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250 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3522
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Title: HPR3522: Set up your Robot Building Lab and build a $0 Robot Platform
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3522/hpr3522.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 00:57:54
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---
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This is Haka Public Radio episode 3522 for Tuesday 1st of February 2022.
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Today's show is entitled, Set Up Your Robot Building Lab and Build a Dollar Zero Robot
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Platform.
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It is hosted by Mekat Roliak and is about 26 minutes long and carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is, Ep 1 of Robot Warlords of the Apocalypse, Build a Free Robot Platform
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Sash Krashberg if I'm old-printers.
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Hey little men, greetings, this is Mekat Roliak, the mildly malevolent Mekatronics megalomaniac
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with episode 1 of Robot Warlords of the Apocalypse.
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We're going to be setting up your robot building lab and building your first platform,
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Krashbuggie.
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So I hope you do join up in this project of bringing to life the dead, the EOL, the discarded
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electronics products.
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If you don't join, you might just end up like the subject of an HR Geeger painting.
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Remember, be the assimilator, not the assimilated.
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So let's get started.
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Stuff you're going to want to order to follow the instructions that I'm going to impart
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to you.
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So I'm going to need an Arduino Uno or a kit.
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I'd recommend getting a kit with the sensors.
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I got the super learning kit by Key Studio and it contains a ton of stuff that will really
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get you up to speed in what sensors are, sensors, they return a voltage based on stimuli.
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So Arduino can read that also some return a variable resistor value, but it's all voltage
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in the end.
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So it's really handy and you'll be able to add sensors and stuff much more readily to
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your robot if you understand how they work beforehand.
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The kits come with a Perfboard or not a Perfboard, what's it called?
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Breadboard, it'll contain a breadboard and other useful stuff like wires to hook everything
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up with.
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So do that, you can order some extra Arduinos as well, order some extra Arduinos.
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You can order Arduinos Nannos as well, they're slightly smaller, but a little bit less
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robust.
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I've gone with Arduino Uno from my first build.
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My second robot build is using a Nannos, so it depends on what you want.
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Uno, I'll be describing Uno, so he may as well get an Uno if you're just starting.
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Go to your welding shop, locally get some small machine screws of various lengths, like
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from like a half inch to two inches, something like that, various thicknesses with nuts
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and washers, make sure you get the nuts and washers too, because you're going to be using
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that to mount your Arduino and other stuff onto your platform and to actually put the
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platform together, an 18654 cell battery compartment.
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Yeah, of course you're going to be ordering this online from either AliExpress or Bang
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Good or Amazon, whatever you use.
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I use AliExpress, it's the cheapest, it might take you a week or two, but you know
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that weight can be advantageous, because when I blew up a H bridge module, and I was
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waiting, I just started building my own and I built my own.
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So the 18654 cell battery compartment, that'll give you 16 bolts, which will run your
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H bridges, which will run your motors, so that's pretty important.
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Two 18651 cell compartments, I use one for powering the MP3 player, so you might not need
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two, but if you get an 18655 charger, a wavegat, plug into a USB via mini USB power, and
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you can charge your 18655 from those.
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So you combine one of these little wavegat chargers, they're just a board, they're like
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not even one inch by one inch board, and you can hot glue that onto your one cell charger
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and then solder wires to the terminals, then you have a charging device right there.
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If you have one of those USB battery cases, you know the little things, those hold usually
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to 18655 inside those, so you might be able to take one of those apart and just use that
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as your charger.
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So there you go, very post-apocalyptic, ready.
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As you're going to want a soldering station, you're going to want to buy some solder or
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flux, and a solder sucker is very handy, if you're going to be removing desodering stuff
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from circuit boards, guess what, tree sap also works, yeah, that's what rosin is.
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So if you got, if you are in a post-apocalyptic scenario, you've got no solder, you can use
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tree sap, and it'll make the solder flow that's on your circuit boards, and you can reuse
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it.
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Perth board, perth board is simply a nylon perforated board, it's got a bunch of little holes,
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you can put your leaded electronics components into that.
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I used it to build my H bridge module out of relays, not really an H bridge, but it reverses
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the polarity to the motor, so you can make it go backwards and forwards.
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But if you're not keen, if you're not too keen on soldering, you can just get one of
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the L298N H bridge modules.
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I used two for more power, one to control the front wheels, one to control the back wheels,
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but that's up to you, you can experiment, that's what we're all about.
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Extra do-pont wires, good idea, there's an email to mail wires, just to hook your stuff
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up.
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You should be able to get a lot of wires out of stuff that you take apart as well, especially
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TVs and stuff like that, save all your wires, get extra resistors, yes, you can desotter
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all the resistors you need, but it might take a while until you get the component values
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that you want, and you're going to want a bunch that are 1K, you're going to want some
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of their 200 ohms, whatever.
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Optionally, ultrasonic sensors and MP3 modules are things that I added to my first
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bot, which I call the herald interceptor, it's the heralds, because it's got an MP3
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player on it, with a speaker that I stole from a television set, and as I mentioned L298N H
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bridge modules, they'll run you like three or four bucks, so it might as well get two or four of
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those, means we'll get four if you're going to get two to use for your device. Tools and
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accessories, as I mentioned, solder station, you're going to need a computer with internet to put
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your IDE for the Arduino on, Raspberry Pi, three works as well, all right, so if you're listening
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to this blood stain slave slab that you found discarded, yeah, you should have downloaded all
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the libraries and stuff, but hopefully you still have internet access, you can go to our
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doeno.cc, download and install the Arduino IDE, and you're going to need basic tools like
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screwdriver's pliers, airplane snips, which is you're going to, if you're going to cut metal
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to reinforce your things, you're going to need airplane snips, they work really well for cutting
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a drill with assorted bits, you're going to want like small, pretty small bits, like
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I don't know, three millimeters, something like that, and you're going to want like a three quarter
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centimeter or one centimeter bit, a hacksaw, be handy to cut down those metal rods, a ruler,
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and a multimeter, multimeter, very important for checking your stuff. To organize your stuff,
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you're going to want a parts drawer, you can get those for like 40 bucks at home hardware,
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and they've got about 30 or 40 plastic drawers, put all your goodies in there, as well as several
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rubber made bins or cardboard boxes for all those circuit boards, ABS pieces, the steel rods and
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stuff that you recover from printers, put them in there, get rid of your wife if she complains.
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Okay, so collect and assemble your post apocalyptic scraps. So a safety note, be careful when
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disassembling stuff, use pliers rather than your fingers as much as possible, printers and other
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products can sometimes be tricky to take apart. There might not be visible screws. There might
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just be tabs, but if you try to force the tabs and it's wrong, the ABS is strong, but it's brittle,
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so when it breaks it can be sharp, so just be aware of that. Laptop batteries definitely be careful
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with those. Try not to short any circuits. You can be cutting these really thin metal strips that are
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behind between the cells when you take the part laptop or power tool batteries, and those metal
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strips are very, very sharp when you cut them. So be careful, use pliers, metal cutters, and try not
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to create any short circuits if you do. They're just going to possibly be an exothermic reaction,
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especially if you pierce a battery. I've only done that with one of the flat cells and it
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starts smoking and I threw it outside. All right, so to get ingredients, printers are one of the
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best sources, great source of mechanical and chassis parts, including motors. The best are the
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ones with the scanners built in, which means you get an extra stepper motor and you get glass
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on top, which you can use to build a solar panel if you have those little cells that you can order
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from AliExpress or whatever. Your DC motors, a mid-sized printer is going to have two that are
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exactly the same. So if you have two printers, roughly the same size, usually you'll get exactly
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like four of the same size motors. And depending on your printers, it might be slightly smaller,
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larger. There are about four centimeters from end to end, which is the ones I use. You can use
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smaller large ones. You can use two smaller in the back or two larger, you know, in the front or
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back, whatever, switch them around. So things you're going to find in the printer, the steel rods.
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So the steel rods will have wheels with rubber tires on them, because that's the paper
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path, how it moves the paper around. And you can slide those wheels off and those are going to be
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the wheels for our robots. You can also use toys and stuff, but this is pretty convenient when
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it's all in one spot. So to that, other stuff you find in the printer gears, specialty steel plates,
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reed switches, rotary encoders, IR switches, lots of ABS parts. So there's a lot of neat ABS
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parts, like levers and hinge, neat stuff. The one power supply box I used as the Arduino box,
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because it perfectly is the same size as the Arduino Uno. So I use that to protect the Arduino
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like I said, the glass panel can be repurposed as a solar panel. UPS devices, the uninterruptible power
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supplies are good for relays and optical isolators. Like I said, if you're going to build your own
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H bridge, you're going to need some relays and optical isolators. If not, you can skip that.
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TVs for lots of wire speakers, more optical isolators, lots of transistors and other components,
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especially in older TVs, laptops, power tools, cell phones, you're going to get your batteries from
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those. So that's about all I can think of for ingredients right now, just any post consumer electronics,
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take it home, take it apart unless it has a radioactive symbols on it or some one caveat for
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printers is there is a ink reservoir in a lot of printers. So be careful being stained of ink,
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that's a big hazard being ink stained. So books libgen.is if you want to read some electronics
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books, that's a good one. And there's a free book by donation, it's called designing electronics
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that work, I believe I'll put link in this description for that as well. All right, so now that we've
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got our ingredients gathered and got a solder station, all our tools ready, hopefully you have a
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table to put it all on. When I was a kid, I used to work on the floor all the time, it gives you a
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sore back. Yeah, so get a table to put your stuff on. All right, so as a promise, we're going to
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build a smash buggy, which is basically your platform, which is going to be a case like a DVD case
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or a CD player case. The first one I used was actually a hard drive tray, and it actually had
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four holes, which accommodated the motors perfectly, because there's a little kind of a hub
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around the spindle on your DC motors, and it's about a centimeter or so. So you've got to need a
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larger hole in your chassis to put those. And well, hopefully you know the convention
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where for attaching wheels, motors, you know, like two on each side type thing, equally spaced,
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you know, like a car. So do that. So with mine, all I had to do was drill some smaller holes to
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attach the screws and screw them in, because there are screws that come with the motor. So when
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you take the printer apart, make sure you save those screws, just screw them right back into the
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motor when you take them apart. Okay, so hopefully you have got your motors all positioned there on
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the spindles around the outside. Okay, now this is the most fraught with difficulty part,
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which probably could use some innovations as well, but I've succeeded pretty well.
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The secret is JB weld basically, but if you pull out your motors, they're going to usually have
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a gear on them, always. And sometimes those gears will fit perfectly into the holes on the wheels
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that are the sides of those steel rods. And yeah, count yourself lucky if you got that. Sometimes
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you might have to remove the gears from the motor spindle if they're not perfect, you know,
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if they're not going to fit perfectly into those wheels that you have. If you have to take the
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wheels off, make sure to brace one side or hold it, hold the side of the spindle with pliers or
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something, because you don't want to pull the spindle right out of the innards of your motor.
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Oh, probably, that'll wreck the motor. So, yeah. Yeah, so if you're lucky enough to have
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motor with the gears already on it to attach your printer roller wheels, that's great,
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because so if you've already got those gears on the motor and they actually fit perfectly into
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the holes in those wheels, just add some hot glue and you should be good to go if like if they're
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snug. Yeah, the two that I found for my robot were snug, very good. And two were not, so I had to
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take those gears off and find a replacement hub. So what I settled on, it's not perfect, but
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it lasts pretty good. And there's still the weak point of where the spindle actually attaches,
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but it's a lot better. So what I did was took some coax wire, I think it's RG6 or something,
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so this is slightly smaller coaxial wire, you know, for your cable vision. So you cut that into
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like a centimeter or whatever is perfect to fit into your hub hole in the wheel. You're going to
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take out the copper center conductor, because you're going to be pushing that onto your spindle.
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And you're going to want to use your JB weld in this case or epoxy. I find the JB weld works
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really well. It's steel infused epoxy. So that's going to be your build for the wheels. So hopefully
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you got your wheels all on with minimal struggle. Now you're going to be taking your 18650 cells.
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I usually too will work for this. So you tape two together. You can use elastic bands to hold
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on the wires. So we're going to be attaching the wires. I would suggest soldering wires to the
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motors. So you can touch those wires to your battery compartment that you made by taping two
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cells together and test which way the wheels turn. So you're going to want all your wheels to be
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turning the same direction unless you're testing the differential steering, in which case the ones
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on the right will be going the opposite direction to the ones on the left, making it spin around
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like a maniac. So this is just to kind of to give you like when you're drawing a drawing,
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you're going to draw the eyes first to give life to the picture. So this gives life to your robot
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project. You're going to know that the motors at least work. So I would, if you want to do this,
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this isn't the, this isn't absolutely necessary, but it's, I think it's fun and it'll give you
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insight into how fast this thing will be with two cells. I mean, I use four and then I graduate
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to five, but so there's no age bridge, there's no control or anything. We're just testing the
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mechanics exclusively. So once you've got your motor turning the way you want, you're going to
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be tying all the wires together from, so you take the one side, the one terminal, whatever determines
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your positive that makes them spin one way and just bind all those wires together. You've got the
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mall soldered. So it's going to be one wire from each motor. You've got them soldered to the motor
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end and then you twist them at the end where they're going to be connecting to your cells and do this,
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do the same for the other terminal. So you've got, you're going to have two wires, one connecting to
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one terminal and two, I mean, two sets of four wires and one connecting to each terminal on each
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respective motor. Just, just check out the, just check out the video. I don't, hopefully this is
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described well enough, but once you do that, it can kind of flimsly attach it to your cell,
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put it on top. You've got, now you've got your platform with wheels spinning madly and just set it
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on the floor and watch it smash into something and when it does crash, it'll just, when it does crash,
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theoretically, the wires will come loose and so that's your test. So that kind of will give you
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something to look forward to. Another pointer on the chassis themselves, like I said, I
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recommend like a DVD case or CD case or hard drive tray. I've also used a power tool battery box
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for my second one, but that's a little bit more involved because you have to make standoffs for
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the motors, but we won't talk about that. So if you're building it out of a DVD case, you're probably
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just going to like use the one side of it because to put it together, I mean, you got your motor sitting
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there, so you're probably not going to be able to fit the top of the DVD case on the way it was.
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So it's, if you want to put the top on, it's going to be like sitting on top kind of built up,
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like the latest cars in the latest road warrior movie and Fury Road and got those cars stacked
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on each other. It's going to be sort of like that. But anyway, I hope that gives you starting off
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point and, you know, just a point of excitement, you know, whatever you decide to do, it'll at least show
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you what it's capable of. If it's not fast enough, add another cell, you know what series is,
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hopefully, hopefully you can look up what series is and what parallel is. The cells are in series,
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the motors are connected to the cells and parallel should work out for you. So next time I'll be
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showing how to make sense of it all. So next time I'll be showing how to make your insane crash buggy
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be controllable via Arduino and H bridges. So until then, this is mechatroniac signing off,
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check me out bitchute.com mechatroniac. And remember, be the assimilator, not the assimilated.
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Endorsement, non-paid endorsement for key studio super learning kit for Arduino. And this is
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like several years old. Comes with a nice booklet, a nice green clear case with all the components in it
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and a resistor sticker, which is nice. But listen to all the stuff that's in this kit. You get five
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each of blue red and yellow LEDs. You get an RGB LED. You get a bunch of 220 ohm resistors, 10k
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resistors, 1k resistors. So those are always handy. I recommend ordering extra resistors as well.
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Those kind of lower values, very, very useful, but you can desotter them off certain boards as well. It's
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just harder to find resistors that are like a lot of the same value and you're going to be one,
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like four of the same value and worth each year. If you are building the H bridge yourself,
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otherwise you don't have to worry about it. But it comes with as well a potentiometer buzzer,
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active buzzer, passive buzzer, four large button switches, two tilt switches, three-fourter
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resistors, one flame sensor, an LM35 sensor, which I've used heat. And 74HC 595N 16-pin dip I see,
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which I think it's a multiplexer, a 7-segment LED, four module 7-segment LED, an 8-by-8 LED matrix,
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16-02 LCD display, which is not funny, you can have those readouts. IR receiver and IR remote control.
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So this really helps me because I use remote control with my robots IR. So I'm able to use
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just like TV remote now. Servo motor, a stepper driver module, stepper motor, a joystick module,
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relay module, a PIR motion sensor, an analog gas sensor, a three-axis acceleration module,
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HC-S-R04 sensor, which is ultrasonics, which I incorporated into the parallel interceptor.
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Clock module, temperature and humidity sensor, soil sensor, RFID module, RFID card, RFID's key,
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pin headers, 830-hole breadboard. Breadboard is really handy. You can use that to hold your
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components while you're experimenting with new H bridges. Just put it right on your bot. You can use
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and not have to actually have like a formal circuit board. It comes with a DuPont connector wires,
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which are just put everything up with those and jumper wires. A 6-cell battery pack, you can go
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this way. This is for AA batteries. I like the lithium 18650 cells, but if you do mind the 18650s,
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two, two, because they're 1.5 volts each, and a USB cable. So and it's got a nice, nice description
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of everything and a website that you can go to to download all the code so you don't have to
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type everything out like back in the comment or 64 days.
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