Microseconds" should read "Milliseconds". Oh well, I was only
a factor of 1000 off!
Bill
|
394.6 | It's all falling into place, neat! | SNDBOX::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Fri Dec 11 1987 11:38 | 6 |
| Thanks Bill, I found the chips and looked things over, and between
the ancoder, the decoder, and the servo chip, it all falls into
place. Looks like my best bet is D/A converters driving the
transmitter box unmodified.
Willie
|
394.7 | lots of channels | LEDS::WATT | | Fri Dec 11 1987 16:02 | 8 |
| Bill,
I thought those pulses were narrow. You could get lots of channels
in there with a 20ms update rate and less than 2 us per channel.
Somehow, I think you might need more than 20Khz bandwidth in the
channels though.
What's a milli-micro between friends
|
394.8 | modulation is on the wide spaces between narrow pulses | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Fri Dec 11 1987 16:33 | 8 |
| Turns out the pulses are narrow, but the Pulse Width Modulation
is done on the space between pulses, not the width of the pulse.
The timing in the Signetics book looks a bit bizarre till you figure
that out, but then it kind of makes sense. At 20 KHz bandwidth,
you should be able to move a 10 kilobit ssignal (or 9600 baud, if
you want a standard baud rate), but I doubt it would be that easy.
Willie
|
394.9 | not space width on signal to servo | LEDS::WATT | | Fri Dec 11 1987 16:45 | 16 |
| The modulation is not done in the spaces. The width of the pulse
is the position information for that channel. The chip in the servo
converts the pulse width to a position command for the servo control
loop. The pot in the servo is the position reference for the output
shaft. In the standard servos, the pot is hooked directly to the
output shaft, and the motor drives the output shaft through a large
gear reduction. I would stick to the standard modulation scheme
so that you don't have to fool with the servos. You could send
additional information over the channel in the time when the pulses
would be sent for unused channels. If you maintain the required
spacing between frames that is required to sync up the receiver's
demultiplexer, you could send anything you want for most of the
frame if you need only a couple of RC channels for servo control.
CHarlie
|
394.10 | Rx decoder maps from space width to pulse width | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Fri Dec 11 1987 17:55 | 10 |
| Well, we are both about half right. Looking at the Signetics spec
shows that the encoder generates a signal that encodes the pot position
(or input voltage, which is usually the same thing) in the spaces
between the pulses, but the decoder sends a signal to the servo
in which the pulse width does the encoding. As long as it all works,
the exact details of the 'magic' in between aren't too important,
input voltage or pot position translate directly into servo position.
I'll probably end up sticking with the standard modulation scheme.
Willie
|
394.11 | what is a 'dual rate' radio? | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Mon Dec 14 1987 10:31 | 5 |
| One more radio question: What are 'dual rate' radios and why would
you want one?
Willie
|
394.12 | Dual rate transmitters | MURPHY::ANKER | Anker Berg-Sonne | Mon Dec 14 1987 10:36 | 12 |
| Re:< Note 394.11 by SNDCSL::SMITH "William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith" >
Dual rate transmitters allow you to select between two
different levels of control surface throw at maximum stick
deflection, usually on just two controls. I think it's most
normal on elevator and ailerons. It's extremely useful to be
able to select between very high sensitivity to stick movement
and a lot less. I usually put it on low when I instruct and keep
it on high for myself. The most common mistake I have observed
is giving too much control, particularly when in trouble.
Anker
|
394.13 | more detail on modulation scheme | CLOSUS::TAVARES | John--Stay low, keep moving | Mon Dec 14 1987 11:16 | 25 |
| Its kind of difficult to see from the diagrams, but the actual
transmitted pulse is about 300 microseconds wide. The spacing
between the LEADING edges carries the position information, and
varies in theory from 1 to 2 milliseconds, with 1.5 milliseconds
being neutral. The reason that there are only 8 channels in the
20 or so millisecond (it can be as little as 15 milliseconds)
frame rate is that there is a 10 or so millisecond pause between
frames. So the transmitter puts out the eight 300 millisecond
pulses then "rests" for a 10 millisecond period. Of course, this
is the modulation; the carrier is on for the full period.
The pause is called the sync pause and is used by the decoder to
determine where channel 1 starts. The decoder contains a missing
pulse detector to find the pulse and reset the channel decoder
string.
BTW-- as I found out the hard way, if you only transmit, say, 3
channels, the 15-20 millisecond frame rate still holds. This is
because the servo decoders are set up for that frame rate. They
go crazy if you transmit information pulses to them at a higher
rate.
Fred Marks' book Getting The Most From Your Radio Control System
is invaluable in its coverage of technical detail. And its
straight from the horse's mouth.
|
394.14 | I stand corrected | LEDS::LEWIS | | Tue Dec 15 1987 09:39 | 22 |
|
> Its kind of difficult to see from the diagrams, but the actual
> transmitted pulse is about 300 microseconds wide. The spacing
> between the LEADING edges carries the position information, and
> varies in theory from 1 to 2 milliseconds, with 1.5 milliseconds
> being neutral. The reason that there are only 8 channels in the
> 20 or so millisecond (it can be as little as 15 milliseconds)
> frame rate is that there is a 10 or so millisecond pause between
> frames. So the transmitter puts out the eight 300 millisecond
> pulses then "rests" for a 10 millisecond period. Of course, this
> is the modulation; the carrier is on for the full period.
Right you are! I guess my memory didn't serve me right - I
just took another look at my Futaba on a scope and the modulated
waveform agrees with what you said. Oh, and thanks for saying
"300 millisecond" when you meant "300 microsecond", I feel
better now!
Thanks for the correction -
Bill
|
394.15 | don't mess with your transmitter | LEDS::HUGHES | Dave Hughes (LEDS::HUGHES) NKS-1/E3 291-7214 | Wed Dec 23 1987 13:25 | 10 |
| re: previous discussions about transmitter modifications
Remember that radio transmitters are regulated by the FCC (Federal
Communications Commission). There are regulations about frequency,
power, and encoding/encryption of information. I am not familiar
with the specific regulations around the 72/75 MHz R/C channels,
but my recommendation is that if you don't know the regulations
you had better not modify any transmitter.
Dave Hughes
|
394.16 | Define 'modify'? | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Wed Dec 23 1987 13:58 | 7 |
| How would you define 'modifying the transmitter'? If I have a computer
driving a D/A converter, connect the resulting voltage to the encoder
where the pot goes, so I can 'fly by wire', would that be legal,
or am I supposed to stay completely outside the case?
Willie
|
394.17 | beginner question #83 | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Wed Dec 23 1987 14:02 | 9 |
| Also, if I buy a 7 channel radio, do I get 7 analog channels, or
do I get 4 analog channels on 2 sticks and 3 on/off channels?
Is it possible to buy the transmitter and receiver as a package
without the servos? I want to get the best, highest power, ball
bearing servos (maybe sail winch servos or something), which would
mean I would have to toss the servos included with the package...
Willie
|
394.18 | better safe than sorry | LEDS::HUGHES | Dave Hughes (LEDS::HUGHES) NKS-1/E3 291-7214 | Wed Dec 23 1987 14:57 | 13 |
| re: .16
I would be careful about changing anything that drives the transmitter
section. I just don't know what the regulations are, so I can't
advise what would be ok. Changing the input to the modulator could
cause problems in the transmitter portion. For example, rise times
of input signals alter the bandwidth of the transmitted signals
- there are specs for the rise and fall times. Unless you're sure
you know what you're doing, I'd stay out of the case.
Regards,
Dave
|
394.19 | Don't want to drive the transmitter directly. | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Wed Dec 23 1987 15:44 | 19 |
| I'm not sure I'd be modifying the transmitter section or anything
that directly drives it. I wan to change from:
A pot that delivers a varying voltage level to the encoder (that
in turn drives the transmitter).
to:
A D/A converter that delivers a variable voltage to the same
place that the pot did. The only difference is that the rise times
of the signals into the encoder (not the transmitter) could probably
be faster.
When I speak of the encoder I mean the thing that takes analog
signals from joysticks and pots and produces that time multiplexed
PPM/PWM signal that is then sent to the transmitter. I suppose
I could always bring it in and check with our new spectrum analyzer.
Willie
|
394.22 | experience with ACE Tx module | CLOSUS::TAVARES | John--Stay low, keep moving | Thu Dec 24 1987 13:18 | 20 |
| .20: The editor is illiterate; a common fault...
.21: I've used the ACE transmitter module several times. When
you buy it you will get an instruction sheet that tells you the
modulation voltage level (I think its 7V; its been a while).
As you probably know, exceeding the specified modulation level is
very much a no-no with the FCC. As long as you don't do this,
and don't fool with the transmitter tuning coils, you are in Fat
City.
Is that module good??? Well, ACE claims that don't need to
change it to meet 1991 specs! Its the one I'll put into my
Futaba when the time comes.
Also worth considering is their "digital commander" modulation
board. I think they're selling it as an experimenter's board.
This is a simple way to get the AD's output into the transmitter
in an acceptable form. When I built my transmitter I used this
circuit but I modified it for CMOS chips. It is very resilient
to being fooled with and produces a nice output waveform.
|
394.23 | Going into xmitter there is no problem | LEDS::LEWIS | | Thu Dec 24 1987 14:04 | 16 |
|
> A D/A converter that delivers a variable voltage to the same
> place that the pot did. The only difference is that the rise
> times of the signals into the encoder (not the transmitter) could
> probably be faster.
I don't think you'll have any problem with this. The encoder
sees the pot output, or your D/A output, as a DC level (relative
to the frequency the decoder is running at).
RE: the question about 7 channel systems, most of them have 6 analog
channels and one on/off (retracts). Four of the channels are on
joysticks and two on slide pots (on top, side or front of xmitter).
Bill
|
394.24 | Servo travel? | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Mon Jan 04 1988 11:32 | 9 |
| While we are on the subject of servos, what is the usual servo traval
in degrees? I've seen some servos specified in time to make a 60
degree swing, but there must be more traval available. I'm
specifically interested in the servos that come with (or are an
extra price option, precision servos? What's the difference?) the
Futaba 7 channel FM dual-rate radios, as I'm planning on ordering
one in the near future.
Willie
|
394.25 | Radio kits any good? | RDGENG::NODDLE | Keith Noddle - CSSE, Reading, UK | Tue Jan 05 1988 07:27 | 9 |
| I have noticed that there are several radio "kits" on the market
here in the UK and I'd guess the same is true just about everywhere.
Question: how difficult are these things to build and what do you
get for your money (ie. do they make economic sense)?
Keith
P.S. I joined DEC on the strength of my S/W background although
I am not unfamiliar with a soldering iron...
|
394.26 | I RECOMMEND BUYING, NOT BUILDING..... | GHANI::CASEYA | THE DESERT RAT (I-RC-AV8) | Tue Jan 05 1988 10:14 | 30 |
| Keith,
The average kit is rather straightforward and reasonably easy to assemble,
assuming some familiarity with electronic component identification, average
dexterity and [**most importantly**] above average soldering skills and know-
ledge regarding handling of delicate solid-state/IC components. As a rule, the
critical RF section(s) is/are preassembled negating the need for a scope and
other exotic [expensive] test equipment for final tuning/alignment though some
basic equipment, e.g. VOM/DVM, will be required.
I've built many electronic kits from my high-school days on and consider myself
[in all humility] very good at it and a more than adequate solderer, having
taught mil-spec soldering on several occasions. And, I've built a coupls servo's
and various [ACE] pieces of support equipment [tachs, chargers, etc.] but I much
prefer leaving the assembly of my radio to the factory who have automated assem
bly/soldering equipment and the QC and testing resources [unavailable to the kit
builder] to assure a quality system.
The cost differential is too insignificant for me to consider; a complete,
ready-to-fly, kit built system will cost within $20-to-$50 of a factory-built
item and "can," believe it or not, frequently cost "more!" Look at the price of
the new generation of "Challengers, Conquests," etc.; you just can't build a kit
that cheaply. It's just my opinion, but I prefer to spend the extra coupla'
bucks and apply my expertise to airframe construction and the homework, i.e.
maintenance, care and feeding of the system, etc., required for crash-avoidance.
I've only lost 4-aircraft in nearly 25 years of radio modeling [no boast, just
fact], which, I believe, speaks well of factory built radios so I see no reason
to "do it myself."
Adios cuzzin', Al
|
394.27 | I've built; I'd now buy | CLOSUS::TAVARES | John--Stay low, keep moving | Tue Jan 05 1988 10:32 | 12 |
| Having built the ACE Silver Seven receiver and a couple of ACE
Bantam servos, I have to agree with Al; the time could be better
spent. Especially with those nice Airtronics servos on the
market for less than the ACE servo kit! The only thing I will
add to Al's commentary is that the work is small and delicate.
The receiver board is packed solid with components, and the servo
board is just as bad. I use an industrial grade soldering iron;
if I had to use the garden variety soldering iron it would've
been much harder.
My eyes have dictated that I've built my last servo board, but I
may tackle the ACE 1991 receiver in a couple of years.
|
394.29 | Choosing frequency: roll dice? | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Fri Jan 08 1988 14:48 | 10 |
| One more silly question about radios and then I'll buy one and find
these things out by playing:
What frequencies would you reccommend for ground use in the
Acton area? I'm not planning on racing against anyone, but would
like to stay away from busy frequencies or those with lots of
interference from other sources. Should I go for one of the channels
that just opened up, or what?
Willie
|
394.30 | ASK YER' FELLOW MODELERS......... | MAUDIB::CASEYA | THE DESERT RAT (I-RC-AV8) | Fri Jan 08 1988 15:47 | 18 |
| Willie,
First ** AND "MOST" IMPORTANTLY ** , you !! MUST !! buy a radio
on a frequency dedicated to surface [boats/cars] use ONLY! If you
already knew this, excuse the reminder but this is EXTREMELY im-
portant! Yer' best course for determinig best/least used/clearest
frequency is to ask around the local tracks, hobby shops, etc. or
simply observe which seem to be the busiest channels, most trouble-
free, etc. I realize that that's what yer' doing in the notes_file
but there's no substitute for observing what goes on in the actual
dynamic environment to intend to operate in.
All [legal] channels currently in use should be exclusive-use
frequencies but some "may" be better than others...the only way
to be sure is to inquire of the modelers who are currently familiar
with yer' particular local situation.
Adios, Al
|
394.31 | I need interference hints from noters. | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Fri Jan 08 1988 19:57 | 17 |
| Al,
Thanks, I was aware of the 'surface only' requirement, I don't
want to be dropping planes out of the sky that I'm not even aware
of. I'm not really into the modelling community, so I don't know
what hobby shops are in the Acton area, and I've only talked to
a couple of other modellers, neither of whom are very near here.
I'm initially planning on running the model around the grounds here
at my apartment complex and maybe graduating to the sand pits out
back, so I probably don't have to worry about conflicting with other
surface vehicles. I was hoping some of the Acton residents who
read this file might have some hints on frequencies. Worst case
I'll just call Tower and see what they have in stock, starting with
the higher channels (the ones just recently allowed).
Willie
|
394.43 | servo maintenance | CLOSUS::TAVARES | John -- Stay low, keep moving | Wed Feb 17 1988 11:39 | 19 |
| That brings up something I've been avoiding, the subject of servo
maintenance. The most likely reason the servo locks up is that
the feedback loop from the pot is broken due to a dirty pot, or a
defective one. A secondary reason is that the transmitter is
putting out an out-of-tolerance positioning signal, hardly
likely in this case -- but I've bent a few servos that way in my
experiments.
The "books" say that you should clean and lube the pot yearly;
I've had a guilty conscience for not doing this -- now I strongly
suspect that no one else does it either. But if there is a
true-blue soul out there, who does lube pots, (and flosses
regularly): What do you use for lube, and just how much trouble is
it? I know that you can buy the lube from ACE -- is that the
only place to get it?
It may be a couple of days before I see this reply, I've got to
see my Perodontist. If you don't know what that is, you're not
as old as Al.
|
394.44 | servo maintenance in years long gone | MAUDIB::CASEYA | THE DESERT RAT (I-RC-AV8) | Wed Feb 17 1988 12:58 | 28 |
| John,
Back in the dark ages when we were running Bonner Transmite/Digimite
servos, maintenance was a "verrrry" necessary evil. At least once
a month [during active flying periods], you had to take all the
servos out of the plane, disassemble them and clean the wire-wound
feedback pots with alcohol, then lube with a fine film of silicone
grease and reassemble and reinstall in the plane. This was a nasty,
time consuming "CHORE" but it was mandatory if you wished to prevent
the guaranteed crash which "would" occer if you got lazy.
With the advent of ceramic pots, carbon button wipers, etc., etc.,
I, quite frankly, thought servo maintenance/pot cleaning was a thing
of the past and, indeed, I haven't cleaned a servo in years,
subscribing to Kevin's "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" theory.
Now, either I've been extremely lucky or the "books" are exaggerating
the need for such maintenance. I, quite honestly, can't remember
the last time I had a servo fail, for "any" reason, and would have
to be convinced of a "real" need before I'd consider returning to
the distasteful chore of servo maintenance.
I fly Futaba, exclusively, and, perhaps, other makes of radios/servos
are less tolerant than Futaba, but I can't admit to knowing "anyone,"
including the "ultra"-cautious Kent Walters, who does any kind of
routine maintenance on their servos. I remain to be convinced of
this necessity.
Adios, Al
|
394.46 | Don't repair servo pots | LEDS::WATT | | Thu Feb 18 1988 08:08 | 7 |
| The pots on modern servos are not designed to need any PM.
If a pot gets flakey causing the servo to chatter or hunt, it should
be replaced. Vibration is the major cause of servo failures due
to gear wear and possible broken wires.
Charlie
|
394.33 | Futaba impressions... | SNDCSL::SMITH | William P.N. (WOOKIE::) Smith | Wed Mar 02 1988 17:52 | 20 |
| Just thought I'd add a quick note here on the Futaba transmitter.
This has to be the _most_bizarre_ PC board it has ever been my
priviledge to encounter. When you open the case you are confronted
with a cheap looking single-sided phenolic PC board with no
plated-thru-holes, no solder mask, no silk screen for component
locations, just normal parts and lotsa jumpers (to make up for the
fact that it's only single sided). Carefully working around the
rats' nest of wires and pulling the board out gives you a view of
the back side of the board, which transports you to a completely
different world: There you find surface mount parts, solder mask,
surface mount jumpers_for_gloz_sake, and one of the highest-tech
looking pieces of hardware around. Really wierd....
BTW: The transmitter module wasn't too hard to figure out with
a scope, does anyone have a source for the NE5044/NE5045 chips so
I can take a shot at building my own encoder module? It's looking
like that might be a bit easier than trying to interface to the
Futaba encoder....
Willie
|
394.34 | source for NE5044/NE5045 chips | BSS::TAVARES | John -- Stay low, keep moving | Wed Mar 02 1988 18:16 | 5 |
| Both Ace and Digi-Key stock them. Also get a copy of Fred Marks'
book Getting the Most From Your Radio Control System. He has
extensive information on the Silver Seven encoder/decoder which
he designed. I assume you have the Signetics info, if not, let
me know.
|
394.37 | Differential servo motion control. | OPUS::BUSCH | | Thu Jun 30 1988 12:00 | 17 |
| Last night I was installing the aileron servo on a PT-40. The instructions call
for mounting the pushrods at +/-45� off center so that you get a "differential"
motion control on the ailerons, ie., the ailerons will travel further in the up
direction than in the down direction. The problem is, in this configuration, the
maximum servo rotation one would want is +/-45� while the servo actually wants
to deliver +/-90�. If you picture the pushrods mounted on the wheel at 7:30 and
at 10:30 (on a clock face) and the trailing edge to the right, at 3:00, if I
rotate clockwise more than 45� the one at 7:30 goes past 9:00 and actually
starts to go in the opposite direction again. At a full 90� rotation, I end up
with full up on one of the ailerons and neutral control on the other one. Is
this correct, or should I do something to limit the travel of the servo? I
thought of modifying the resistance of either the pulse width forming circuitry
in the transmitter or of the feedback circuitry of the servo. What I need (I
think) is a dual rate capability for the transmitter, but that isn't one of the
features of the Futaba 4 channel Conquest.
Dave
|
394.38 | Strange servo? | IOENG::JWILLIAMS | Zeitgeist Zoology | Thu Jun 30 1988 12:10 | 4 |
| Your servo goes +/- 90 degrees? The ones I've seen only go +/- 45.
Have you actually verified that your servo goes +/- 90?
John.
|
394.39 | servo travel can be over-ridden | SNDCSL::SMITH | TANSTAAI | Thu Jun 30 1988 12:48 | 5 |
| Most servos will turn much further by hand than they will when driven
by a standard transmitter. If you do have a servo that will do
180 degrees when driven 'normally' I'll trade you even for an S-148!
Willie
|
394.41 | as pulse width varies, which way goes the servo? | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Fri Mar 03 1989 16:09 | 21 |
| This question may apply more to car RC than airplane because of
the reverse switches I have seen on airplane RF transmitters
(maybe there the same switches on the CAR RC pistol controllers
and I havent seen them).
If using the servo signal to control a motor speed controller,
which way would be forward and which way reverse?
I am assuming for the moment that 2.0 msec would be max forward,
1.5 neutral and 1.0 max reverse. The only reason this matters
is that I plan to provide 4 functions for motor speed control
with this one signal: forward linear from about 1.6-2.0msec, neutral
binary from about 1.4-1.6msec, brake binary from about 1.2-1.4, and
reverse analog from 1.0 to about 1.2msec. As you can see simply
reversing the motor leads would not make things right if I guessed wrong.
I am definately at a disadvantage designing this thing without
a car, transmitter and receiver in hand.
Thanks,
Walt
|
394.42 | Should Work Either Way | LEDS::WATT | | Mon Mar 06 1989 08:56 | 11 |
| Walt,
Most radios have reversing switches on the transmitter that
make it possible to have throttle movement affect the pulse width
in either direction. I would guess that the most straight forward
way would be increasing pulse width = increasing forward speed.
You want to put a delay on reverse to prevent damage to the car
if the stick is shoved back. The futaba speed control has maybe
one second delay so that you get instant braking but not reverse.
Charlie
|
394.45 | retract servos and the ACE device | LEDS::LEWIS | | Wed Oct 18 1989 14:15 | 47 |
|
Eric stopped by to play yesterday at lunchtime. We happily noted
that it was cold and rainy outside, so we wouldn't be flying even
if the hunters weren't stalking the CMRCM field!
He brought along his JR PCM-9 with the intent of adding a slow-down
circuit like I had put in my Futaba. Charlie tore himself away from
work to join the fun, and we ended up drawing a pretty good crowd
of people who are sick of debugging disk drives.
We ripped the PCM-9 apart and quickly found that the retract channel is
a digital input (as opposed to my FGK, which is an analog input).
We concluded that we would have to take one of the analog aux channels
and wire it to a retract switch so we could add the RC delay circuit.
At this point Eric decided to take a closer look at the ACE servo
pacer he had purchased, and was surprised to find that it performs
the exact functions he needed. We left the PCM-9 in its original
configuration.
The servo pacer is used with a regular servo, not a retract servo.
I learned yesterday that retract servos are not proportional, just
one end or the other. So it's impossible to slow them down without
modifying the servo itself. So how do you get the additional throw
of a retract servo (close to 180�) with a standard servo (about 100�)
so you can slow down the rate? Happily the answer was right under
our noses.
The servo pacer detects from the incoming pulse stream when you have
thrown the retract switch, and synthesizes _new_ pulses to the
servos. So the servo end-points are not limited by the pulses
sent out by the transmitter, they are set by two pots in the servo
pacer. These pots allow close to 180� throw.
If your servo does not have mechanical stops that prevent it from
going more than 100�, you are all set. Using the pacer, the standard
JR servo was able to travel about the same amount as the retract servo.
A third pot in the pacer sets the rate of movement, so you can make
the retract last several seconds if you want.
The servo pacer has the disadvantage that you have to add something
inside of your airplane, so I still prefer the transmitter solution,
but it is a neat little device, small and lightweight, and not much
circuitry.
Bill
|
394.47 | external servo control | WRASSE::FRIEDRICHS | Kamikaze Eindecker pilot | Wed Sep 19 1990 17:50 | 11 |
| Does anyone know of any device(s) on the market that allow you to
control a servo without the tx/rx turned on??
I had all kinds of engine problems at Rhinebeck and it would have been
great to work on the engine without tying up the frequency...
(read-only noters, feel free to send me mail on WRASSE::FRIEDRICHS)
thanks,
jeff
|
394.48 | Ace made one.. maybe they still do. | STOSPT::EATON | Dan Eaton St.Louis,MO,USA, 445-6522 | Wed Sep 19 1990 23:19 | 5 |
| Hi Jeff,
Ace RC used to make a box that you could plug a servo into and control
it without needing a transmitter and reciever. I can't find my ACE
catalog or I'd tell you whether or not they still make it and how much
it cost.
|
394.49 | servo test/control devices | BRAT::RYDER | perpetually the bewildered beginner | Wed Sep 19 1990 23:31 | 27 |
| >> Does anyone know of any device(s) on the market that allow you to
>> control a servo without the tx/rx turned on??
There are two classes of such devices --- one is a servo exerciser, and
the other is a local manual control. The technology is trivial, and
there are devices on the market. e.g.
Automatic Servo Exerciser (kit) $18 to $35 (what the market will bear)
H&N Electronics 619-373-8033
10937 Rome Beauty Drive
California City, CA 93505
I would guess that to scratch build a manual servo control would cost
about $4 plus [old] battery pack plus connectors. It would have a dual
555 to generate a pulse every 20 ms and to vary (via a potentiometer)
this pulse in width from 1 to 2 ms. This is what you want.
I've considered building a random exerciser to test servos for dead
spots after a severe landing. This would generate a random pulse
width, hold it for a second, and go on to another random width. In an
hour it should test at least once almost every possibility for a dead
spot.
The two functions can be combined in one device. I'm not sure exactly
what the device from H&N Electronics does.
Alton, who has more projects on file than time to do tiddly
|
394.50 | Airtronics Feature | LEDS::WATT | | Thu Sep 20 1990 09:06 | 11 |
| My Airtonics Chanpionship raidios both have this feature built in.
There's a plug on the back of the TX that you use with a cord that's
included with the radio. You plug the cord into the charge plug and
leave your tx turned off. Now, when the receiver is turned on, you
have control of all of your servos without transmitting any RF. THe
only problem with this is most clubs require that your TX be in the
impound unless you have the frequency pin. I've never used the feature
for this reason.
Charlie
|
394.51 | Airtronics 94151 servo autopsy | ELMAGO::TTOMBAUGH | A Fistful of Epoxy | Wed Aug 14 1991 14:12 | 44 |
| Here's what I've found, doing the autopsy on the four Airtronics
94141 servos that were in my Legend crash:
The two all-metal gear,later model came through okay. Actually,
even these use a plastic gear as the first one after the motor out
put shaft.
The earlier model used a second plastic gear, further downstream
in the middle of the gear train. This second gear stripped in two
servos.
I bought two replacement gear sets (STICKER SHOCK ALERT !) @ $20
per, half the price of a new servo.
I thought I could replace only the stripped plastic gear with the
new metal one, and save the other gears in the set for later use.
BUT, I discover that the base of the final output shaft, the one
with the splines on top for the arm, was also bent causing slight
but noticeable wobble.
So I replaced all the gears in both servos.
Now arrives a baffling problem that spent 2+ hours diagnosing:
After reassembling with the new gears, both servos would rotate
smoothly, but only in one direction. When they reached full travel
one way, they would lockup solidly. I disassembled/reassembled
many times, compared with a known good servo, etc. and just
couldn't see anything wrong.
In desparation I plugged them into the rcvr. and powered up.
Now, one works perfectly, the other is stilled jammed. The good
one under power, still jams under hand rotation. What the....?
Anyway, it turns out that the recessed hole in the top of the case
that receives the top of the gear shaft in the next-to-last output
stage, gets elongated slightly with sufficient side load impacts.
The gear train itself will be working ok, but the shaft cocks
over in the elongated hole and binds up the gear train when it reaches
full travel on one side.
If the elongation isn't too bad, it will work under power but not
by hand twisting.
The fix is to replace the top of the case. Cases are ~$3.50, so
it's off to the hobby shop to order two new ones.
Any crash hard enough to strip gears or break output arms , warrants
close investigation in this area, even if no other symptoms arise.
Terry
|
394.52 | 94141 servo arm screws | ELMAGO::TTOMBAUGH | A Fistful of Epoxy | Thu Aug 15 1991 11:23 | 15 |
| I decided to use servo savers on my flap servos on the new Legend.
I have the CRP, or CPR, or PRC brand, whatever, they come in a yellow
package at $3.00 per and fit all Airtronics non-micro servos.
The body of the servo saver where the screw goes through is too
thick to use the stock screw that comes with the servo.
The 94141 uses a machine thread *3 MILLIMETER* screw because of
the metal output shaft.
At my local hobby shop I was able to find a 3 mm machine thread
screw in the R/C car section where they have boxes of them; servo
savers being all the rage on R/C cars. They are twice as long as
the stock screw and go down into the output shaft a safe distance.
Terry
|
394.53 | 5102 = s-133 + metal gears | RANGER::REITH | Jim (RANGER::) Reith - LJO2 | Mon Feb 24 1992 13:52 | 6 |
| Somewhere in here is a discussion of the metal gear Futaba micro servo
announced last year. They've recently come available for about $53
(list is $79.95) I got a futaba catalog at the WRAMS show and they use
the same case as the s-133 so the answer is yes, you can upgrade your
133 to metal gears. (same replacement part number for the cases). The
bad news is that the catalog lists the metal gears at $39.95 list!
|
394.54 | Tower lists S5102s for $47.97 | RANGER::REITH | Jim (RANGER::) Reith - LJO2 | Mon Mar 09 1992 07:43 | 3 |
| Another data point on the 5102 metal gear micros. Tower has them listed
for $48 in the latest Tower Talk. Still no "actual" price on the gear
trains themselves for retrofitting 133s.
|
394.55 | Repairing Futaba S9601s without buying new gearsets | GAUSS::REITH | Jim 3D::Reith MLO1-2/c37 223-2021 | Fri Jul 16 1993 09:05 | 15 |
| Last night I tore down my stripped S9601 servos to replace the stripped gears.
These are coreless servos with one metal gear. In all three I stripped it was
the main shaft gear that was stripped. This gear had two holes 180 degrees
apart that tabs from the motor fit into. 90 degrees from this is a "bump" that
sticks up. The place where they all stripped was opposite the bump. the bump
prevents you from rotating the gear 180 degrees to fix the problem. Since the
servo only moves this main output gear under 180 degrees, I trimmed the "bump"
off carefully with a knife and reinstalled it 180 degrees from original. The
missing teeth now don't come in contact with the rest of the gear train and I
get a second life out of the output gear. You can only do it once but since I
had three stripped servos and two replacement gear sets, I figured it was worth
a shot. Moving the servo with the case top off showed that the servo didn't get
to that point. This bump provides the mechanical stop when the servo is
unpowered. This is also a trick I hope to remember when I strip one at a
contest since it only took 10 minutes to do and could be done as a field repair.
|
394.56 | Small world! | MR4DEC::ANKER | Anker Berg-Sonne | Fri Jul 16 1993 14:12 | 8 |
| Re: <<< Note 394.55 by GAUSS::REITH "Jim 3D::Reith MLO1-2/c37 223-2021" >>>
Jim,
I did exactly the same thing at a contest 2 weeks ago!
It works like a charm.
Anker
|
394.57 | Wish they sold the single gear 8^) | GAUSS::REITH | Jim 3D::Reith MLO1-2/c37 223-2021 | Fri Jul 16 1993 14:17 | 4 |
| Yeah, the only possible problem I can see is that it allows over rotation
of the servo when unpowered which might be a problem. It wouldn't be a
problem if the surface had some mechanical stop that prevented it but as
a loose servo you need to watch it.
|
394.58 | | CIM::LOREN | I <heart> OOPS | Wed Aug 10 1994 22:20 | 19 |
| As good a note as any...
I've got a few extra s148 servos that I would like to convert to sail
winches. I can get the behavior I want (multiple revolutions both
clockwise and counterclockwise, neutral stick = stopped) by cutting the
feedback pot shaft and cutting the rotation limiter stops off the final
gear. My only issue now is that the 'deadband' is still pretty small.
I would like to increase it so that only major stick movements would
cause the servo to move. Ideally, the trim on the transmitter should
have no effect - the servo would remain motionless regardless of trim
setting. I figure that the deadband can probably be changed by new
resister and/or capacitors on the board, but I have no schematics and
I'm left with 'reverse engineering' (read: trial and error) to get the
desired deadband.
Any constructive advice?
Loren
|
394.59 | info on servo IC NE 544 available | FRUST::HERMANN | Siempre Ch�vere | Thu Aug 11 1994 06:41 | 10 |
| hi loren,
if you look at the IC on the pcb and see it of type NE 544 i can supply
schematics/info which is the deadband r/c combination.
else only try and error will help, but with the few components you should
be able to do it that way as well.
cheers
joe t.
|
394.60 | We replaced it with a 10 turn pot | APACHE::BRADOR::ZUFELT | V12 @13k music to my ears | Thu Aug 11 1994 10:10 | 20 |
| We used a 10 turn pot instead of the original. This is hooked to the
end of the wintch pullies, servo on one end, pot on the other with an
extention wire feeding back into the servo electronics.
You take out any stop teeth on the gears in the servo. This will give
10 turns of your servo for the same movement on your stick making it
less sensitive. We did this type of system when we first started sailing
in the early 70's using a kraft set, I believe a 15H servo, Maybe
wrong it was a long time ago.
I would think that the 148 would be pretty marginal power,although a
pully will require less power than an arm.
We sail Marble Heads (52 inches) and for sure a 148 wouldn't have
enough power.
Happy Sailing
Fred
|
394.61 | | CIM::LOREN | I <heart> OOPS | Fri Aug 12 1994 04:06 | 2 |
| The 10 turn pot seems just the ticket for my application. Great idea.
Thanks...
|