Downside to that I guess is it would add a 200us delay in the laser power stream...
Ill Dwell on it... :)
Art
Galvo Lasers
Re: Galvo Lasers
Hi Art,
That is the way of life - "nothing is ever simple and there is always a catch".
More electronics but could you perhaps introduce an equal delay in the axis movement ?
Tweakie.
That is the way of life - "nothing is ever simple and there is always a catch".
More electronics but could you perhaps introduce an equal delay in the axis movement ?
Tweakie.
Re: Galvo Lasers
Ill have to give it more thought. Ironically I put in a laser
delay in Auggie for servos that are slow to react, but I hadnt
considered the inverse.
Art
delay in Auggie for servos that are slow to react, but I hadnt
considered the inverse.
Art
Re: Galvo Lasers
First try at a single pass 3d , 1.5" round. Took less than a minute.
Not great detail, but its small on pine..
Art
Not great detail, but its small on pine..
Art
Re: Galvo Lasers
Looking good.
Tweakie.
Tweakie.
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- Old Timer
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Re: Galvo Lasers
Art,
Do you have a link to your Arduino code used for the DAC signal conversion?
Saw your youtube video and want to give this build a try with my diy style galvo motors.
Thanks
Brian
Do you have a link to your Arduino code used for the DAC signal conversion?
Saw your youtube video and want to give this build a try with my diy style galvo motors.
Thanks
Brian
Re: Galvo Lasers
Hi Brian:
I hadnt posted it yet. It is attached to this post though. Let me know if you have
any trouble with it, I cant recall if I modified any system libraries as tweaks to make it
work faster.
I havent cleaned it up and documented it yet, so its a bit messy.. :)
Art
I hadnt posted it yet. It is attached to this post though. Let me know if you have
any trouble with it, I cant recall if I modified any system libraries as tweaks to make it
work faster.
I havent cleaned it up and documented it yet, so its a bit messy.. :)
Art
- Attachments
-
- GalvoCubeArduino.zip
- (554.02 KiB) Downloaded 572 times
Additional files for arduino
Hi :
The following zip contains a new winterrupts.c required for compiling the code in the previous post.
Also a wiring list for the arduino is included.
(Archival post)
Art
The following zip contains a new winterrupts.c required for compiling the code in the previous post.
Also a wiring list for the arduino is included.
(Archival post)
Art
- Attachments
-
- WInterrupts.zip
- (1.93 KiB) Downloaded 613 times
PWM post scaling device
Hi:
This is a post for archival purposes. I discussed earlier in this thread the posability of using an arduino
to better control my lasers power for photos. I did make on from an arduino Due and an LCDShield 2.0,
in which a pwm is fed from Auggie ( or whatever) into the arduino, and a selected scale factor is applied
and sent out another pin.
This means at default power on operation it is set to 100% and simply passes pwm through itself,
however it can be set from 5% to 100% and will scale incoming PWM commands from 0-100% to
100 levels of selected scale power. This allows software limited to 100 slices of power, to have 100
slices of power at any set level by the time it reaches the laser.
I include a photo of the device and the .iso file for the arduino to make one. Its hard to say if
this is usefull for anything other than laser driven by auggie, Im not sure what the granularity
is of other lasesr when set to lower power. If a laser set to 20% simply allows power to be
20 levels instead of a 100 levels of 0 - 20%, this may be usefull to someone. I'll post it here just in case
someone in their searches is in need of a PWM scaler. :)
Art
This is a post for archival purposes. I discussed earlier in this thread the posability of using an arduino
to better control my lasers power for photos. I did make on from an arduino Due and an LCDShield 2.0,
in which a pwm is fed from Auggie ( or whatever) into the arduino, and a selected scale factor is applied
and sent out another pin.
This means at default power on operation it is set to 100% and simply passes pwm through itself,
however it can be set from 5% to 100% and will scale incoming PWM commands from 0-100% to
100 levels of selected scale power. This allows software limited to 100 slices of power, to have 100
slices of power at any set level by the time it reaches the laser.
I include a photo of the device and the .iso file for the arduino to make one. Its hard to say if
this is usefull for anything other than laser driven by auggie, Im not sure what the granularity
is of other lasesr when set to lower power. If a laser set to 20% simply allows power to be
20 levels instead of a 100 levels of 0 - 20%, this may be usefull to someone. I'll post it here just in case
someone in their searches is in need of a PWM scaler. :)
Art
- Attachments
-
- PWMBox.zip
- (3.2 KiB) Downloaded 610 times
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