Society of Robots - Robot Forum
Electronics => Electronics => Topic started by: goatfish on April 01, 2008, 06:42:54 PM
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i recently bought this robot http://www.siliconchip.com.au/cms/A_102198/article.html (http://www.siliconchip.com.au/cms/A_102198/article.html) and i have placed all of the parts in the right spot,right way around no short circuts or anything.But it doesnt have the motoors turn. if anyone else has made this kit before could you please tell me whats wrong with it.thanks seb
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yep I built that kit once, I have it downstairs stowed away somewhere
Check if motors are connected right , if batteries are right . And if circuit is right. And if components are the right way.
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I CAN ASSURE YOU EVERYTING IS IN THE RIGHT WAY(how do i put pics of the circut on i dont know yet)i have put the motors in every possible way and they still refuse to turn ???
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thats weird, maybe the gearbox is screwed up?
do you hear a tone when you turn it on?
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yea it makes a beep 3 time and the LED is in time with that,im thinking it might be a dry solder,another thing at first i had the LED around the wrong way then i fixed taht,could that have wrecked the chip or something?and the motors work properly too i put a voltage to it the same amount as the circut and they turn,so the motors definately work :-\ ??? :-X :(
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Hey, did any1 notice the first advertisement on the right hand side of that link is for...
SOCIETY OF ROBOTS ;D ;D ;D ;D
Soz for the off topic announcement
But i do have something useful to say! (i think)
My cousin had this kit and he had a similar problem
I must ask him how he fixed it, but i think he ended up getting a refund...?... I shall attempt to find out.
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ok well thanks for that private reid ;D
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maybe you put the transistors in the wrong way?
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you could get out a multimeter and if the setup is a breadboard or a protoboard (sorry didn't look) inject your probes before and after different components to determine if the voltage is what you'd expect.
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maybe you put the transistors in the wrong way?
the transistorts are all in the right way
you could get out a multimeter and if the setup is a breadboard or a protoboard (sorry didn't look) inject your probes before and after different components to determine if the voltage is what you'd expect.
and i dont have a multimeter,yet