Small tube display viewfinder
Lunes, Abril 8th, 2013This is a very small tube display usually mounted as a camcorder viewfinder. Can work by powering it with 8v and composite signal input.
This is a very small tube display usually mounted as a camcorder viewfinder. Can work by powering it with 8v and composite signal input.
This iPhone dove in some water, so battery contacts shorted making the LiPo explode. Now circuits doesn’t work and everything was lost.
This is the basic block diagram hand drawn.
The only element directly powered from power supply is the atmega328p. Sensors and storage are powered using an LDO (Low dropout regulator) enabled by the atmega328p. This way I will be able to cut power to everything from the arduino and then put it on deep sleep to save as much power as posible.
I’ve thinking about registering for the Pongsat program. For those who doesn’t know them, Pongsat is a space program for students and everyone insterested on doing some space research for free. The defined experiments are to be fit inside a pingpong ball so they send as many as they can, and before flight balls are sent back to their creators so data can be retrieved.
I came across with some experiments I want to make in such travel:
All collected data and pictures will be stored in a micro SD card for further analysis. Also RTC chip (real time clock) is mandatory to keep track on timestamp of data.
To save power for all the travel I’ll to use an LDO to cut power from camera, SD card and sensors, and then use of deep sleep functions on atmega328p to powerdown the microcontroller. Every 10 or maybe 5 seconds, wake up microcontroler, wake up sdcard, camera and sensors, take a snap, sensors reading, store everything on SD card, then sleep another 10 secs. I’ll be using ATmega328p running 3.3v and 8MHz as uController.
As the main function of the ball is to take pictures from the travel I decided to name it Mad-Eye. Here are some pictures of firsts internal space fit test to see how much room can be use for electronics:
Este es un gran Iris, procedente de una video cámara de estudio. El conjunto de lentes no funcionaba y solo valía para despiece. Esta es una de las piezas que me quedé debido a su asombrosa complejidad y a que se podía extraer de una sola pieza.