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Robotics at Home with Raspberry Pi Pico

You're reading from  Robotics at Home with Raspberry Pi Pico

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803246079
Pages 400 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
Danny Staple Danny Staple
Profile icon Danny Staple

Table of Contents (20) Chapters

Preface Part 1: The Basics – Preparing for Robotics with Raspberry Pi Pico
Chapter 1: Planning a Robot with Raspberry Pi Pico Chapter 2: Preparing Raspberry Pi Pico Chapter 3: Designing a Robot Chassis in FreeCAD Chapter 4: Building a Robot around Pico Chapter 5: Driving Motors with Raspberry Pi Pico Part 2: Interfacing Raspberry Pi Pico with Simple Sensors and Outputs
Chapter 6: Measuring Movement with Encoders on Raspberry Pi Pico Chapter 7: Planning and Shopping for More Devices Chapter 8: Sensing Distances to Detect Objects with Pico Chapter 9: Teleoperating a Raspberry Pi Pico Robot with Bluetooth LE Part 3: Adding More Robotic Behaviors to Raspberry Pi Pico
Chapter 10: Using the PID Algorithm to Follow Walls Chapter 11: Controlling Motion with Encoders on Raspberry Pi Pico Chapter 12: Detecting Orientation with an IMU on Raspberry Pi Pico Chapter 13: Determining Position Using Monte Carlo Localization Chapter 14: Continuing Your Journey – Your Next Robot Index Other Books You May Enjoy

Wiring in encoders on a Raspberry Pi Pico robot

Our robot has already got encoders on board, and we have already wired them in. We can take a closer look at the motors and how they are wired into Raspberry Pi Pico GPIO pins to understand the robot better.

Examining the motors

We use N20 geared motors with encoders. The following diagram labels the motor parts:

Figure 6.3 – The N20 motor parts

Figure 6.3 shows a drawing of the motors we have used. Marked on it are essential features that affect how we use the encoders. On the left is a magnetic disk with markers in it. This disk is attached to the motor’s driveshaft and sensed by the encoder sensor board. On the right are the gearbox and the motor output shaft.

The driveshaft goes through the gearbox, so the output shaft will not make the same number of rotations as the disk – the gear ratio will determine this relationship. So one revolution of the output wheel could count many...

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