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Green Camera Light Questions
How should we power the lights? Can we connect them directly to the 12 volt or do we have to go through some other circuitry or get a seperate batteries.
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Re: Green Camera Light Questions
Any half-decent 12V source should do... and the main robot battery is definitely a decent 12V source. Any car battery should also do the trick.
Just remember that the camera is neither required nor the only means to find the rack.... although it is undoubtedly an exceptionally cool means of finding the rack. Jason |
Re: Green Camera Light Questions
You are going to want to put some sort of fuse or breaker in-between the battery and the light to prevent from shorting the battery directly (BAD). If you have any electrical parts lying around from previous years, just wire up a fuse block and connect the light to that.
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Re: Green Camera Light Questions
I wired all the transformers to a small terminal block that we had laying around last year. I have a black and red wire stub that I hook to my "super 40 foot aligator clips of doom" Who says you can't run the robot and the light off the same battery?
The freshmen project for this saturday will be setting up the other two lights for us :) |
Re: Green Camera Light Questions
I hooked up a pair of transformers (for the lights) to a 9v wall-wart from Radioshack, and I did the same for the other pair and the fan. It isn't pretty (I used about a foot and a half of electrical tape) but it works great!
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Re: Green Camera Light Questions
Yup... We wired all of ours up to a 12v wall wart we had laying around, and it works just fine, You'll want to watch leaving it plugged in though :)
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Re: Green Camera Light Questions
I recommend a sufficient AC powered transformer in place of robot batteries, as they get low the lights dim and your tracking/calibration gets really faulty, and its hard to tell from across the room. With a solid power supply you can be sure your problems will never stem from incorrect lighting.
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Re: Green Camera Light Questions
In the past we have used a power supply from a computer (one of the older ones with a push putton to turn it on.) It worked fine with no problems to speak of.
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Re: Green Camera Light Questions
How does FIRST power the green lights on the field?
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Re: Green Camera Light Questions
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Anyway, we jimmied a couple of last year's batteries and it works fine. Though looking at previous posts, it might be beneficial to try the wall-wart idea. We're having trouble as it is just calibrating the thing, low batteries shouldn't add to the fun. |
Re: Green Camera Light Questions
i haven't done much this year, but from fun last year... callibrating in a dark area might be good. unless you think having the robot "look" at ceiling lights is benificial...
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Re: Green Camera Light Questions
Has anyone who used a 12V. AC adapter have any problems with the lights dimming out after about 4 minutes or so? My team has had this problem for the past two years now. We've checked our wire setup many times and we can't find anything that could be causing the problem. We are running through a large terminal block and that may be the cause of the problem, but we are not sure. We haven't gotten the chance to change it out yet. Also are there any teams who have florescent lights in their buildings? We have them and we cannot program very well because of the poor lighting. If you have this problem, how do/did you best get around it? We would really like to have a camera this year. :)
~Rabbit 222 |
Re: Green Camera Light Questions
did you look at the current load of each pair of cold cathode lights, and the available power from the wall wart?
We estimated about 3 amps per light box, the old computer PS I gave the team is rated 5 amps on the +12v output Most 12v wall warts are rated for one amp or less. |
Re: Green Camera Light Questions
I remember last year we had our camera hooked up to just one battery. After about 2 weeks of working with it, all of a sudden the camera just wouldn't pick it up. After running some tests with it, we found that it was grossly out of focus. After much blaming of freshmen, we tried it out again. Still it wouldn't pick up the light. After running more tests, we found that the battery was low, and the light wasn't that perfect shade of green. :rolleyes: whoops
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Re: Green Camera Light Questions
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