fuelcel
Industrial
- Mar 16, 2005
- 3
I am a mechanical/industrial designer with no real foundation for curcuit design. I have a small experimental device I'm working on for myself that requires a simple electronic driver/timer. to avoid mechanical movements I want to do the following.
I have an optical device mounted in a small frame, 1.75"x1.5". this frame is suspended by four small rubber isolaters at each corner. On each side of the frame will be mounted a small neodymian magnet. About .03 away from each magnet will be a small stationary coil. I need to send a series of dc pulses to each coil in sucesion, 1-2-3-4 at a manualy adjustable setting of between 60hz and 200hz. if seen from above the coils would fire in a circular pattern. in this way I can induce an orbital occilation into the frame. The orbit only needs to be about .01" max. Operating voltage 12v.
I've been doing some reading but I'd be months away from ever understanding how to accomplish it. It seams it would be based on a 555 timing chip?
I can fabricate if there was something to follow.
thanks for the replies.
john harvey
I have an optical device mounted in a small frame, 1.75"x1.5". this frame is suspended by four small rubber isolaters at each corner. On each side of the frame will be mounted a small neodymian magnet. About .03 away from each magnet will be a small stationary coil. I need to send a series of dc pulses to each coil in sucesion, 1-2-3-4 at a manualy adjustable setting of between 60hz and 200hz. if seen from above the coils would fire in a circular pattern. in this way I can induce an orbital occilation into the frame. The orbit only needs to be about .01" max. Operating voltage 12v.
I've been doing some reading but I'd be months away from ever understanding how to accomplish it. It seams it would be based on a 555 timing chip?
I can fabricate if there was something to follow.
thanks for the replies.
john harvey