Monday 30 October 2017

Crumble based Junk-Eggbot

Full details at http://bit.ly/2yZ3dZT



There was three inspirations for this project
·   Femi Owolade supported by Nic Hughes ran a session at Mozilla Festival 2016 using the Crumble’s to make a wheeled robot.
·   The junkbot project https://junkbots.blogspot.co.uk/
Kit
·      Kinder Egg (without the Chocolate and toy)
·      Battery pack and 3xAA
·      Vibrating motor
·      Tape (lots of)
. Sticky-tack of some form.
·      Pens
·      Paper
·      Scissors
·      Glue and Gluegun (optional)


Stage 1: Fix the vibrating motor into the Egg.
Stick (sticky-tack is a good temporary method) the vibrating motor into the Egg with the motor electrical connections sticking out the bottom larger half of the egg. Make sure the unbalanced load is free to move – this is bit that causes the vibrations needed to move the egg.
IMG_0578.JPG


Stage 2: Sticking the pens on.
This is the trickiest bit. Tape the pens on the egg. One suggestion that someone who tried it out suggested, was to use little bits of sticky-tack to position the pens on the egg before tapping the pens onto the egg.

IMG_0579.JPG
If you are using three pens, the third pen should be placed so that all three form a triangle with equal sides, that means the egg can stand-up on a piece of paper on the pen nibs, without anything supporting it.
If you are using four pens, the other two pens should be placed so that all four form a square with equal sides, that means the egg can stand-up on a piece of paper on the pen nibs, without anything supporting it.
Stage 3: Add the battery pack and go.
Using two wires connecting the battery, to the motors. Remove the nibs and set the bot off. It is hopefully vibrating and shaking and scribbling lines on the paper.
IMG_0580.JPG IMG_0582.JPG


To see one in action go to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRlntdmdQRo


Stage 4: Crumble Controlling
Disconnect the battery connection (the connections on the motor can stay as they are) from the junkbot. Connect the USB cable to the Crumble. To the right of the USB connect there are two connections marked + and -. Connect one wire to the + connection and the other end to the red wire of the battery pack. Connect a one wire to the – connection and the other end to the black wire of the battery pack.
IMG_0583.JPG IMG_0584.JPG
Stage 5: Connect the Egg!
On the Crumble, on the right-side there are two motor connections connect the Motor to these connections. Don’t worry about which of the motors wires is need you swap them around later.


IMG_0585.JPG
Stage 6: Programming it – Making the bot moves.
The software can be found at https://redfernelectronics.co.uk/crumble-software/ it includes how to set it up on your own machine.
Start the Crumble software. Drag from the left the Program start, motor, and wait blocks. Now join the up start block at the top and the motor block next and the wait block last.
Screen Shot 2017-10-23 at 16.23.51.png
Your code should look like this.
Screen Shot 2017-10-23 at 16.23.43.png


Click on the stop within the motor block. It should change to forward. Now you are ready to make it move. Press the green arrow and with the battery pack on, it should (hopefully) keep moving.
Screen Shot 2017-10-23 at 16.24.12.png
If you put a second motor block after the wait block with the stop in the block. It such then stop after 1 second of moving.
Stage 7: Making it do more.
-    Drag a do-until block in (found in the control menu).
-    Go to variable menu and add a new variable, I have used t, select the block marked let=, and drag a t into the blank space.
-    Drag an increase block onto the screen and drag a t into the blank space.
Screen Shot 2017-10-23 at 16.27.45.png
Go to the operator menu and drag onto the screen an = block, go back to variables menu and drag a t into the first space on the = block and click on the second space on the block and type in 5.
Screen Shot 2017-10-23 at 16.29.02.png
Now for the challenge put all these together to copy what is shown below. Now, but the egg-bot on the paper, with the pen lids off, press the green triangle and the motors should be spun in different directions.
This is a junkbot so it may just cause the bot to move a slightly different directions but hopefully it should just draw some squiggly lines.


© Scott Turner
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CC BY-SA






All opinions in this blog are the Author's and should not in any way be seen as reflecting the views of any organisation the Author has any association with. Twitter @scottturneruon

Monday 9 October 2017

Sphero Mini - fun-sized Sphero


The Sphero Mini has been recently launched and at the time of writing seems to be popular, Amazon.co.uk delivery times vary depending on the colour you select. There are some very good reasons for it to be popular.


It's a ping-pong sized ball, much smaller than the normal Sphero's and approximately half the price. Though slightly less featured, what it has got, is good. 

In the box, you get the sphero-mini, a charging cable, as well as packet of mini-skittles and cones. There is no charging station for this one, you charge it taking the outer shell off (it splits into two pieces) and the socket is on the ball inside. Actually, it is quite interesting to see the insides (I know the Spheros SPRK+ have a transparent shell to show the innards) and handle the ball inside, trying to see what it does. The ball is a little slower than the other Spheros, but this is not a problem in my opinion.



There is an app for playing the games, and this is fun to play with; providing control via the app to make the ball move and many features I have yet to explore. Alternatively, the SpheroEdu app, running on a tablet, allows programming via blocks or JavaScript. Had to have a go with writing a JavaScript routine.




The routine just makes the robot go in a square and not really much of a test, but a start. I especially liked the visual display of the sphero-mini's route on the tablet's screen.

I think this little robot, the price is not bad, though less featured than their bigger 'sibling' Spheros it is still good. I would like to see support for Swift in the future but it is early days for this kit and the skittles and cones are a good touch.


All opinions in this blog are the Author's and should not in any way be seen as reflecting the views of any organisation the Author has any association with. Twitter @scottturneruon

ChatGPT, Data Scientist - fitting it a bit

This is a second post about using ChatGPT to do some data analysis. In the first looked at using it to some basic statistics  https://robots...