by JonHylands » Tue Mar 06, 2007 11:04 pm
by JonHylands
Tue Mar 06, 2007 11:04 pm
limor,
This is something we're considering doing. We're not really interested in speed control, but in using the servos as force-driven actuators. However, there's no reason not to do a decent job on the speed control at the same time.
With respect to the gyro - my six axis board will interface quite nicely with just a single axis gyro (using the breakout board version from Sparkfun), and you can ignore the other 5 A/D values.
I should have a printed PCB available within a month, and I'll be selling populated & tested boards shortly after that.
My brother has a baby-orangutang board, and he's going to try the code tonight. There's no reason it won't work, and if it does, you can use that with up to six analog sensors of any type with my code.
edit: the baby-orangutang board comes with a 20 Mhz resonator, so you can't run the UART at 1.0 Mbps without switching to either a 16 MHz or 8 MHz resonator...
- Jon
limor,
This is something we're considering doing. We're not really interested in speed control, but in using the servos as force-driven actuators. However, there's no reason not to do a decent job on the speed control at the same time.
With respect to the gyro - my six axis board will interface quite nicely with just a single axis gyro (using the breakout board version from Sparkfun), and you can ignore the other 5 A/D values.
I should have a printed PCB available within a month, and I'll be selling populated & tested boards shortly after that.
My brother has a baby-orangutang board, and he's going to try the code tonight. There's no reason it won't work, and if it does, you can use that with up to six analog sensors of any type with my code.
edit: the baby-orangutang board comes with a 20 Mhz resonator, so you can't run the UART at 1.0 Mbps without switching to either a 16 MHz or 8 MHz resonator...
- Jon