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Here is part of our control box, as you can see we have a lot going on!
The crazy light array shows how well the gun is aimed, and we have an automatic ball sensor! The rest of the buttons are pretty self explanatory.
The box itself is made out of a single piece of welded aluminum, its hot
06-03-2006 00:41
sanddragthe crazy light array is neat but rather than telling you that it's off target, why doesn't it just fix itself? Because it seems as if you can already determine that you are off and by how much.
06-03-2006 00:55
The Lucas
Congrats, on the Creativity Award for that Light Array.
How do you drive all those LEDs with only 8 LED outputs?
I did something similar in 2004 and I used the LED drivers as select lines to a multiplexer. With 5 LED drivers for select lines you could select the 25 LEDs and still have 3 left for the other LEDs.
06-03-2006 01:25
ChriszumaI want to know how you powered all those LEDs. You can control up to 28 according to The Lucas, but then you would be spreading out your 5v10mA each across 3 times as many lights. Seems like they would be mighty dim. Unless you used some sort of crazy transistor setup.
06-03-2006 02:28
Eldarion
Could you elaborate further on "we have an automatic ball sensor"?
Neat control panel! 
06-03-2006 09:31
Spikey|
Originally Posted by Eldarion
Could you elaborate further on "we have an automatic ball sensor"?
Neat control panel! ![]() |
06-03-2006 11:37
Mark McLeod
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Originally Posted by The Lucas
How do you drive all those LEDs with only 8 LED outputs?
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06-03-2006 23:19
Chriszuma|
Originally Posted by Mark McLeod
I can add what I learned from talking to the mentors and students in the pit.
You reasoned correctly that 3 bits of the available eight go to the Ball Ready light, etc., the remaining 5 bits provide all the data necessary to process and run the LED grid display through a couple of custom circuit boards. |
08-03-2006 00:00
SpikeyWe use a custom circuit to power the board, it works in a circular manner, one row lights up at a time, as we hone in the lights merge on green to tell us its ok to fire.
We have an identical LED array on the drivers side by the joysticks so he knows if he needs to move the robot or not!
08-03-2006 12:15
Jon Jack
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Originally Posted by Spikey
We use a custom circuit to power the board, it works in a circular manner, one row lights up at a time, as we hone in the lights merge on green to tell us its ok to fire.
We have an identical LED array on the drivers side by the joysticks so he knows if he needs to move the robot or not! |
08-03-2006 23:57
Chriszuma|
Originally Posted by jjack
What is your power source? Are you powering it through the OI or are you powering it through some external power source (i.e a battery)
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