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News Archives - October, 2009

Happy Halloween!

Posted: Friday, October 30th, 2009 at 4:32 pm   Author: Chris Turner  

You know how I said we’d have new and exciting stuff to show off this week? That isn’t quite the case. It’s just been one of those weeks, and we don’t have anything ready to go for you. But I can say this - we’ll be opening up pre-orders for our brand spankin’ new Oomlout Arduino Experimenter’s Bundle pretty early next week. We’re really excited about this everything-included kit for people who want to learn about Arduino goodness, so keep your eyes peeled for that one.

In the mean time… HAPPY HALLOWEEN EVERYONE! Make is running a contest for cool ‘ween projects, so head on over to their Flickr pool or Youtube group to poke around their stuff.

Protoshield, FTDI Breakouts, GM10s IN STOCK!

Posted: Friday, October 23rd, 2009 at 11:12 am   Author: Chris Turner  

Freeduino SB-PRotoshieldAlriiiiight. It’s Friday, and you know what that means… We get to sleep in tomorrow morning! WOOOOO! Also, it means that it’s time for the weekly news post of new product goodness. Today we’ve got four items to show off:

Designed particularly for the Freeduino SB (it works with other USB Arduino Boards too!), the SB-Protoboard will make your life a lot easier for those of you who want to do some fun custom stuff.

But wait, I said there were four items, did I? It’s been a long time coming, but we’re pleased to announce that GM10s are back in stock! They’re a little bit different than before - the arm/head isn’t quite the same and the shell is no longer transparent. Aside from that, it’s the same quirky motor we all know and love.

Stay tuned, in the next few weeks we’ll be adding lots of new products to the Interface Modules category, as well as starting a new mystery section. What could it be?! Oh, the anticipations…

Calgary ProtoSpace Open House

Posted: Wednesday, October 14th, 2009 at 1:02 pm   Author: Dave Hrynkiw  

Calgary’s fledgling hacking group is hosting an open-house at the ProtoSpace on October 27 November 3rd. We’re planning to be there - come on down!

MakerBEAM

Posted: Wednesday, October 14th, 2009 at 9:27 am   Author: Dave Hrynkiw  

Ok, besides being a conjunction of two things we really love (Make Magazine & BEAM Robotics), it also is an open-source hardware project that is about little “T-Beams”.

This project is using the “KickStarter” model of sponsorship. Ask for pledges for the projects, and if the minimum is met (and it has - yay!), the project will go ahead. Of course, more funding equals better chance of success. In celebration of them making their sponsorship goals, Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories has a Q&A article with them.

We twittered about this a good while back (ok, it was a retweet of a staff member), and like to think we helped them get the attention they deserve with this project. We’ve pledged our support to the project, because these looks so handy for building small machines. Take a look - it might be of interest to you too!

What can you do with a GM15?

Posted: Friday, October 9th, 2009 at 4:53 pm   Author: Dave Hrynkiw  

…oh, just save the Republic!

Just got this note in from Rob Meyer, who is using 3 of our GM15 pager gearmotors to drive his 1/18 scale R2-D2.

Given that the real R2-D2 measures 108cm tall, that makes this cute cousin only 6cm (2.36″) tall!

There’s a GM15 for each of the drive wheels, and another under the dome which belt-drives the dome. You can see the it in this photo in the vertical tube front-middle.

Rob writes:

“Just wanted you to know the GM15 motors you sold me are working great! They allowed me to make my 1:18 scale r/c R2-D2 a reality. It uses two GM15 motors for the drive and one to run the dome. My friends at Astromech.net love it. “ 

Update!

Just got more details from Rob which he forwarded me from Astromech.net, and a nice breakdown photo of R2-D2’s parts:

“I turned the body out of a block of 1″ acrylic, then bored holes through the top and base to mount the battery, dome drive motor, circuit board, and bottom plate mounting pins. The bottom plate is based on a steel washer and is held in place by a tiny rare earth magnet.

The legs were built up on sections of 1/4″ by 1/8″ brass rectangular tubing.

The motors are pager vibrator motors with a 1:25 planetary gearset attached (solarbotics.com). They are some of the most amazing hardware I have come across recently. They are right at 1/4″ diameter, so I had to squeeze them into the 1/4″ wide leg frames.

The final drive gears consist of sets of standard ring and pinion gears from the back of a slot car. The ring gears double as the drive wheels, and they have small rubber bands glued to their circumference.

The dome is a measuring spoon with the handle cut off and a styrene bottom ring added. Originally I thought it would be a piece of cake to drill the hole for the PSI’s and Logics, but turns out it is made of stainless steel, so I ended up breaking six of my tiny drill bits before I learned to grind through the surface with my dremel first before finishing with the drill.

I do intend to add the full suite of dome lighting- PSI’s, Logics, and eventually the front HP. I have the LEDS set up on a breadboard and tested running from a surface mount Picaxe 08M. The only thing holding me up on installing them is the power supply. The Blue, Green, and White LED’s need 3 volts to run, but everything else on the system is now at 1.5 volts. I have located a 1.5-3.3 volt up-converter chip, but I am waiting for it to arrive.

Finally, the control board and battery came out of a MicroSizers RC car. The tiny little battery takes about 45 seconds to charge and it runs for maybe a few minutes from that. The original car was set up for forward/reverse on the drive motor channel, and left/right steering on the other. The way the receiver’s channel outputs were arranged, I could only get one motor to reverse. I adapted the other drive motor to run off the steering outputs, but they were designed to power two seperate electromagnetic coils to steer the car- they would not reverse the motor as such. As it turns out, it was a bonus, because I realized I could sacrifice reverse on one motor and still have full steering. The only thing it will not do is back up in a straight line. I then had the other steering coil output to use for the dome drive. Originally I had the dome just spinning one direction- but then I realized it would be cooler to set up a belt driven crank mechanism so the dome would scan back and forth.

Kudos on a great hack!

Turkey Time! (and new product too)

Posted: Friday, October 9th, 2009 at 3:02 pm   Author: Chris Turner  

Breadboard Jumper WiresWoohoo! It’s early October, and that means it’s TURKEY TIME for us Canadians! We know, Americans have their Thanksgiving in November, but it’s so cold here already that it might as well be November. So to celebrate we’re releasing the following items:

We just want to point out that the Breadboard Jumper Wires are pretty neat - for $6 USD you get 75 pieces of wire of various lengths and colours. It makes prototyping so much easier.

Anyways, with Thanksgiving being a holiday Solarbotics and HVW Tech will be closed on Monday, October 12th. Standard rules apply - submit orders, send emails, etc. We’ll respond to any messages and resume processing/shipping orders on Tuesday. So to all of our Canadian Comrades, have a great Thanksgiving! And to all of our American Amigos, Happy Columbus Day!

Diodes, Trimpots

Posted: Friday, October 2nd, 2009 at 11:12 am   Author: Chris Turner  

 10k Single-Turn Trimpot w/ KnobHappy October everyone! The leaves are falling and there’s that crisp scent of winter lurking in the air. Ah, it sure is beautiful! And you know what else is beautiful? Diodes and trimpots, of course. Check out these gorgeous new components:

These trimpots are actually pretty nice. These units have a nice big nob on ‘em, so it’s super-easy to adjust them on the fly. Gone are the days of needing a finding a slot screwdriver or trimpot adjust tool!

Oh, a quick heads-up - we’ll be closed for Canadian Thanksgiving on Monday, October 12th.We know that’s still a week and a bit away, but we just wanted to give you some early warning. We’ll be sure to mention it in next week’s post so no one forgets.