Know How... 133 (Transcript)
Net Casts you love, from people you
trust. This is Twit! Bandwidth for Know How is brought to you by cachefly.com.
On this episode of Know How we are
going to be continuing Project Arduino, starting up Quad with Alien X and your
feedback, our answers.
Father
Robert Ballecer: Welcome to Know How, it is the Twit show where we
build, bend, break and upgrade. I’m Father Robert Ballecer.
Bryan
Burnett: And I’m
Bryan Burnett.
Fr.
Robert: And for the
next four or five hours at least…
Bryan: This is going to be an endurance
run of Know How. 24 hours of knowledge.
Fr.
Robert: I've known
hole. But seriously we are going to be bringing you some of the projects that
we have been working on in the past couple of weeks so that you can geek out.
Bryan: Because we don't have enough things
to do so we get to fool around with this kind of stuff all week right?
Fr.
Robert: But before
we do that, speaking of endurance marathons of knowledge. There is a nether
kind of endurance that you actually know about.
Bryan: The 24 hours of LeMans.
Fr.
Robert: Of all the
endurance races, I have heard of LeMans and I have
heard of Baja. If you know nothing about racing you will hear about those. But LeMans actually has an interesting history. Where did this
race come from and why do they do it, and why is it so popular?
Bryan: Well, it started a long time ago in
France. I don’t know all the specific details of the actual race but I want to
go. I might be invited to go later this year.
Fr.
Robert: No way. I
think it is in June right? Maybe June 13- 14? I don’t
actually speak French but I think it is in…. Now, let’s go beyond just the
location and the history of the city of the event. You have been at an
endurance race so what is so special about an
endurance race?
Bryan: Well unlike where most races are a
contained number of laps and it is just an all-out sprint to the finish line,
this is more of a… well, the way I experienced it in Daytona was a long chess
match where if you make one mistake it could bring down the whole thing for
you. And it was like a demolition derby just waiting to happen because there
are so many things going on. There are the different classes of cars and they
are all competing against not only their class but against the other people on
the track so most races it is just one type of car and they are all relatively
the same speed. It is down to the drivers to kind of get around each other. But
with a 24 hour endurance races they are weaving in and out of the prototypes,
the LeMans cars, the GT cars and they all our fast. But some are much faster than others and have
to be very careful about not hitting each other. And they switch out drivers so
that is another level of complexity.
Fr.
Robert: I actually
had a question about that. When you switch out drivers is their strategy on
where you put your strongest drivers where do you want them at the beginning or
at the end or does it not matter?
Bryan: It does matter. Hopefully you are
putting a team together and all of your drivers are strong. But that isn’t
always the case. Usually, the way I saw when I was working close with the team
here in Petaluma they would have their strong driver do the qualifying because
that is the important position. And then you want your strong drivers at the
end of the race too because as the clock ticks down those last few hours of the
race that is like a sprint. That is the race. Everything
leading up to that point is just trying to get there without breaking
something, without someone having fatigue and then crash into a wall or
something like that.
Fr.
Robert: So
basically what you need out of the driver in the middle shift is just to
maintain your position.
Bryan: The way it was described to me is
let the other people make mistakes and you just focus on what you need to do.
If you lose a few seconds and a corner just try and maintain.
Fr.
Robert: Is there a
blue shell in LeMans?
Bryan: I think the blue shell is another
car coming at you and not hitting the brakes.
Fr.
Robert: We are not
here just to talk about LeMans. We are here to talk
about a specific company that is going to be competing in LaMans but they have brought kind of a crazy entry.
Bryan: They have a Nissan GTRLM Nismo.
Fr.
Robert: This thing
looks weird. This is not what I expected a race car to look like. This is what
I would expect a show car to look like. So this is a GTRLM Nismo.
It is 1250 hp, it is 1940 foot pounds of weight so
this thing is ridiculously power to weight ratio. But the coolest thing about
this is what they are doing with the aerodynamics and the power train. They
have basically taken the racing world and what we know about how you design a
race car and they have flipped it upside down. For example, race cars are never
front engine and never front wheel drive. Why don’t you want that?
Bryan: Because if you have too much weight
over the front of the car, you get under steer and it is a lot harder to go
fast when you are and are steering. You can control over-steer a little bit
better.
Fr.
Robert: So most
race cars are either going to be rear wheel drive or
all-wheel drive.
Bryan: Without weight ratio of about
50/50.
Fr.
Robert: That Nissan
has decided to put the engine up front and they have made it a thought will
drive car and what they have done is they have said all the disadvantages that
you just mentioned, the wrong weight distribution and the wrong type of
traction is actually made up because with putting all the heavy big stuff up
front they can streamline the aerodynamics of the car and it actually runs
faster.
Bryan: Okay, so I wonder… it might go
faster but will it turn too quick?
Fr.
Robert: That is
what they are saying. When they were designing this, they wanted to solve that,
they wanted to solve weight distribution and they wanted to solve for oversteer and understeer. So what they found out is that by
putting the coolers upfront they could get all of the air they needed to cool
down the oil in the engine and then they can streamline the back of the car.
Essentially they can turn the entire car into a spoiler.
Bryan: It looks like a wing. Like a wedge.
Fr.
Robert: Now they
have done that in the past by either messing with the spoiler but there are
limitations and how big you can make that. And they also use things like blown
diffusers to kind of stick it to the ground but this is the first time that you
have had an entry with a lot of cash behind it that has said no we are going to
do a design that is completely different. Now we have no idea if this is going
to work. It could just fail out of LeMans. But, the
fact that they are doing something different I kind of like that.
Bryan: And that is not the weirdest car
that I have seen at LeMans. There is a tried wheel
car that has one wheel on the front and two on the back. I forget what it was
called. It seemed to spin out a lot. It was fast.
Fr.
Robert: I don’t
think I want to drive it.
Bryan: Without four tires you are losing
that much more traction.
Fr.
Robert: And taking
the corner at 150 miles an hour with three wheels?You got a be brave. But we will see. This event is
running in June and we will see how it works. It it even shows, if it lasts 24 hours you can probably expect the other team to take
a serious look at it. Because this is a first attempt and the other teams will
start to say whoa aerodynamics cells play a big part. Maybe we don’t go front
engine but maybe we go mid-engine and mess with our aerodynamics in the same
way. Like what happened with the F1 circuit with Mercedes moving that turbo to
the back of the car. Every team is now moving their turbo to the back of the
car.
Bryan: Yeah, the part I find fascinating
is not only are they trying something new that you have to be consistent. You
can’t just make a car that will race for 16 or 20 laps perfectly it has to do
it for 24 hours with multiple drivers.
Fr.
Robert: Exactly. If you only have one driver that can drive your super special car
that is not going to work.
Bryan: I'm looking forward to seeing
somewhere that.
Alex Gumple:
I'm pretty sure I've seen this design before.
Bryan: The similarities are uncanny.
Fr.
Robert: Batman
drives for Nissan? What?
Bryan: I knew that that mobile was front-wheel-drive.
Alex: It is jet powered.
Fr.
Robert: Speaking of
jet power. Well it’s not jet power. But we did, is that since it is March we
have gotten past the January and February time. When we said we weren’t going
to do any quad copter segment. We have hit that limit and now we are going to
do plot copters segments. Specifically people are saying the 250 was nice, a
lot of you bought the 250. Thank you very much because we are getting some
great feedback in our Google plus group. But the one thing that people ask for
is base say I wish I could take better Arial photography.
Bryan: That was the level of steps for me.
We played with the Styma and I was like okay I have
gotten good at this and now I want something faster. Then I got the 250 and it
was super maneuverable but then I wanted to strap a Go Pro to it.
Fr.
Robert: You can put
a Go Pro on the 250 as is but the footage is kind of shaky and is not very good people people started saying can I mount a gimbal on it? You could but it is kind of heavy
and you would get poor performance. It is time to move up. This is how it
works. You get comfortable with one class and you move up to the next class. In
this case we are moving up to this. This is Project Alien. Specifically it is
an Alien X frame. It is a 450 class and remember when we talk about classes we
are just talking about how far it is between props. But this is a stretched 450
class because as you can tell the distance between the front and the rear is actually longer than the distance between the two
columns. And you stretch it for a couple of reasons. One is because it gives
you more stability in this access, which is what a lot of people like that it
also allows you to fork out these front arms so that you can get them out of the
way of the camera because people don't want to see the props and the arms when
you are shooting video. Now I played with a lot of 450 class and this is the one settled on just because it is a nice mix between camera
stability and plan to fly. You could go for a straight 450, it is called an
X450 which puts all the props the same distance from each other when you go off
the sides. But the problem is that it is a boring flight. It is a good flight
for cameras. But it is boring.
Bryan: So you like to do a little stunting
or something?
Fr.
Robert: I like a
little something.
Bryan: You will sacrifice the stability to
have a little bit more…
Fr.
Robert: A little
bit of stability. But this is just a lot more fun to build. Now what we want to
do first is we want to give you all the parts that you are going to need to
build Project Alien. So we are doing this two weeks
before we continue the module. Because we want you to have
time to order all the parts if you are actually going to build along with us. So on the table this is everything you are going to
need to build it. Aside from the tools. You will need
the standard tools, wire cutters, wire strippers, soldering heads,
screwdrivers, ratchet drivers. I am assuming that you have all that on your
geek workbench.
Bryan: Especially if you have already done
the 250.
Fr.
Robert: If you've
done the 250 you already have all the tools you are going to need. But these
are the specific parts that you are going to need for Project Alien. Let’s
start with this. This is the frame. So we've got a top plate and a bottom
plate. They look the same but the bottom plate is actually a little bit wider
and a little bit longer. The reason why it is longer is because of this. This
right here is a clean plate. That is going to mount on this bottom plate with a
bunch of rubber dampers. And what that allows you to do is it allows you to
isolate the camera from the vibration of the frame. Which is
important because you notice that Jell-O effect that you get on the 250 and it is
just because the subtle vibrations are shaking the camera enough that you get
weird artifacts on the sensor.
Bryan: And one thing that I hadn’t thought
of, Tony’s strapped a Sony camera to his quad copter and have the shaky cam mode on. So it tries to adjust for the amount of shake and that
just made it way worse.
Fr.
Robert: People
always say I will just turn on the optical image stabilization and that should
fix it. No. It is vibrating so much and so quickly that it is actually kind of
counterproductive.
Bryan: That kind of stuff is fine if you
are a handheld but have you ever uploaded a YouTube video where it says your
video is too shaky? We can fix it for you. Every time I do that it just becomes
worse.
Fr.
Robert: So we are
not going to do that. This frame is actually inexpensive. You can find it for
about $18 on amazon.com.
But there are a lot of them. Just look for an Alien X frame and you are going
to find them.
Bryan: Can you find them on ready to fly
quads?
Fr.
Robert: They don’t
do this one on ready to fly quads. I would actually suggest you get this one
from Amazon. Now, power plants. Power plants are
important because you need the motor to give you the power to go right? Right
now there are two motors that I would suggest. The one I would suggest the most
is this. This is an Emax 2213. I buy these on eBay
just because you can get is set up for for about $56
or so. Take a look, this is what I like. These are actually count set for
counter rotation. This red one rotates counterclockwise and this black one
rotates clockwise. They are threaded for that. They are actually counter
threaded so that the rotation of the prop will actually tighten the motor bolt.
That is important when you start getting up in the bigger classes because you
are now dealing with props with a lot more thrust.
Bryan: A lot more thrust and spinning.
What is the power to weight ratio on this one?
Fr.
Robert: Power to
weight ratio on this one is about 8 to 1. So this will generate 8 g of thrust
for every gram that it weighs. It is not bad. Now, the thing is if that is a
little bit expensive and you really need to That this
is the second motor that I would suggest. This is the red series and it is a
house motor from ready to fly quads. This is $10. So you can get this and you
can get a spare for half the price of the other sets of motors. This doesn’t
give you near as much, this will probably give you about a 6 to 1 thrust to
weight ratio. I wouldn’t use it unless I had to. But we wanted to give you a
lower budget way to do it. Ready to fly quads also has some incredible motors
that will give you like 12 to 1 the thrust ratio. But you can always upgrade.
We are going to start with this. Past motors we’ve got to look at ESC’s. So
these are little devices that are going to drive power from the battery over to
the motor. They allow you to individually control the rotation of every motor.
Bryan: Was it last week we talked about
PWM?
Fr.
Robert: Yes, these use PWM. It is that wave, that’s squared off wave that
will determine how much power it delivers. Now the ones I would suggest RDs. These are the ready to fly quads and these are 30 A.
The nice thing about this is that it is $10. And that is actually about as
inexpensive as you are going to get. If you go to Hobby King or eBay they are
all going to cost more and most of them are not going to be as good as this.
Bryan: These, with the better software.
Fr.
Robert: They come
with firmware which is what you want because it means it is refreshing itself
more times so it responds more quickly to your throttle.
Bryan: Which is
definitely what you want when you are flying.
Fr.
Robert: Exactly. Because if you have a speed controller that is lagging and there is
a little bit of delay between the time you throttle up and down. Some
people think you turn the throttle on or you turn it off but you are always
riding that throttle. And you want it to respond immediately so that you can
keep your altitude and keep your heading.
Bryan: Especially if you are coming
towards the tree. Like somebody this weekend.
Fr.
Robert: I don’t
know what you’re talking about.
Bryan: And those props exploding.
Fr.
Robert: They didn’t
explode they just farted.
Bryan: Right. Along with
your camera.
Fr.
Robert: I can’t
blame the ESC’s, that was me using a really… well I knew there was something
wrong with the receiver but I thought it was probably okay to use. Folks, quick
safety tip. If you ever damage something just replace it. Seriously. Just replace it. It’s a good lesson. I could've saved myself a lot of cash by
just replacing it. That is ESC is now let’s go ahead and look at power
distribution. It is very important. This is how you get from your battery to
the ESC’s themselves. This is a two dollar board from ready to fly quiets and
it essentially allows you to solder two wires from your battery and it
distributes that power to everything on your craft, either the ESC’s, lights or
any sort of accessories that you may have. You can make your own harness.
People just take wire and they sought are together and put bullets on it. You
can do that. But I find this a lot better and it is a lot easier to expand if
you are using the power distribution board. And it is just two dollars so you
might as well.
Bryan: Definitely.
Fr.
Robert: So we got
our power distribution, we have a way to get to our ESC’s and now we need
something that we can put on the motor to actually generate thrust. what I would suggest is to pick up a set of carbon fiber
props. These are 845. So that is 8 inches long from tip to tip with a 4/5 pitch. Which means every rotation of this prop it is going to pull
forward 4.5 inches. So it is a little bit aggressive, you could go with
a lower pitch and a wider surface on the prop if you wanted a really steady
video. In fact what you can do is you could go ahead and go with the 10 or an
11 inch prop on these motors. And it will rotate slower which will create less
vibration which is actually better for cameras. But again, I like to balance
it. I like these because it gives it a lot of zip. I don't want to talk about
batteries right now that we might as well. This is a 3S battery, and this is a
4S battery. This one is going to run at 11.1 V and this one is going to run at
14.8 V so this one delivers more power. We know that motors, if you go way back
to the first episode we had when we were talking about how motors work, they
have a KV which is how many times they are going to rotate per minute times the
number of volts. So you give more volts to a motor it is going to rotate
faster. But, they also have a power limitation. The maximum
amount of power that you are going to push through a motor until they blow out. They will just melt down. This will run fine with 10 or 11 inch props on a 3S
battery but if you wanted to use a four asked battery you need to use 8 inch
props because 10 inches will pull too much power through the motors.
Bryan: Okay. What kind of flight time are
you looking at with these batteries?
Fr.
Robert: With the
2200 pack I would probably get about 7 to 10 minutes. But I would put a 5000
pack on that and get 20 minutes. It all depends on what you want and what you
are looking for. If you want longer flight times I would use a large 3S battery
with larger props, it is more efficient and you will fly longer. But the nice
thing about this is that if I want to sport fly I can put in the 4S with 8 inch
props and if I want to photography fly I put in ten inch propeller with a 3S
battery. And the other thing is, we are now moving into carbon fiber.
Bryan: I was going to say have you noticed
much of a difference in stability between that and a plastic prop?
Fr.
Robert: It is huge.
It is ridiculous. carbon fiber does a couple of
things. Number one, it is much lighter. Far lighter than a plastic nylon prop. Which is important because we talked about this when we talked
about motors the first time. The agility of your quad copter comes from
thrust control, how fast can you speed up and slow down props. Because that is
going to determine how quickly can you change the state of your quad copter. If
you have a heavier pop it takes longer to spin it up and longer to spend it
down. So you want as light a prop as possible so that you can change thrust states
immediately.
Bryan: With the most amount of strength.
Fr.
Robert: Exactly.
And that is the other thing. If you look at a nylon prop when you’re flying it actually bends.
Bryan: I’ve taken pictures of my quad
before and in the picture you can see the propellers are bent.
Fr.
Robert: And bending
props means excess vibration and it also means that you are bleeding off some
of the energy that should be pushing. It should be developing thrust. It
doesn’t really matter on a 5 inch prop that is why we didn’t care about getting
carbon fiber for our 250s. Because we are going to crash them a lot and carbon
fiber props are expensive. And also at that size you don’t see a whole lot of
benefit. A little bit that not as much to justify. I have never broken one of
these props. Oh I take that back. One of these props was broken but that is
because we got stuck in a 100mph windstorm and it actually blew my prop across
the beach.
Bryan: You were flying in a 100mph windstorm?
Fr.
Robert: No, no, no.
It was on the ground. And it literally blew everything.
Bryan: And as it tumbled?
Fr.
Robert: They will
snap. One other thing though. Carbon fiber props are dangerous.
Bryan: They will cut you.
Fr.
Robert: They will
cut you. And they will cut you deep. So if you are going to be using carbon
fiber and just know that you need to treat it like a knife.
Bryan: Do you recommend getting both and
starting with the plastic prop? Or just get the carbon fiber ones and save the
money and don’t hit anyone?
Fr.
Robert: I would say
that if you have been practicing on a 250 your training transfers directly over
to a 450 class. So go ahead and get yourself the carbon fiber product. Make
sure you’ve got all your stuff flying out on the 250 and then do steady flying
on the 450. And fly it outside.
Bryan: No flying in the studio.
Fr.
Robert: I’ve only
done that once. So we've got our props let’s talk a little bit about flight
controllers. I use a more advanced flight controller in the Alien that I fly
for my photography. It does GPS, it does way point encompassing and that is all
fine. But what I would suggest is that since technically we are still kind of
reaching out in the start of your building career go ahead and use a KK. This
thing is a $20 board. And this will do everything that you wanted to do. But
the really nice thing about the KK’s is that they are so easy to use. They have
that built-in LCD screen and the buttons are right on the flight controller so
that if you mount this thing on the top debt of your quad copter you can make
real-time adjustments in the field without having to have a computer or a phone
or anything else. This is what it looks like.
Bryan: I was going to say you’ve done a
very good job of your cabling and stuff so you have direct access to the
buttons.
Fr.
Robert: Right. And
you can actually take this and move it under the deck. You can put it inside
once you have it all dialed in and you want more protection. But with that
cost, $20, some of that is really going to allow you to define the difference
between what the PID settings do and what the thick scaling will do, it is
priceless. Especially since what we are going to be doing as we build, we are
going to show you what each of those settings will do to the characteristics of
your craft. It is a lot easier if you can actually see it right on top of the
quad.
Bryan: Because the other when you were
talking about you have to plug it into the computer to
dial in the settings right?
Fr.
Robert: It is an
Arduino board and I actually have mine set up with the Bluetooth module but it
means I have to use my phone. It is cool but that in itself is a project. We
are going to be doing that segment. This is digital and it is right on top and
there is no messing around. You know exactly what you are doing, and exactly
what the settings are.
Bryan: Because the worst thing is when you
get out to where you want to fly your quad and you realize you don’t have
something that you need.
Fr.
Robert: Exactly. Like I have actually done that. I've taken my nice quad out
where I was flying up in the mountains and it wasn't flying right. I wanted to
change the settings but I had forgotten the cable. I had no options, either I
fly it like that or I’d don’t like. If I had still had the KK on it I could
adjust it right there. And I would be good to go.
Bryan: I forgot the SD card on my Go Pro
once. After I got the Go Pro all mounted and everything.
Fr.
Robert: So those
are all good big-ticket items. There are a few other things that you are going
to want for this project. You are going to want bullets. These are 3.5 mm
bullets. Again, there are people who don't like bullet connectors they just
want to solder everything to everything else. Totally logical and you can do
that. I like a little bit more flexibility because I am always swapping parts
in and out of my quads.
Bryan: And you showed on a previous
episode that it is not too difficult to solder the bullets together. It is pretty
straightforward.
Fr.
Robert: It is
pretty straightforward and if you do it right, like WiSpy is in the chat room right now and I respect him and he always says you are just
adding a point of failure. And I know that. But at least for me, might builds
are so dynamic I’m going to swap it out way before anything fails. But there
will come a point when I am going to say this is a perfect build and I’m going
to solder everything else and make sure it is bulletproof.
Bryan: Because we are still in the stages
of playing around with what we like and what kind of models we want to play
with right? And usually the point of failure is between my thumbs.
Fr.
Robert: You are
also going to need some servo leads. You just need three. If you buy your controller
from ready to fly quads, which again I don’t advertise for ready to fly quite and they don’t give us any money I just have been so
happy with everything I bought from Paul Baxter. They will give you the board,
they will give you the leads and the pins soldered the way that you want. Just
make sure that you check the boxes so that you get them when you need them. And
of course, I am in love with his ESC’s.
Bryan: If you make good stuff we are going
to want to play with it.
Fr.
Robert: In fact I
just ordered the parts for building an X8, it is an Optic Copter.
Bryan: Is that going to cut in to our
snack budget though? We don’t have pork funds anymore.
Fr.
Robert: You are
also going to need 14gauge wire. So this is what you need to be able to handle
the current that is going to be going through. You don’t need that much. I
would just go to eBay and buy about 10 feet of this. For
something like $7.50.
Bryan: And you have to get the silicone
right?
Fr.
Robert: Yes. This
is important because if you get the plastic sheet one that stuff will melt.
Silicone is nice and flexible and it will stay flexible. It is easier to work
with. Don't cheap out on them. You are going to want to get some heat shrink. I
got heat shrink tubing in every size in my lab. You could just get a pack like
this. I think I got this thing for like five dollars. And it just contains all
different colors of heat shrink tubing. Which is nice because
sometimes you want to color code your connections. You are also going to
want a set of nylon spacers. These are incredibly useful. I got a pack of like
every size of nylon spacer. I actually have a much bigger tab of this that you
can buy a starter pack. These are things that you are not going to exhaust just
doing this project, so if you are getting into quad copter building by years
self a nice supply. The more you buy, The cheaper it
is going to get and you are going to use them. I am always using nylon spacers
because they are vital whenever you are putting things inside an internal
structure of a quad copter.
Bryan: I can see you have put them to
pretty good use.
Fr.
Robert: Absolutely
everywhere. It just makes things more flexible. You also want to get a set of
8mm M3 .05 screws. These things right here. You need the 8mm version. I bought
this pack for like four dollars because I am going to use a lot of them. You
need the 8mm because 6 mm is not going to penetrate far enough into the can and
you are going to get a motor that wants to let go. 10 mm will actually go too
far into the can and you will start touching the windings. Make sure it is 8mm.
Again, don’t buy small packs. A small pack will cost you three dollars and this
cost me four dollars. Buy a big pack and you will use them for years.
Bryan: I’ve kind of learned that lesson in
some of the parts that I bought for the Syma period I
should have just bought all of them at once.
Fr.
Robert: Actually
there was one point and I was like I should just buy extra Syma’s for parts. It’s cheaper.
Bryan: And just buy with their free
shipping and then wait a month or two depending on what you are buying and then
just have them on hand.
Fr.
Robert: So
altogether if you want to go the inexpensive route and go with the inexpensive
motors this build is going to cost you about $160 or so. If you have some of
the stuff that calm you could shave off like $20. So the cheapest I have been
able to build this with the existing supportive equipment is about $140. If you
have none of it, but you do have a radio and a battery and a charger because
you have done a build before, it is going to cost you about $170 to $180. If
you have absolutely nothing if this is actually the first bill that you have
ever done and you need to get a transmitter and a battery etc. it is going to
cost you about $250 to $280.
Bryan: Ka-Ching!
If you are going to get a Phantom, this is still cheaper than that.
Fr.
Robert: And by the
way this doesn’t include the Go Pro that you were going to strap on.
Bryan: Oh that is true. but I think you can pick up the older Hero3 for not too much.
Fr.
Robert: So. We are
actually going to talk about alternatives. For example, I lost a camera during
my AFP the incident but it was a $50 one. So it is not as bad as losing a $400
Go Pro.
Bryan: Yeah. Black edition or something
like that.
Fr.
Robert: All of this
is going to be in the show notes so you don’t have to rewind us to figure out what you are going to get. I have actually given your links
and prices so you know exactly where to go to buy. You have got to week so if
you buy it today you should have them all in your house by the time we actually
start the build.
Bryan: Cool. Can we fly these now?
Fr.
Robert: No. You
have to wait.
Bryan: You bring all this stuff out and I
haven’t even gotten to play with it.
Fr.
Robert: I built
this one for you.
Bryan: Well let’s go fly then. Can we just
end the show now? Wait let me grab the quad.
Fr.
Robert: Now, we
will be applying more of these in just a bit. But right now, we are going to
jump into our crossover episode. If you came here from Coding 101, then you
have seen what we had to do coding wise in order to get the Arduino clock
working. We’ve got Mark Smith, Smitty from DefCon, who is guiding us through a little bit of embedded
programming and now we are actually going to show you how the hardware comes
together.
Mark
Smith: Hey
everybody this is Smitty on Know How. Over the last
few weeks we have shown you on Know How and on Coding 101 how to make one of these
awesome analog panel meter clocks. We showed you the code, we showed you some of the hardware on a breadboard. Today, what we are going to
do is we are going to take a prototyping shield for the Arduino and we are
going to hard solder that circuit onto this board so that you don’t have to
worry about wires falling out. And then you can use your prototyping board to
go work on some other project. The results of this will be a hard soldered kit
that you can put together in an awesome box like this and have a final product
that you can put on the shelf and use forever. You will notice that there is
one very similar to this already in here. I have used lots of them but the one
that I like for this project is the solar bought XB ProtoShield.
The reason I like this particular ProtoSheild is that
it comes with buttons. It has four buttons built into the board already. It
also has some LEDs and some other things on there. We won’t be using those. But
the buttons are the things I really like. It is about the same price. Some are
about $10-$20 each and I think I got these for $15 on Amazon. I’m sorry, not
Amazon. Solarponics. Links will be in the show notes. We are going to be using
this board with those buttons leaving off some of the bits that we are not using
since we are not actually going to be using it for prototyping this is going to
be a final thing. Consequently, I’m not going to follow the instructions. Instead,
we are just going to install the bits that we want and leave off the bits that
we don’t want so that we are left with a minimal product. The first thing we
are going to do is we are going to solder on the male headers. The male headers
are the ones that connect the shield into the Arduino. There are a bunch of
male headers there, there are four of them in the kit.
Two of them are 8 pin and two of them are six pin. If you look at the shield
there are two sections of six pins over here and two sections of eight pins
over here. So we are going to put those headers into these holes over here. Now,
also notice that there are two different roads. There is an outside row and an
inner row. This kit was designed to have a separate male and female header. The
male header is on the bottom like that so that you can connect it to the
Arduino. And then the female header goes on top so that you can plug your wires
into it. Since we are going to be hard soldering to this board I am not going
to bother with the female headers. But we are still going to use the mail
headers on the bottom. One thing with headers is that they wobble a lot. When
you put them in and they haven’t been soldered yet. You really want them to sit
flush with the board and the way I do that is by pushing down on it with my
finger now on the plastic and that pushes the plastic flat against the board.
To do that, and be able to solder all at the same time, the way I've found to
do that is to go ahead and solder one in without worrying too much about
whether it is flush. Let that solder cool, then we are going to take the board
and I am going to hold it with my finger, don’t hold onto that pen because you
will burn it but hold onto the other pins and push it flush against the board.
Wobble it around while you preheat the solder and when you know with this flash
then you can release the solder, let it cool down and now you can go back and
solder the rest of the pins and that first pin will hold it in place. I’m going
to go ahead and do the same to the other three headers. Notice how that is kind
of off angle it is a little wobbly from the other one. So I’m going to go in,
reheat that solder, line it up, let that cool down again, and then it will be
nice and straight and in line with the other ones. That is the way we want to
see it. Let me go back and solder the rest. One thing to note is that I am
exhaling ever so slightly while I am soldering this and blowing the smoke away
from me otherwise when you inhale you will get a lung full of solder flux and
that is no good. All right, so, we have an Arduino shield with straight pins
and we should be able to plug this in an Arduino. Line up the pins nice and
straight and make sure none are overhanging on either side, make sure they are
all making it into the holes and plug it in. And it is good. Look at that it is
a shield. It doesn’t have a whole lot of useful information on it or a lot of
useful parts on it but we are going to put those on next. Next thing we want to
put on here are the switches. It comes with five different switches, these are
small tactile switches. They are very small and simple switches. There are four
places up here for four different switches that you can wire into your circuit.
We are only going to be using three of these so I am going to leave one of them
unpopulated. If you remember from the Coding 101 episode where we talked about
this, two of these will be used for setting minute and seconds and one of them
will be for putting into calibration mode. The fifth switch that is on the
board is a reset. Sometimes your code gets a little wonky or you want to started over from scratch for whatever reason you want to be
able to reset your code. So this one down here is a reset
switch. You can kind of see it is labeled reset on the board. That is a
feature that they included on this prototyping board. Make sure that all your
buttons go all the way down before you solder. So I am going to go ahead and
solder these buttons in. Let’s take a look at our buttons. The minute and hour, the calibrate and the reset. They are all flush with
the board. We’ve also got some LEDs and they are current limiting resistors. We
will go ahead and populate one of these because I did put a LED tick-tock on
the code. Now one thing to note about the LED is that there is a little bit of
a flat side and then the other side is still rounded. The flat side is one of
the two sites. These devices are polarized so you need to make sure they go in
the right orientation. If you look at the board you will notice that the
outline has kind of a flat side on the outline of the diode. Make sure that the
flat side of the LED goes into the flat side on the board. So I am going to do
that. We will go ahead and push that in. If you were making this kit as a
general prototyping board you would go ahead and populate all of these that
since this is going to be a special purpose application we know what it is
going to be doing and we know that there are going to be three other LEDs so I
am not going to bother populating them. We are going to keep it in minimal
board. We will cut off the excess leads. There you go. So we have an LED, but
we don’t have its current limiting resistor. I need to put its current limiting
resistor in there. They come in packs of four like this and I’m just going to
take one out, just literally pull it out of the sides. Now, look at the board.
The pins and the holes on the board are awfully close to each other so I am not
going to be able to do a standard bend on a resistor where it looks like that.
Instead, we are going to have to make this a vertically mounted resistor where
the band looks like that. So I am going to go ahead and push this in. Resistors
are non-polarized so it doesn’t matter which way they go in. On the flip side,
on the back side of it here I am going to bend these wires out just a little
bit to hold it in place while I solder it in. That way the resistor won’t fall
out. Trim off the excess leads. All right we’ve got an LED, a current limiting
resistor, we’ve got our switches, I think that is
about it for all the components that come on. The rest of this subordinate has
a couple of servo outlets over here that you can run some servos. We are not
going to be using any of those. These two 1x4’s are
the connections to the switches and the LEDs and normally the kit has us
putting these female socket headers on top. So that you can
use the breadboard wires. We are not going to be doing that, we are
going to be hardwiring now so I am not going to the put these in. That is
pretty much it and now we need to start soldering up the rest of the board.
Fr.
Robert: We actually
have a question from the chat room, they are wondering why he wasn’t putting
more components on the this ProtoShield. it is because This is final assembly. If you want to
see what it looks like using a breadboard what you want to do is watch the crossover
Coding 101 episode. Because he just puts the components and and then he jumpers them. So if you want to test first go ahead and use the actual
breadboard ProtoShield. This is final assembly ProtoShield in other words this ProtoShield will never be used for anything else.
Bryan: And he is very fast at soldering.
Fr.
Robert: I know did
you see that? And actually I slowed that down. If you do want to continue with
the entire project we are going to be doing it over the next two weeks. But again,
he is only going to be showing you the hardware on Know How. Coding 101 is
where you have to go to find the software. The nice thing about this is after
this set of episodes is done I am going to show you how I repurposed the
hardware and the software to do something else that is actually very cool with
no additional work required. This is one of the things about the world of
Arduino that use start to notice which is one project leads
to another which leads to another. Because you just start adding inputs
and outputs and you are good to go.
Bryan: Yeah, and the more you play with at
the more you find other projects. And Hi Tech is saying Always thought a tip
clean. Absolutely. That is not just a safety tip if
you don’t keep it clean intend what is going to happen is that your tips will
corrode and when they corrode they look like they do in my shop.
Bryan: I was going to say if you see any
of padres soldering segments…
Fr.
Robert: Please. But
they end up looking discuss things although they will still kind of work but
you get messy solder joints and if you buy something nice take care of it.
Bryan: I think you just do it to prove
that it can be done.
Fr.
Robert: I have a
really nice kit and you never see it on camera. Because I don’t want to mess it
up.
Bryan: It is like buying a toy and leaving
it in the wrapping.
Fr.
Robert: It is a
fine control soldering iron and the problem is when you solder on camera you
are always doing weird angles. End it doesn’t work. Nevermind. Let’s go ahead
and jump into a little bit of feedback because it has been a while since we had
a chance to listen to what the folks in the chat room and in our Google plus
group have been saying. Bryan, do we have a first winner?
Bryan: Our first feedback question from
our Google plus is, “What is your network tester?” and that is from Daniel. He wanted
to know if we could identify the fluke network tester that you used on episode
129. He couldn’t actually make out what was written on it even though it was
then 720 P.
Fr.
Robert: Sorry about
that but I thought I mentioned it but maybe not. I was using this. This is an
old fluke network tool. They don’t actually sell these things anymore. So buy
on eBay. If you were to buy this one when it originally came out it was like
$1500. But not anymore. You can actually get one of
these from between $100, in pretty bad condition cosmetically, and they go all
the way up to $500. One of the nice things about this is that it is not just a
cable tester it is a network tester. So it will test your D8CP server, your
DNS, it will actually look for continuity. It will tell you where the break is
because this will do the return time. So it knows where there is a break in the
cable. But, one big disadvantage and that this is just 10/100 so this does not
test gigabit networks. Which is actually not a big deal
because we are not looking to verify gigabit runs we are actually looking to
test continuity and then test service.
Bryan: Especially if you made your own
network cable.
Fr.
Robert: Right. Which brings us to something else that you can get. You can
buy this brand-new. It is about $200 and this is one of their IntelliTone’s. The cool thing about the IntelliTone it isn’t just a cable mapper it is also a toner so I can plug this side into
the toner end this side will actually allow me if I get close to the cable it
will let me know what I am plugged into. So if you’ve got a project where you
have a bundle of cables or you are trying to figure out which cable goes where,
you plug this into one end and you can use a toner to find exactly what cable
that is.
Bryan: And that works because it is
sending a signal down the line and these are basically like little antennas?
Fr.
Robert: That’s
right. It is just sending a tone down the line enough of that are at the energy
comes off end this is like a radio receiver to so it is just receiving the
signal and then it amplifies it. Back, it has a second mode. And the second
mode is if you plug the cable into both ends it will actually do a cable test.
It’s got these eight LEDs that will tell you whether or not that particular
lead is connected properly. Now, Bryan, I actually got this cable from your
desk.
Bryan: This is my handiwork.
Fr.
Robert: This is
your handiwork so let’s go ahead and turn on the cable map and see what it
looks like. Okay well the first two are good. And then the bonk sound is not
good.
Bryan: That is what the noise should be at
the end of the line. So two of my connections are okay but the others are not.
Fr.
Robert: It’s a
start. But again this is a multipurpose tool because this allows you to locate
cables as well as testing them. Now I know that is still a lot, $200 can be
kind of pricey for the newer versions. This is the links printer and this one
can go all the way down to $100. This is a new product from fluke end this will
do cable testing but it does it in a weird way. You actually start up in
account on flukes Web server and you test a bunch of cables and it will
actually upload the results to the Web server and then you can check them from
your computer. Which sounds convoluted but then is like
automatic documentation. It documents your house.
Bryan: Is there a mobile app?
Fr.
Robert: Yes there
is a mobile app. So, I like fluke networks just because I have used them for so
long. They are really high quality tools and they never break unless I am
trying to break them. They are pricey. If you just want super simple cable
testing, go to a place like Monoprice and for $30 you
can buy something that will just literally tell you if electrons are passing
from one side of the wire to the other.
Bryan: That if you are going to be wiring,
not only your house but maybe relatives houses….
Fr.
Robert: It’s nice
to have more of a little something something. I know
people who have a cable tester that they will plug a laptop in and it works.
Bryan: If I can get on the Internet we are
good.
Fr.
Robert: And I’m not
going to make fun of that. That is fine. You go with what you’ve got. But
sometimes it is nice to have nicer things.
Bryan: Especially if you are laying more
than one cable. I guess we should move on to our next feedback question. So,
believe got John.
Alex: Hey Brian, sorry I am looking
at the network. And it looks like we just have a hand on this episode. We
should probably cut it short. We don't want to feel the episode with too much
free knowledge.
Bryan: Woe woe.
Fr.
Robert: You were
the one who told him to take a bigger role in the show. And this is what he
does.
Bryan: The power has gone to his head. But
we've got so much wore to talk about.
Alex: But we've got responsibilities
here.
Bryan: I need him to keep us in check
Padre.
Fr.
Robert: Fine. Fine.
Alex: We’ll save him for next week.
Fr.
Robert: Thank you
very much for staying around for this segment of the show. We know this was a
lot of material end especially since we gave you a parts list we are not going
to leave you in the dark. On the show notes page you will have everything
spelled out. We literally will take everything from our notes and put it into
the show notes.
Bryan: We’ll take what Padre puts in the
dock and we’ll paste it in the website.
Fr.
Robert: Where do
they go for that?
Bryan: They go to twit.tv/KH. And not only
can you find our show notes you can find past episodes which is extremely handy
when we are going back on projects like soldering bullets and are quad projects
and everything else. And there are handy little drop-down menus for downloading
the episode to your preferred device. So if you have a Zoon like Alex.
Fr.
Robert: My Zoon
died.
Bryan: Well you should have been smart and
bought like two or three like Alex did. I think he even has like, what is that
little phone? A Ken?
Alex: I have a Ken somewhere.
Fr.
Robert: That only
worked for like 30 days.
Bryan: And when they discontinued it they had to notify their next of kin. But I
digress.
Fr.
Robert: If you've
got really bad puns like that you are probably going to want to check out our
Google plus group. It is 8000 members and growing. Tell your friends to join
in. It is a great place to get information.
Bryan: And it is a cool place to go around
and see other people’s projects and get ideas from those. I know that a few of
the projects that we have done had been outshines on Google plus. So thank you.
Fr.
Robert: Stop it. Just
stop it. We used to give you a link for it but just go to Google plus a look
for know-how. There is only one Know How group. Come join in, ask questions,
post questions and post your projects. We will take your questions on the air.
One of the other things that we did if Alex hadn’t stopped us, we actually had
a feedback of a very cool Arduino project that one of our Know It All’s did. We
are going to show you that next week.
Bryan: We were going to show you. But now
we are just going to drive out. All because of Alex.
Fr.
Robert: You can
find us on other social media venues. Specifically on
twitter. You can find me @PadreSJ.
Bryan: And I’m @cranky_hippo.
And if you want to complain about the episode being short you can go to
@anelf3.
Fr.
Robert: In fact the
power of Padre impels you to go to twitter and complain to @anelf3. Tell him we
want more Know How.
Alex: In reality it was totally my
decision.
Fr.
Robert: Don’t
forget we are getting back into our quad copter episodes
which means next week we are going to continue the Arduino clock but we
are also going to be doing the first episode where we are going to show you
mindset you can make to your existing FPV 250. So if you built a 250 from three
months ago we are going to start to give you little tips, some of them
completely free, that can increase your performance and stability.
Bryan: I just want to fly, Padre. Can we
just see some FPV?
Fr.
Robert: Until next
time, I’m Father Robert Ballecer.
Bryan: And I’m Bryan Burnett.
Fr.
Robert: And now
that you know how…