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Creative DIY Microcontroller Projects with TinyGo and WebAssembly

You're reading from  Creative DIY Microcontroller Projects with TinyGo and WebAssembly

Product type Book
Published in May 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800560208
Pages 322 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Tobias Theel Tobias Theel
Profile icon Tobias Theel

Table of Contents (13) Chapters

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Getting Started with TinyGo 2. Chapter 2: Building a Traffic Lights Control System 3. Chapter 3: Building a Safety Lock Using a Keypad 4. Chapter 4: Building a Plant Watering System 5. Chapter 5: Building a Touchless Handwash Timer 6. Chapter 6: Building Displays for Communication using I2C and SPI Interfaces 7. Chapter 7: Displaying Weather Alerts on the TinyGo Wasm Dashboard 8. Chapter 8: Automating and Monitoring Your Home through the TinyGo Wasm Dashboard 9. Assessments 10. Afterword 11. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix – "Go"ing Ahead

Controlling a servomotor

As we are now able to read the input to the keypad, the thing that is missing to build a safety lock is some kind of motor. For that case, we are going to use an SG90 servomotor. As of the time of writing, the timings on the Arduino Uno are not accurate enough to completely control the SG90 servomotor, but that is not a problem for our use case. We are just going to move the servo in one direction, which is clockwise. Also, there is currently no official driver for the SG90 servomotor, so we are going to write our own!

Understanding SG90 servomotors

SG90 servomotors are controlled by Pulse Width Moduluation (PWM). Basically, the SG90 reads inputs in a 50 Hz period. During this period, we can tell the servomotor to adjust itself to a certain angle by setting a signal for a certain amount of time. The signal length is called the duty cycle. After the duty cycle, we wait for the rest of the period. Depending on the duty cycle (the pulse width), the SG90...

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