tank robot

Posted on 01/05/2013 by mr_bandit
Modified on: 13/09/2018
Introduction
This is an automatic import from our previous community platform. Some things can look imperfect.

If you are the original author, please access your User Control Panel and update it.

Finished robot, on track. I started with the same base as the Cocoabot https://www.robotshop.com/letsmakerobots/node/36700 - I had not seen his, but great minds think alike. I built this as a demo bot for Roborave.org. I used aa Arduino pro328, with a proto shield jusrt for connections, and a protoboard on the top for my connections and two 2-motor H-bridge chips. If you look at the track, you can see it is just black electrical tape. The original track - on the other side - has a tight turn the ...


tank robot

Finished robot, on track.

I started with the same base as the Cocoabot https://www.robotshop.com/letsmakerobots/node/36700 - I had not seen his, but great minds think alike. I built this as a demo bot for Roborave.org. I used aa Arduino pro328, with a proto shield jusrt for connections, and a protoboard on the top for my connections and two 2-motor H-bridge chips.

If you look at the track, you can see it is just black electrical tape. The original track - on the other side - has a tight turn the tracked base could not handle because it was too long.

The arm motor is to move an arm to dump ping-pong balls into a box. The front sensor determines the distance to the box. This is a QRD1114 IR LED and optotransistor.

The line followers are a Sharp GP2Y0D810Z0F. Thru a mixup, this sensor was meant to be the distance sensor. It is another IR LED/optotransitor, but with a filter that has a PWM-like output. I had to custom make a little PCB out of copper clad, JB weld the sensors onto them, then cut my own pads to solder the connections to. The "art" piece is my prototype connections to make sure I knew how to connect the thing.

Otherwise, construction was simple. I started with the electronics stack in the middle, but had to move it back to balance with the arm motor (a  kit by the same folks as the base).The same battery pack powered everything.

line follow

  • Actuators / output devices: Tamiya twin gearbox
  • Control method: Pre-programmed
  • CPU: pro328
  • Operating system: none - bare metal
  • Power source: 8-AA
  • Programming language: C (old school)
  • Sensors / input devices: Reflective infared distance sensor, Line
  • Target environment: educational
Flag this post

Thanks for helping to keep our community civil!


Notify staff privately
It's Spam
This post is an advertisement, or vandalism. It is not useful or relevant to the current topic.

You flagged this as spam. Undo flag.Flag Post