Difference between revisions of "User:Haukur"

From Fab Lab Wiki - by NMÍ Kvikan
Jump to: navigation, search
 
Line 64: Line 64:
  
 
  Problem 1 the contents of the file vanishes ??
 
  Problem 1 the contents of the file vanishes ??
 +
The reason for it was I had put my name at the start of the .cad file like that # Modified by Haukur Sölvason 2009 #
 +
After I changed it to # Modified by Haukur Solvason 2009 # it worked fine. So two tiny dots over the o where the reason for this weird behavior.
  
 
  Problem 2 the Modela won't start ??
 
  Problem 2 the Modela won't start ??
Line 70: Line 72:
  
 
'''Here are pictures of Hello.echo.44.MTA board befor and after the modifications.'''
 
'''Here are pictures of Hello.echo.44.MTA board befor and after the modifications.'''
 
  
  
 
[[Image:Hello.echo.MTA.44.png|500 px|Before]] [[Image:Hello.echo.44.MTA.Mod.png|500 px|After]]
 
[[Image:Hello.echo.MTA.44.png|500 px|Before]] [[Image:Hello.echo.44.MTA.Mod.png|500 px|After]]
 
  
  

Latest revision as of 16:29, 18 December 2009

Haukur Sölvason

Haukur Sölvason


Fab Academy

Final project proposal - Warning system for monitoring freezers and coolers.

File:Final.png
Final unit


The aim is to build a unit that can monitor temperatures and precense of power to freezers and coolers and upon failure sound an 80 db alarm, if no one is present it will then send a sms to a mobile phone.

Electronics design and production (October 28)

Assignment
  Make and program the serial hello-world:
     hello.serial.45.cad
     hello.serial.45.asm
     hello.serial.45.hex
  Remember DTR power




Computer-controlled machining (November 11)

Assignment
  Make something big






Embedded programming (November 25)

Assignment
 read an AVR data sheet
 make serial and programming cables
 add (at least) a button to the serial echo hello-world board
 modify the serial echo assembly program to respond to the button
 modify the serial echo C program to respond to the button

When making the Hello.Echo.44 board we did not have any of the newer connectors. So I deceided to use the Hello.echo.44.MTA board and modify it, add MTA power connector and another 5 pin MTA connector so I could connect it to a bread board and do some experimenting with the unused pins of Attiny44.

I opened Hello.echo.44.MTA.cad in Cad.py and there I worked on the modifications.Everything was working ok and I did rendering from time to time to see the changes. Then I took the modified file to the computer the Modela is connected to and set it up to make the board.

I went through the whole procedure and pressed send to maschine,it said it would take 30 min to complete but didn't start. I tried again and again but all of my efforts were to no avail,the Modela didn't start.

Back to the drawing board I opened the modified Hello.echo.44.MTA.cad in Cad.py and started to work on the file,however when I tried to save the file, Cad.py did not respond,so I closed Cad.py. The file was there on the desktop but Zero Byte. After many tries I finally managed to solve both problems and got it to work.

Well I'm not completely 100% sure what the problem or what the solution was,so I´m going to try to replicate it and post it here after I'm 100% sure.

Problem 1 the contents of the file vanishes ??

The reason for it was I had put my name at the start of the .cad file like that # Modified by Haukur Sölvason 2009 # After I changed it to # Modified by Haukur Solvason 2009 # it worked fine. So two tiny dots over the o where the reason for this weird behavior.

Problem 2 the Modela won't start ??


Here are pictures of Hello.echo.44.MTA board befor and after the modifications.


Before After



Here is the board unpopulated, _________________________________________________ and here the residents have moved in.


Before After

__________________________The early board catches the worm. The purple "worm" is a wire from R3 to pin BP2 on ATTiny44


The soldering went without any problems and the board worked ok after programming.

And no I did not forget to mill out the board,instead I want to try to add some circuit to the unused area.