Torpedo firing circuit
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Torpedo firing circuit
Anyone have any ideas on designing a cirucit to make this sucker work?
- DLMatthys
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A soldure yourself kit in between $15 to $25
I call that reasonable.
And I put to a challege... to any E engineer reading here...(for which I am not)
Come up with a schematic useing regular hobbiest off the shelf PCB parts and chips. (make a list, ie DigiKey)
And a circuit etch trace would be a plus...a rough schetch on a napkin even, that I can take to Illustrator.
Please,( not to offend basic stamp fans),... nothing you have to "program" off a computer.
Something a hobbiest can soldure down, power up, flip a switch..."Fire One, Fire Two!"
An intrepid elelctronics engineer with some gumption and comon sense can earn themselvs a big butt load of favors and products from DLM
I call that reasonable.
And I put to a challege... to any E engineer reading here...(for which I am not)
Come up with a schematic useing regular hobbiest off the shelf PCB parts and chips. (make a list, ie DigiKey)
And a circuit etch trace would be a plus...a rough schetch on a napkin even, that I can take to Illustrator.
Please,( not to offend basic stamp fans),... nothing you have to "program" off a computer.
Something a hobbiest can soldure down, power up, flip a switch..."Fire One, Fire Two!"
An intrepid elelctronics engineer with some gumption and comon sense can earn themselvs a big butt load of favors and products from DLM
- Pat Amaral
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A few months ago, Virtualight posted a photorp circuit she was working on that was based on design found in Paul Newitt's StarFleet Assembly Manual 4. She posted a link to the schematic she developed but I've been unable to find it on her site and I can't find the copy of the file I had. Perhaps she is reading this and she'll repost the link to her schematic.
Pat A.
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50% Nerd, 50% Geek, 100% Cool
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50% Nerd, 50% Geek, 100% Cool
- DLMatthys
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I was thinking along the lines of that angle also, Pat. She nailed it pretty good. And I did see the video and have the files she posted.
But since I do have an original System-E board and a signed copy #425 of Newiitt's SFAM#4 on hand I may take a close look at that option. I'm looking for somthing from someone more original. A lot of those System E parts and IC chips are obsolete. As for Newitt... last I heard he is become a model rail road wrangler.
So far it seams like all of them electronics engineers who come by here must be off elswhere imershed into HALO 3
But since I do have an original System-E board and a signed copy #425 of Newiitt's SFAM#4 on hand I may take a close look at that option. I'm looking for somthing from someone more original. A lot of those System E parts and IC chips are obsolete. As for Newitt... last I heard he is become a model rail road wrangler.
So far it seams like all of them electronics engineers who come by here must be off elswhere imershed into HALO 3
- Pat Amaral
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Re: torpedo
Has anyone purchased this kit? I want a review of it before I buy it, plus details about how it works.drache wrote:Voodoo's kit is really cool, but it's $90 - a bit too steep for me.
- MillenniumFalsehood
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There's a much cheaper lighthouse kit for model railroaders available somewhere that seemed like an ideal cheap way to get a phototorp launcher, but the site it was on escapes me.
If a redhead works at a bakery, does that make him a gingerbread man?
Ponies defeat a Star Trek villain? Give them a Star Wars award ceremony!
Ponies defeat a Star Trek villain? Give them a Star Wars award ceremony!
- Pat Amaral
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Is this what you're talking about?MillenniumFalsehood wrote:There's a much cheaper lighthouse kit for model railroaders available somewhere that seemed like an ideal cheap way to get a phototorp launcher, but the site it was on escapes me.
Pat A.
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50% Nerd, 50% Geek, 100% Cool
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50% Nerd, 50% Geek, 100% Cool
The problem with that one is that it ramps up to full intensity, and then fades out gradually. I believe it uses a simple sin wave generator. For the photon torpedo to look convincing, it has to "ramp up" to full intensity, and cut off abruptly.
From what I saw on VoodooFX's website, that is what theirs does, and it looks quite believable. It is pretty expensive though, especially when I look at how many other lights and flashing circuits I want to build into mine.
From what I saw on VoodooFX's website, that is what theirs does, and it looks quite believable. It is pretty expensive though, especially when I look at how many other lights and flashing circuits I want to build into mine.
As far as i can tell by looking at the firing sequences frame by frame, there are actualy 2 colors, 1 orange/red ramps up to full in approx. 0.6 seconds, holds full for 1 second, and ramps down in approx. 0.6 seconds.
The second color is a 1/10 sec white or blue flash exactly in the middle of the 1 second hold.
The flash overloads our optic nerves and we register that flash as longer while the rampdown of the orange is already in progress which we don't register.
Hence the impression that after firing the light fades abruptly.
A close look at the foottage also reveales that they brightned up all the white that is in front of the torpedo launcher in post production.
At least for the Movie Enterprise 1701 and 1701A.
I havent looked closely at the ent D and E yet
The second color is a 1/10 sec white or blue flash exactly in the middle of the 1 second hold.
The flash overloads our optic nerves and we register that flash as longer while the rampdown of the orange is already in progress which we don't register.
Hence the impression that after firing the light fades abruptly.
A close look at the foottage also reveales that they brightned up all the white that is in front of the torpedo launcher in post production.
At least for the Movie Enterprise 1701 and 1701A.
I havent looked closely at the ent D and E yet
Democracy may be only a few steps removed from anarchy,
But at least it's not as loud.
You broke your little ships. See you around Ahab.
But at least it's not as loud.
You broke your little ships. See you around Ahab.
I wonder how difficult this would be to do with a PIC. Can't be that hard and the parts would be cheap. I'm going to play around with some PIC programming and see what I come up with. Anyone try this approach?kitty wrote:As far as i can tell by looking at the firing sequences frame by frame, there are actualy 2 colors, 1 orange/red ramps up to full in approx. 0.6 seconds, holds full for 1 second, and ramps down in approx. 0.6 seconds.
The second color is a 1/10 sec white or blue flash exactly in the middle of the 1 second hold.
The flash overloads our optic nerves and we register that flash as longer while the rampdown of the orange is already in progress which we don't register.
Hence the impression that after firing the light fades abruptly.
A close look at the foottage also reveales that they brightned up all the white that is in front of the torpedo launcher in post production.
At least for the Movie Enterprise 1701 and 1701A.
I havent looked closely at the ent D and E yet
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I could do it with my kit pretty easily, its already got a microcontroller on it and the software is all setup to read brightness levels from a table. I dont know what people are willing to pay for such a beastie and now that I've read this thread it might be a little unethical to "borrow" all these good ideas.
-John C.
-John C.
That Madman Who Lit Up Deep Space Nine
Pretty much sums up what I would call reasonable for price range. Could this be an "add-on" or separate small kit. The programming of the chip is the part that I am totally unfamiliar with. Wires, solder, and electronic bits don't scare me a bit.DLMatthys wrote:A soldure yourself kit in between $15 to $25
I call that reasonable.
And I put to a challege... to any E engineer reading here...(for which I am not)
Come up with a schematic useing regular hobbiest off the shelf PCB parts and chips. (make a list, ie DigiKey)
And a circuit etch trace would be a plus...a rough schetch on a napkin even, that I can take to Illustrator.
Please,( not to offend basic stamp fans),... nothing you have to "program" off a computer.
Something a hobbiest can soldure down, power up, flip a switch..."Fire One, Fire Two!"
An intrepid elelctronics engineer with some gumption and comon sense can earn themselvs a big butt load of favors and products from DLM
I think $50 or less is about right (I'd say MUCH less). If you keep your prices too high, it just drives away sales. For example, the VoodooFX stuff is FAR too high priced for what you get and what you can figure out on your own given enough time on the internet.Madman Lighting wrote:I could do it with my kit pretty easily, its already got a microcontroller on it and the software is all setup to read brightness levels from a table. I dont know what people are willing to pay for such a beastie and now that I've read this thread it might be a little unethical to "borrow" all these good ideas.
-John C.
I know there's a point where you need to make a profit, but I think if you miss the sweet spot by going too high, you scare people away.
A small board just for the torpedo launch for $15?
That should be easy enough, you can do it with less than $8 worth of components (including the PIC), leaving $7 for the pcb.
Al you need is a microcontroller with a counter , 2 PWM outs and some memory for the program
There are 8 pin Pics that can do it that only cost like $2.00-$3.00.
And you could even throw in a soundeffect with those
Or you could use a small Atmel microcontroller
That should be easy enough, you can do it with less than $8 worth of components (including the PIC), leaving $7 for the pcb.
Al you need is a microcontroller with a counter , 2 PWM outs and some memory for the program
There are 8 pin Pics that can do it that only cost like $2.00-$3.00.
And you could even throw in a soundeffect with those
Or you could use a small Atmel microcontroller
Democracy may be only a few steps removed from anarchy,
But at least it's not as loud.
You broke your little ships. See you around Ahab.
But at least it's not as loud.
You broke your little ships. See you around Ahab.
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*Sigh*
The thing that hobbyists forget is that if you're running a biz, you need to make a profit on what you buy so I bet I could buy just the parts and PCB for that much but then I get nothing for my time and effort to invent it, build it, box it, etc and my retailer gets nothing for selling it. Sure Randy's stuff is pricy but I'm not getting rich playing this game either.
If Kitty can invent, build and sell it for $15, I'll be pretty impressed.
Now I have a question for the PIC fans in this group:
I know you need to be as simple as possible with your PIC but I'm spoiled with my On Semi micro that has background debug mode and lets me code in C. Do PICs have similar features at the $1 per part price? How expensive are the starter development kits?
Thanks!!
-John C.
The thing that hobbyists forget is that if you're running a biz, you need to make a profit on what you buy so I bet I could buy just the parts and PCB for that much but then I get nothing for my time and effort to invent it, build it, box it, etc and my retailer gets nothing for selling it. Sure Randy's stuff is pricy but I'm not getting rich playing this game either.
If Kitty can invent, build and sell it for $15, I'll be pretty impressed.
Now I have a question for the PIC fans in this group:
I know you need to be as simple as possible with your PIC but I'm spoiled with my On Semi micro that has background debug mode and lets me code in C. Do PICs have similar features at the $1 per part price? How expensive are the starter development kits?
Thanks!!
-John C.
That Madman Who Lit Up Deep Space Nine
I am pleased the at least someone recognizes that there is more to the cost of putting out a circuit than the cost of the parts. But then you, ML, would know about that.
The free programming environment for the PIC, called MPLAB IDE, comes with a C compiler. I don't use it as PIC ASM becomes nearly intuitive after one has used it for a while. But it is there.
The chip that I use most often (including for the photon torpedo) is a PIC12f683. In lots of 25 this runs about $1.05 each.
The programmer that I use is a pickit2. Digikey sells this for about $35 the last time I looked. This is intended to work with an in-circuit header. But last week I found a generic programming socket on Ebay for $10 ("buy it now"). The software comes with the programmer, and you can download the latest versions from the Microchip website.
The free programming environment for the PIC, called MPLAB IDE, comes with a C compiler. I don't use it as PIC ASM becomes nearly intuitive after one has used it for a while. But it is there.
The chip that I use most often (including for the photon torpedo) is a PIC12f683. In lots of 25 this runs about $1.05 each.
The programmer that I use is a pickit2. Digikey sells this for about $35 the last time I looked. This is intended to work with an in-circuit header. But last week I found a generic programming socket on Ebay for $10 ("buy it now"). The software comes with the programmer, and you can download the latest versions from the Microchip website.
Would something along the lines of a "sawtooth generator" hooked up to a momentary switch work for this application?
I found this site http://www.electronic-circuits-diagrams ... ckt2.shtml
with a diagram using a good ol' 555 timer to generate a slow increase in brightness, with a fast cut off after it hits peak voltage.
Might be worth a try.
I found this site http://www.electronic-circuits-diagrams ... ckt2.shtml
with a diagram using a good ol' 555 timer to generate a slow increase in brightness, with a fast cut off after it hits peak voltage.
Might be worth a try.
Look at this: http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2008/1 ... guide.htmlMadman Lighting wrote:If Kitty can invent, build and sell it for $15, I'll be pretty impressed.
You can find complete programmable boards there for $17.50, that can do a lot more than just the torpedo sequence.
If the torpedo sequence is all you want that should be doable with a preprogrammed PIC or AMTEL with a lot less memory and no usb connector etc.
$15 should allow for a nice profit.
But these arduino boards are all you need and you'll have a lot more outputs than needed for the torpedo launch.
You just have to write the program.
So I don't have to design a torpedo launch PCB, because it is already available.
I did however design a universal programmable circuit for 16 seperate sequences with serial interface which would cost a bit more, because it uses a more expensive microcontroller and more components than needed for the torpedo sequence.
I have build it on experimental board, but i won't produce it, i just want it working inside my 1/350 PL enterprise A.
Although i might go for a arduino nano as alternative and save me the hassle of designing a PCB.
Besides, the $15-$20 was for a solder yourself kit containing a pcb, the components (including a programmed microcontroller if that's what is used), not a built kit.
The parts should cost a lot less than $15 -$20
And the profit is payment for the time you spend designing it and programming it.
My design was not meant to make any money, it was just something i wanted to do, so the circuit and later on the finished program is all GNU not commercial.
Democracy may be only a few steps removed from anarchy,
But at least it's not as loud.
You broke your little ships. See you around Ahab.
But at least it's not as loud.
You broke your little ships. See you around Ahab.
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OK, I'm a little impressed but there's more to the story.
$15 gets you a bare expansion board with no parts and no microcontroller. If you want the small version that is the same size as my board and has a micro on it, thats $50 and you still dont get the LED drivers I have on mine and you have to write your own real-time code which is not trivial.
Arduino is an impressive set of micro boards and I may play with one someday. They're similar to the PIC BASIC stamp cards and some of the other micro controller proto boards out there and they do some pretty neat stuff, but not for $15.
-John C.
$15 gets you a bare expansion board with no parts and no microcontroller. If you want the small version that is the same size as my board and has a micro on it, thats $50 and you still dont get the LED drivers I have on mine and you have to write your own real-time code which is not trivial.
Arduino is an impressive set of micro boards and I may play with one someday. They're similar to the PIC BASIC stamp cards and some of the other micro controller proto boards out there and they do some pretty neat stuff, but not for $15.
-John C.
That Madman Who Lit Up Deep Space Nine