Author Topic: Robot tutorial Step 3B Question  (Read 1675 times)

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Offline CosmicExcursionTopic starter

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Robot tutorial Step 3B Question
« on: August 20, 2011, 12:08:52 PM »
Hello there, I was wondering if there's a difference between different colored wires?

I'm on step 3B and I was wondering if the black, purple and yellow wires serve different functions; Or are the different colored wires just used (in this case) to avoid confusion?

 "Now we will connect all grounds together. I like to use black wire to represent ground because it can save me a lot of confusion if my wiring gets messy...While you are at it, add in this purple wire. This wire will transfer the output 5V from your regulator to the middle row of the sensor power bus...Now we want wire up the Programmer ICSP Header (see schematic). I used thin yellow wire for this, so as not to confuse with ground or 5V power..."


link: http://www.societyofrobots.com/step_by_step_robot_step3B.shtml

Please forgive me. This is my first time engaging on a project like this. I realize this is a silly question. Any comments or insights would be greatly appreciated. Thanks ahead of time.

Offline TheDarkLord

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Re: Robot tutorial Step 3B Question
« Reply #1 on: August 20, 2011, 04:46:38 PM »
Hi there, I'm also building the $50 robot, and I'm on the programming step  :P

To answer your question, the color of the wires is used just to prevent confusion and make it easy to remember which wire connects to what.

Offline CosmicExcursionTopic starter

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Re: Robot tutorial Step 3B Question
« Reply #2 on: August 20, 2011, 05:45:12 PM »
Thanks for clearing that up for me. =)

Offline Soeren

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Re: Robot tutorial Step 3B Question
« Reply #3 on: August 20, 2011, 11:29:45 PM »
Hi,

I was wondering if there's a difference between different colored wires?
The functionality isn't dependent on color (wire gauge/thickness is another matter), but...
There's some conventions that it is smart to keep to.

Red should always be the positive (eg. +9V).
Blue is 0V (often called ground), although it is very commonly being misunderstood (loads of people thing that black is the 0V color, probably because they only use single supply circuits.
Black is the negative supply (which in a single supply will be the same as 0V - it's all in what you choose to call your reference)

PC's have always used the convention of black=0, red=+5V and yellow=+12V on drive supplies (but on fans, the yellow wire, when there is a yellow wire, is for measuring the speed of the fan).

There will be no (direct) penalty for mixing up the colors - except when you can't remember which is which and burns an entire board ull of chips (and that's why it's good to follow conventions - a year or two from now you'll be glad you did if you do :)

Sometimes you have only one color, then it's a good idea to mark the ends of the wire with a permanent marker. I draw rings around the end, 1, 2 or 3 rings etc. and for supplies, I often tie a knot on the positive wire (both ends) and/or color the end entirely with permanent ink for ground.
Regards,
Søren

A rather fast and fairly heavy robot with quite large wheels needs what? A lot of power?
Please remember...
Engineering is based on numbers - not adjectives

 


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