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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Mon Jan 23, 2023 9:32 pm 
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I was never into robots at all, though I did build a number of wire-control meccano gizmos; there was never a great interest if it wasn't at the 'Danger Will Robinson' level.

Though as part of a university Mechatronics course, the 'here's a tiny robot with sensors and motors randomly wired; make it work' part was an interesting challenge with a lot of inductive logic for it to work out which way it was going.

On the other hand, the deep oil-well drill steering mechanisms I designed for a few years probably count as robots; it's just that they're three miles underground trying to hit a six inch target with a six inch drill through solid rock (and did it, too).


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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2023 12:52 pm 
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barnacle wrote:
the deep oil-well drill steering mechanisms I designed for a few years probably count as robots; it's just that they're three miles underground trying to hit a six inch target with a six inch drill through solid rock (and did it, too).


I'd say so! Impressive!

Alarm Siren wrote:
I've heard they changed the project a few years later and it is now greatly simplified, for example it now uses an off-the-shelf "maze runner" chassis, so no mechanical construction or freedom of design there any more. This was done 1. to make it cheaper and 2. so that they could enter the students into an inter-university challenge that required the use of these components. I understand why they changed it, but for the purposes of actual education I think the original version of the project as described above was superior, because the students had more creative input and had to engage in a greater variety of skills to build it.


Very interesting! Yes, building your own and just figuring it out is very important. I guess there are different levels of 'aid' possible. Starting from the robot being already pre-assembled for you, down to the exact components fitting into the exact spots, down to different components possible in different places, down to just a lot of components and you need to figure it out.

BigEd wrote:
I think it's very difficult, when you're grown, to remember how it is when you didn't know what you know now. And even if you do remember, teaching is different from reliving your own journey. This is why there are courses to teach people to be teachers, or at least to start them off on the journey.


Very true. Being a teacher myself I relive those early moments often so that I don't have my students making the same mistakes I did. But that's only in math :)

BigEd wrote:
And so any of us here can look at something simple and dismiss it, because it wouldn't tell us anything. Nor would it inspire us, because we're already greatly interested. We have to take a different perspective to see the value in it - and of course, some offerings are going to have more value than others. Lego has merits, Meccano has merits, and they are different.


Sure, everything has some merit to some degree. But there are certainly more optimum paths to learning. For example, I make a LOT of recorded lecture videos for my math classes (check out my youtube channel!) because I know that reading the darned book is just terrible. If someone is a math-book-reader, then they will gravitate to that without my help. Certainly one style does not fit all people, but I do think it can fit most people. Not everyone can wear the same size shoes, but we can all probably wear the same ball cap.

drogon wrote:
Why robots? Simple. Engagement and instant feedback and that's what you need to hook some kids into the world of computing (electronics, and so on).


Yes. In our math classes we use an online homework platform that gives immediate feedback. It helps in learning. Getting blinky LED lights on a breadboard is definitely immediate feedback. Getting wheels spinning or an arm moving is immediate feedback. But when do we need to shift our focus and allow the student to create their own "small victories" without our help anymore? Hm.

drogon wrote:
But make it high level - give kids a 6502 and assembly language manual to start with and you'll lose them a second later.


Is that why they used BASIC? :)

BillG wrote:
Hobby rocketry has grown up from when we were kids


That's awesome! Is that... allowed by the govt? ;)

Thanks everyone.

Chad


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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2023 1:40 pm 
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Location: North Tejas
sburrow wrote:
BillG wrote:
Hobby rocketry has grown up from when we were kids


That's awesome! Is that... allowed by the govt? ;)

We have to coordinate with the FAA to reserve airspace when we fly high power rockets. They will issue a NOTAM so that pilots know to avoid us. A problem is that some private pilots out joyriding see a notice of an unmanned rocket launch event and say, "Cool! Let's fly over there and check it out."

Our safety code requires us to stand down when an aircraft is nearby. So if they circle our field waiting for a launch, we cannot. Eventually, they give up and leave but sometimes they come back when they see rockets flying behind them.

Most model rockets use black powder motors. Mid and high power motors are generally APCP (ammonium perchlorate composite propellant); think the solid rocket boosters of the Space Shuttle. About two decades ago, the BATFE tried to regulate APCP as a low explosive. We raised money, sued and won! Because the larger motors can be dangerous is misused, we self-regulate. Certification is required to purchase and fly the larger motors.

There are lots of pictures on our club's web site. The links saying "sights and sounds" also have video clips. https://www.dars.org/gallery/photos.html


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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2023 2:06 pm 
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barnacle wrote:
On the other hand, the deep oil-well drill steering mechanisms I designed for a few years probably count as robots; it's just that they're three miles underground trying to hit a six inch target with a six inch drill through solid rock (and did it, too).

I'm impressed with the accuracy of the current wellbore navigator. Sometimes in early 1990's I was minimally involved with putting gyro and accelerometers in well logging instruments. Calibration of gyro and accelerometer are very sensitive to temperature so to maintain accuracy they need to be re-calibrated as it travel down the well. I don't recall the accuracy anymore but it was many tens of yards, not inches. The holy grail then was hitting another well pipe a mile downhole. I guess we are there now.
Bill


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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2023 2:18 pm 
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BillG wrote:
We have to coordinate with the FAA to reserve airspace when we fly high power rockets. They will issue a NOTAM so that pilots know to avoid us. A problem is that some private pilots out joyriding see a notice of an unmanned rocket launch event and say, "Cool! Let's fly over there and check it out."

Our safety code requires us to stand down when an aircraft is nearby. So if they circle our field waiting for a launch, we cannot. Eventually, they give up and leave but sometimes they come back when they see rockets flying behind them.

Most model rockets use black powder motors. Mid and high power motors are generally APCP (ammonium perchlorate composite propellant); think the solid rocket boosters of the Space Shuttle. About two decades ago, the BATFE tried to regulate APCP as a low explosive. We raised money, sued and won! Because the larger motors can be dangerous is misused, we self-regulate. Certification is required to purchase and fly the larger motors.

There are lots of pictures on our club's web site. The links saying "sights and sounds" also have video clips. https://www.dars.org/gallery/photos.html

The Apollo program had triggered a worldwide fascination with rocketry. As a kid in Taiwan we had all watched the Apollo launch with great admiration. Since black powder was readily available from firework that were sold year round, we'd build rocket engine out of black powder and designate our own rocket. Most of them just spun on the ground, but some of them would reach several story high. There were bottle rockets we could've purchased cheaply, but no, we want to re-invent rockets from ignition to guidance and experience the thrill of success or failure--that was the spirit of education.
Bill


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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2023 7:58 pm 
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If you're a reader of The Register you probably remember the Special Projects Bureau that held the record for the highest flying paper plane - about seventeen miles up. I was a member of the SPB that developed from that to the LOHAN project which was intended to launch a printed-plastic rocket plane at around 100,000 feet and have it self-navigate back to ground. Our back of the envelope calculations indicated from naught to just under mach 2 in seven seconds, and an extra 15,000 feet altitude before it started to come down. Unfortunately, plans were waiting on the FAA in the States to give permission when the project leader - Lester Haines - suddenly died of a heart attack and the project has been shelved ever since.

Neil


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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Tue Jan 24, 2023 8:45 pm 
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BillG wrote:
[FAA] will issue a NOTAM so that pilots know to avoid us. A problem is that some private pilots out joyriding see a notice of an unmanned rocket launch event and say, "Cool! Let's fly over there and check it out."

What do you call a pilot who flies in the vicinity of a rocket launch?

...




....



.....








Darwin award candidate.

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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Wed Jan 25, 2023 3:44 am 
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plasmo wrote:
BillG wrote:
We have to coordinate with the FAA to reserve airspace when we fly high power rockets. They will issue a NOTAM so that pilots know to avoid us. A problem is that some private pilots out joyriding see a notice of an unmanned rocket launch event and say, "Cool! Let's fly over there and check it out."

Our safety code requires us to stand down when an aircraft is nearby. So if they circle our field waiting for a launch, we cannot. Eventually, they give up and leave but sometimes they come back when they see rockets flying behind them.

Most model rockets use black powder motors. Mid and high power motors are generally APCP (ammonium perchlorate composite propellant); think the solid rocket boosters of the Space Shuttle. About two decades ago, the BATFE tried to regulate APCP as a low explosive. We raised money, sued and won! Because the larger motors can be dangerous is misused, we self-regulate. Certification is required to purchase and fly the larger motors.

There are lots of pictures on our club's web site. The links saying "sights and sounds" also have video clips. https://www.dars.org/gallery/photos.html

The Apollo program had triggered a worldwide fascination with rocketry. As a kid in Taiwan we had all watched the Apollo launch with great admiration. Since black powder was readily available from firework that were sold year round, we'd build rocket engine out of black powder and designate our own rocket. Most of them just spun on the ground, but some of them would reach several story high. There were bottle rockets we could've purchased cheaply, but no, we want to re-invent rockets from ignition to guidance and experience the thrill of success or failure--that was the spirit of education.
Bill

Have you read the book Rocket Boys by Homer Hickam, later renamed October Sky and made into a movie of the same name? It is set into Coalwood, West Virginia around the time of and following the Sputnik launch. The main characters built a series of rockets to join the "space race" and as a possible means to escape the destiny of working in the nearby coal mine.

Model rocketry was invented for a couple of reasons. The first was that many people were being killed or seriously injured in "rocket accidents" while stuffing match heads into a CO2 cartridge or handling hazardous chemicals. The idea of commercially available rocket motors meant that enthusiasts did not have to engage in the dangerous parts of building a rocket. Secondly, model rocketry was established as being distinct from fireworks to make it legal in more jurisdictions.

We moved when I was nine years old. While our house was being readied, we stayed with my grandparents for a couple of weeks. There, I got to see my uncle and his friends build model rockets. "I want to do that when I get older" was my reaction.


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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Thu Jan 26, 2023 3:11 pm 
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I have built many robots, both from kits and scratch built. My son and I initially started with Lego NXT and branched out from there. I think the appeal is the intersection of the physical world with computer programming. It really makes learning that topic fun for kids. Adults with programming chops like it too because it's soc different from other areas of programming.

Here's Tower of Hanoi on two mostly scratch built robots:
https://youtu.be/qDtgz4ywWKs

https://youtu.be/mpWOcOV-ib4

So far I have only used microcontrollers for their brains, although on my to do list is to use a 6502 SBC in one. The reason to use microcontrollers is their small size, I/O, RAM, and flash ROM integrated into a single package. An SBC can do all of those things, but requires a substantially larger power budget.


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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Thu Jan 26, 2023 4:02 pm 
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sburrow wrote:
drogon wrote:
Why robots? Simple. Engagement and instant feedback and that's what you need to hook some kids into the world of computing (electronics, and so on).


Yes. In our math classes we use an online homework platform that gives immediate feedback. It helps in learning. Getting blinky LED lights on a breadboard is definitely immediate feedback. Getting wheels spinning or an arm moving is immediate feedback. But when do we need to shift our focus and allow the student to create their own "small victories" without our help anymore? Hm.


Absolutely. Making a light bulb (that's a bulb, not LED - they were far too expensive) flash with a 2-transistor multivibrator was my "wow" moment in electronics.

sburrow wrote:
drogon wrote:
But make it high level - give kids a 6502 and assembly language manual to start with and you'll lose them a second later.


Is that why they used BASIC? :)


Well... (Despite the :) ) When I started in computing and up to the mid 80's it was BASIC because that's what most schools (UK; Scotland) had available to them. You went to university to do Pascal, etc. then although some schools did experiment with COMAL and Pascal it wasn't until there were some more capable systems that BASIC started to fade. I found computing at university incredibly boring (but relatively easy) as it was Pascal, FORTRAN and COBOL. We did do some assembly, but meh... I went elsewhere and learned C, then I transferred to the engineering department after a couple of years and got to play with robots - and introduced the engineering department to high level languages (e.g. BASIC on the Aim 65) for control stuff... They were quite surprised at the time when I made some pneumatic pistons move, and be able to detect a jammed piston from a BASIC program... when in the past they'd used pneumatic logic, then TTL then some 8080 system programmed in hex..

-Gordon

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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Sat Jan 28, 2023 5:39 pm 
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drogon wrote:
sburrow wrote:
Absolutely. Making a light bulb (that's a bulb, not LED - they were far too expensive) flash with a 2-transistor multivibrator was my "wow" moment in electronics.

That must require an amplifier stage or relay to pull off. Even most relays request a transistors to boost the current.


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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Sat Jan 28, 2023 6:55 pm 
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Martin_H wrote:
drogon wrote:
sburrow wrote:
Absolutely. Making a light bulb (that's a bulb, not LED - they were far too expensive) flash with a 2-transistor multivibrator was my "wow" moment in electronics.

That must require an amplifier stage or relay to pull off. Even most relays request a transistors to boost the current.


The bulb is the collector load

See e.g.

https://www.petervis.com/GCSE_Design_an ... ircuit.gif

That's more or less exactly what I did - right down to the BC108's.

-Gordon

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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Sun Jan 29, 2023 12:59 pm 
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That's really neat. The digital logic and the power handling are the same transistors.

When I started experimenting with digital logic in the late 70's TTL IC's were available at Radios Shack. So I always used them as the starting point.


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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Sun Jan 29, 2023 4:35 pm 
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Martin_H wrote:
That's really neat. The digital logic and the power handling are the same transistors.

When I started experimenting with digital logic in the late 70's TTL IC's were available at Radios Shack. So I always used them as the starting point.


We had none of that here in the UK at that point in time. Then it was almost all mail-order. I was given an electronics kit when I was 14 (~1976) though - wish I could find it again (online in ebay, etc.) but I don't even recall it's name - it had an A4 sized PCB with tracks and holes and each component was mounted on a plastic holder on 6BA bolts, so you could place them on a PCB and tighten them down with a nut underneath. There was only 20 or so different projects you could do on it, the usual AM radio, LDR, oscillator, etc. but it was enough for me.

Things did pick up pace though and Maplin (one of the big mail order places) started to open shops, but only in cities. I soon moved to Edinburgh though and there was the wonders of "Browns Radio" - a veritable cave full of everything you wanted, but could never afford...

-G

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 Post subject: Re: Robots?
PostPosted: Sun Jan 29, 2023 9:12 pm 
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It may have been a year or two later, but Tandy (UK branding for Radio Shack) popped up and had a shelf or two of fairly generic components - logic, analogue, passives. Eventually Maplin started to carry a similar range, cunningly informed by what projects were coming up in next month's magazines. Though ten years ago or so, I was informed in Maplin that a chip I had asked for had a suitable replacement, on the grounds that it had the same number of legs...

The back pages of Everyday Electronics were full of adverts from places like John Bull Electronics and Display Electronics and of course Henry's Radio... many places would see you a pound (weight) bag of components for not much money, which was usually what they were worth...

Neil


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