The Smell of Molten Projects in the Morning

Ed Nisley's Blog: Shop notes, electronics, firmware, machinery, 3D printing, laser cuttery, and curiosities. Contents: 100% human thinking, 0% AI slop.

Month: January 2010

  • Micropositioner Rehabilitation: Planetary Reducer

    Micropositioner
    Micropositioner

    An old 3-axis micropositioner recently found itself on my electronics workbench, where it should come in handy for SMD soldering, microscopic examination, and similar projects requiring the ability to move something in tiny, precise increments. This picture gives you the general idea; it’s mounted on a magnetic base stuck to a random chunk of sheet steel.

    The knob on the front drives the vertical (Z) axis, with the other two controlling the front-to-back (Y) and left-to-right (X) axes. A rotary joint between the X and Y axes, plus another at the tip of the arm, mean you’re not restricted to orthogonal axes; that may be either a blessing or a curse, depending on what you’re trying to accomplish.

    Unfortunately, the Z axis was essentially immovable: that big knurled knob took a remarkable amount of force to drive the slide. Some Quality Shop Time was in order.

    Planetary reducer - cover
    Planetary reducer – cover

    The thing is a chunk of old-school German engineering: nary a gratuitous plastic part to be seen. The planetary reducer has a cast metal cover secured to the torque arm with an acorn nut, which had obviously been removed several times before, as the cover was somewhat chewed beneath the nut.

    I loosened the two setscrews holding the knob in place, gave it a pull, and … nothing. After a protracted struggle and considerable sub-vocal muttering, the knob came off to reveal a thoroughly scarred shaft. Contrary to what I expected, the shaft did not have flats below the setscrews, so the inevitable screw burrs locked the shaft to the knob.

    Planetary reducer - torque arm
    Planetary reducer – torque arm

    The picture to the left shows the planetary drive and torque arm after I filed off the burrs. Two plastic washers (the top one sits on the spring; it’s not shown here) provide smooth bearing surfaces that hold the knob under firm spring pressure, which prevents the Z axis from descending unless you turn the knob manually.

    Planetary drive output shaft screws
    Planetary drive output shaft screws

    Two more setscrews secure the planetary drive’s output bushing to the Z axis pinion shaft. The picture to the right shows that they’re pretty much inaccessible; one was directly behind a tab holding the drive together, the other was aimed at the shoulder of the casting holding the Z axis slide.

    And, of course, even with the knob in place, I can’t turn the mumble shaft, which is why I’m doing this in the first place. The planetary drive uses balls, rather than gears, and the lubricating oil had long since turned into gummy varnish. I slobbered enough light oil into the drive to loosen the gunk enough to make the drive turn-able, albeit with considerable effort. I urged the input shaft barely enough this-a-way and that-a-way to get access to both of the screws.

    Pinion shaft
    Pinion shaft

    As you’d expect, removing the drive required even more muttering and the application of dangerous tools. The pinion shaft was badly scarred in several places, so this poor thing has been dismantled several times before.

    That was entirely enough for one day. Tomorrow, disassembling the Z-axis slide and cleaning things up…

  • WWVB Groundwave Signal Is Vertically Polarized

    I suppose this shouldn’t be surprising, but the nature of groundwave propagation pretty much requires vertical polarization: the E-field is perpendicular to the ground.

    Perforce, that means the H-field is parallel to the ground, which means that ferrite bar antennas must be horizontal in order to work properly.

    A simple experiment with the Alpha-Geek Clock conclusively demonstrates this. Turning it vertically is just as bad as aiming a bar end directly at Colorado: the signal drops right into the noise.

    Horizontal and broadside to Colorado, it’s fine.

    Alas, I’d been hoping to tuck the bar antenna inside the Totally Featureless Clock I’ve been building. The ideal location, mounted vertically behind the right-hand digit at the end of the circuit board, as far from the Arduino Pro as possible, just isn’t going to work. Good location, wrong orientation!

    I want to avoid an external antenna or a tall case. Drat!

  • Blog Impulse Response and Summary

    Two recent postings were mentioned on blogs with much higher readership than mine, which provides an opportunity to measure the impulse response of the blog to an external simulus.

    Views Per Day - Dec 2009
    Views Per Day – Dec 2009

    The first peak comes from the Make magazine blog: they liked the trick of holding screws in slit nuts for trimming and finishing.

    The second is from hackaday.com: they loved the Alpha-Geek Clock, although they linked to the inside circuitry.

    It looks like an external blog mention is good for 50 to 60 hours of fame. After that, the search engines take over again.

    You can tell nearly everybody arrives here from search engines, because the monthly view increases slightly more than linearly with the number of posts.

    Monthly Views - 2009
    Monthly Views – 2009

    I’d love to believe that’s the start of exponential growth, but that’s just not going to happen!

    Speaking of search engines, here are the top terms…

    Search Terms
    All Time
    Search Views
    arduino pwm frequency 235
    milling 223
    arduino pwm 212
    transformer model 99
    bellows 94
    staghorn beetle 87
    triple alert redemption 83
    chain catcher 81
    sherline 79
    arduino command line 79
    arduino fast pwm 66
    cold solder joint 66
    sherline mill 56
    hd44780 arduino 50
    cold solder 50
    cold solder joints 47
    sherline projects 46
    magnetizer 44
    avid rollamajig 43
    triple alert 43

    Obviously, Arduino, electronics, and machine-shop topics are hot.

    Who would have imagined, however, that so many people search the Internet to find pix of staghorn beetles? As of right now, though, Google gives my post two of the four image results and puts it on the first page. Evidently I give good writeup. Now, if only I were selling something, huh?

    The most-viewed pages…

    Top Posts
    All Time
    Title Views
    Alpha-Geek Clock 1836
    Changing the Arduino PWM Frequency 1324
    Arduino Command Line Programming: Avrdud 931
    Sherline Mill Counterweight Gantry 928
    Finding Transformer Pi Model Parameters 851
    Arduino Hardware-assisted SPI: Synchrono 850
    Arduino Fast PWM: Faster 740
    Dell GX270 Auto-On Power Setting 659
    Arduino LiquidCrystal Library vs Old HD4 623
    Cold & Fractured Solder Joints 493
    Kubuntu Remote Desktop via SSH Tunnel 473
    Sunglasses Repair: Half a Hinge Is Bette 420
    Sherline Bellows Covers The Cheap Way 380
    Laser Alignment for the Sherline Mill 364
    Recumbent Bicycle Amateur Radio Antenna 341
    Arduino Push-Pull PWM 336
    Tektronix 492 Spectrum Analyzer Backplan 335
    Experian Triple-Alert Signup: FAIL 312
    Holding Machine Screws for Trimming 309
    Silver-soldered Bandsaw Blade Joint 307

    The Alpha-Geek Clock isn’t representative, due to the sudden peak that slapped it to the top of the list. It’s nice to know that folks are finding (and, presumably, using) the tech info that I put together.

    A tip o’ the engineer’s cap to the two dozen of you who keep track of goings-on through the RSS feed. These posts are mostly for my own amusement and record-keeping, but I trust you find something useful every now and again.

    A Happy New Year to one & all… and keep on building stuff in your shop!