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Handy Board

Handy Board. Why the Handy Board. Designed to be the controller of small, mobil robots Has many features that make it ideal for robotics projects Integrated motor drivers 32K bytes of memory LCD screen Integrated battery pack Interactive C Small size

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Handy Board

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  1. Handy Board

  2. Why the Handy Board • Designed to be the controller of small, mobil robots • Has many features that make it ideal for robotics projects • Integrated motor drivers • 32K bytes of memory • LCD screen • Integrated battery pack • Interactive C • Small size • Sensor connectors for digital and analog sensors

  3. Handy Board Specifications • Motorola 6811 microprocessor with system clock at 2 MHz. • 32K of battery-backed CMOS static RAM. • Two L293D chips capable of driving four DC motors. • 16 x 2 character LCD screen. • Two user programmable buttons, one knob and one piezo beeper. • Powered header inputs for 7 analog sensors and 9 digital sensors.

  4. Handy Board Specifications • Internal 9.6v nicad battery with built in recharging circuit. • Hardware 38 kHz oscillator and drive transistor for IR output and on-board 38 kHz IR receiver. • 8-pin powered connector to 6811 SPI circuit. • Expansion bus with chip selects. • 4.25 x 3.15 inches.

  5. Handy Board

  6. Expansion Board Specifications • 10 additional analog sensor inputs; • 4 inputs for active LEGO sensors (reflectance sensor and shaft encoder). • 9 digital outputs. • 6 servo motor control signals with power supply from the Handy Board's internal battery. • optional external power for servo motors.

  7. Expansion Board Specifications • connector mount for Polaroid 6500 ultrasonic ranging system. • pass-through connector for the Handy Board's LCD screen.

  8. Expansion Board

  9. Charging • Adapter plugged directly into board. trickle-charge • Adapter plugged into the Serial Interface/Battery Charger board with “NORMAL CHARGE” selected. Trickle-charge • Adapter plugged into the Serial Interface/Batter Charger board with “ZAP CHARGE” selected. Zap Charge mode

  10. Downloaders • Two primary components to Interactive C • 6811 downloader program • Interactive C application • “pcode_hb.s19” must be present in the handy board to use Interactive C. • Bootstrap Mode • Turn off the board ant then turn it on while holding down the stop button. When the two power LEDs go out it is in bootstrap mode.

  11. Interactive C • A subset of C • Includes control structures, local and global variables, arrays, pointers integers and floating point numbers • Data types • Int 16-bit integers • Long 32-bit integers • Float 32-bit floating point • Char 8-bit characters • No switch statements

  12. Using IC • IC will perform any valid C statement • 2+2; • (beep(), sleep(2.0);beep()}; • Main function • If main function is present it will be run when the Handy Board is reset

  13. Using IC • IC commands • load <filename> compiles and loads “filename” to the Handy Board • unload <filename> unloads “filename” and re-loads remaining files • list files, list functions, list globals lists files, functions or globals presently on the Handy Board • kill_all kills all currently running processes • Ps prints the status of currently running processes • Help displays a help screen of IC commands • Quit exits IC

  14. Library functions • DC Motors • void fd(int m) turns on motor m in forward direction • void bk(int m) turns on motor m in backward direction • void off(int m) turns off motor m • void alloff() turns off all motors • void ao() turns off all motors • void motor(int m, int p) turns on motor m to power level p (p ranges from 100 to -100 or full forward to full backwards)

  15. Library functions • Sensor input • int digital(int p) returns true false value of sensor in sensor port p • int analog(int p) returns value of sensor in sensor port p (value between 0 and 255) • User Buttons and knobs • int stop_button() returns value of STOP button (1=pressed,0=relesed) • int start_button() returns value of START button (1=pressed,0=relesed) • void stop_press() waits for STOP button to be pressed, then relesed and then issues a short beep and returns • void start_press() waits for START button to be pressed, then relesed and then issues a short beep and returns • int knob() returns the position of the knob as a value from 0 to 255

  16. Library functions • Time Commands • void reset_system_time() sets system time to zero • long mseconds() returns system time in milliseconds • float seconds() returns system time in seconds • void sleep(float sec) sleeps for sec seconds • void msleep (long msec) sleeps for msec milliseconds

  17. Library functions • Tone Functions • void beep() produces a 500 Hertz tone for .3 seconds • void tone(float frequency, float length) produces a tone at frequency Hertz for length seconds • void set_beeper_pitch(float frequency) sets the beeper tone to frequency Hertz • void beeper_on() turns on the beeper • void beeper_off() turns off the beeper

  18. Analog and Digital Sensor Inputs • Two banks sensor inputs • nine digital sensor inputs • seven analog sensor inputs

  19. Sensor Circuitry • Each port is a 3-wire sensor (power, ground, signal) • 47K resistor provides half of a common voltage divider circuit • Default 5 volts when no signal is present

  20. Sensor Inputs • Digital Inputs • True/False (Vsens>2.5/Vsens<2.5) • Analog Inputs • Range from 0 to 5 volts • Converted to 8-bit number • 0 to 255 decimal

  21. Switch • Simple switch circuit -contact switch

  22. Voltage Divider • Simple voltage divider circuit • Light sensors • Reflectance sensors

  23. Reflectance Sensor • Emitter led • Current limiting resistor • Detector/photoresistor • Concept directly applies to Break beam sensors

  24. Optical Distance Sensor GP2D12 • Modulated IR emitter • Projects a spot of modulated light onto target surface • Detector assembly • Light from the spot is focused by the detector lens • The focused light hits a special linear position-sensitive detector element

  25. Optical Distance Sensor • The angle of incidence changes depending on the distance the light spot on target surface is from the Detector Lens/Position Sensitive Detector

  26. Gears • Uses • To reverse the direction of rotation • To increase or decrease the speed of rotation • To move rotational motion to a different axis • To keep the rotation of two axis synchronized • Tradeoffs of increasing/decreasing speed • Gearing for high speed reduces torque • Gearing for high torque reduces speed

  27. Gears • Gear Ratios • Representation of the size difference between the two gears 2:1 (two to one) • The smaller gear has to spin two times for the larger gear to spin a single time • Gear Trains • Combination of multiple gears • Produce larger gear ratios • Change axis of rotation • Synchronize gears

  28. Lab • Ferguson room 18 • Equipment • Computers • Voltage Supplies • Voltage Meters • Oscilloscopes • Soldering equipment • Wave Generators • Manuals located in workbench drawers

  29. References • Robotic Explorations A Hands-On Introduction to Engineering by Fred G. Martin • http://handyboard.com/ • http://www.cse.unl.edu/~bradleyk/lego.htm

  30. Questions

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