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Published inJun 2015
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ISBN-139781785284847
Edition1st Edition
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Richard Grimmett
Richard Grimmett
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Richard Grimmett

Dr. Richard Grimmett has been fascinated by computers and electronics from his very first programming project, which used Fortran on punch cards. He has bachelor's and master's degrees in electrical engineering and a PhD in leadership studies. He also has 26 years of experience in the radar and telecommunications industries, and even has one of the original brick phones. He now teaches computer science and electrical engineering at Brigham Young University, Idaho, where his office is filled with his many robotics projects.
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Using a servo controller to control the servos


To make your biped walk, you first need to connect the servo motor controller to the servos. The servo controller you are going to use for this project is a simple servo motor controller utilizing the USB from Pololu—Pololu item number 1354 is available at pololu.com—that can control 18 servo motors. Here is a picture of the unit:

Make sure that you order the assembled version. This piece of hardware will turn USB commands from Raspberry Pi into signals that control your servo motors. Pololu creates a number of different versions of this controller, and each one is able to control a certain number of servos. In this case, you may want to choose the 18 servo version, so that you can control all 12 servos with one controller, and you may also add an additional servo to control the direction of a camera or sensor. You could also choose the 12 servo version. One advantage of the 18 servo controller is the ease of connecting power to the unit via...

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Raspberry Pi Robotics Essentials
Published in: Jun 2015Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781785284847

Author (1)

author image
Richard Grimmett

Dr. Richard Grimmett has been fascinated by computers and electronics from his very first programming project, which used Fortran on punch cards. He has bachelor's and master's degrees in electrical engineering and a PhD in leadership studies. He also has 26 years of experience in the radar and telecommunications industries, and even has one of the original brick phones. He now teaches computer science and electrical engineering at Brigham Young University, Idaho, where his office is filled with his many robotics projects.
Read more about Richard Grimmett