arduino

RC Car Hack Wrapup

April 26, 2013 8:55 am

 

Hacked RC Car

There she is.  A beautifully hacked, piece of junk, remote control car.  Earlier this month, 20 Wichita makers got together for a MakeICT workshop to learn how to do something cool with the Arduino microcontroller.  The workshop, led by MakeICT member Ivan, taught us how to replace the cars on-board IC with an Arduino Nano to take control of the differential motors and then add a sonar device to provide information about the car’s surroundings as it moved.  Ivan did an excellent job of explaining pulse width modulation, frequency, duty cycle, H-bridges, and basic sonar theory.  By the end of the 4 hour workshop, the 10 cars were being controlled by the Arduino, negating the need for a remote, and when the sonar sensor told the car it was approaching an object, it would stop, back up, turn right, and continue forward.

Some of the challenges we experienced during the workshop were the inconsistency of the manufacturing of these cars.  The boards inside the cars were different, some with surface mount components, some with through-hole components, and that required some attention on an individual basis to make sure each car would work.  We also used extremely cheap AA batteries for the workshop which drained quickly.  Next time we will invest in higher quality power sources!

Thanks to everyone who participated and a big thank you to Ivan who organized and led this workshop.  He has put the details of the hack on his blog, including the Arduino code.  Be sure to check it out!

The kit for the MakeICT RC Arduino workshop.

The kit for the MakeICT RC Arduino workshop.

Ivan educating us

Ivan educating us

Hacking the cars

Hacking the cars

 

 

April 2013 Update

April 2, 2013 4:57 pm

MakeICT has the following events planned for April.  We hope you can come out and make with us!  If you have workshop ideas for us, send us a note!

April 8: Public hours from 7 to 9 pm at Bluebird

April 13: RC Arduino Workshop at 1 pm (all RC kits have been reserved, but you can still join us to watch and learn)

April 23: Public hours from 7 to 9 pm at Bluebird

TBD in late April: 3D Printer Special Interest Group Meeting

We are also excited about the CNC Router that was generously donated to us.  If you are interested in learning how to use it or can help teach others, let us know in the forum.  We plan to host a CNC Router workshop in May.

In March, MakeICT signed up their first paying members.  We now have approximately 20 official members of MakeICT.  Membership benefits include an ID card that gives you access to our space at Bluebird during their business hours as well as voting rights at member meetings.  We suggest a donation of $10/month as membership dues.  If you are interested in becoming a member, join us for one of our workshops or during our public hours and ask how you can sign up.