Society of Robots - Robot Forum
General Misc => Robot Videos => Topic started by: sonictj on July 14, 2009, 05:41:45 PM
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[youtube]Jl2HKa2KiLI[/youtube]
everything seems to work so far.
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wow sonic! it looks great!
hows the testing going, have you found any bugs with it yet?
i call beta tester!
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hows the testing going, have you found any bugs with it yet?
no bugs per say just some aesthetic changes I want to make.
1) I wanna add a status led.
2) I goofed on a silk screen label
3) I think I want to scoot the reset button a tad closer to the edge
4) I may decide to change to mini usb cuz more people have them
Its looking more doubtful that I will be selling the board due to the time required to make them. The way to go would be sending the boards out for manufacturing, but frankly I can't afford that so I will likely end up with a good board for myself. It feels really good having your first PCB work correctly though. I feel that PCB design is a very useful skill.
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Its looking more doubtful that I will be selling the board due to the time required to make them.
we told you so!
you should seriously consider hiring some skilled solderers from your local school or something...
about how much do you think places will charge to manufacture it?
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great job sonictj, it looks vry professinal.
whith the manurfacturing, before you give up make sure you contact some manufacturing companies and see what they charge for a package deal of say 25 or 50 to start.
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good job the final board looks great... could you post more videos and possibly some close up pictures!?
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could you post more videos and possibly some close up pictures!?
+1 this thread is useless without pics!
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here is the pic sorry for not posting it earlier. I don't have a way of making it under 400 kb on my machine.
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wow! it looks great... is there a possibility that in addition to that power plug you could add headers for a power option for use with a battery?
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wow! it looks great... is there a possibility that in addition to that power plug you could add headers for a power option for use with a battery?
yes, that is one thing that has always annoyed me about arduinos, the need for a jack connector.
a simple header would be much better and easier. just a suggestion.
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simple header connectors cannot take enough current. I had to find a connector that would do 4+ amps at 24V.
is there a possibility that in addition to that power plug you could add headers for a power option for use with a battery
you need a shield anyway if you really want that kinda connector just throw one on VIN is available. If you want reverse polarity protection though you will need another diode. This also means you better not plug something into both connectors or you could over voltage something.
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Its looking more doubtful that I will be selling the board due to the time required to make them.
we told you so!
you should seriously consider hiring some skilled solderers from your local school or something...
about how much do you think places will charge to manufacture it?
enough to where its probably out of the question. I don't have a ton of cash to throw at this, and personally I don't want to gamble with a lot of money right now. If I went the manufacturing route I'd likely spend several thousand dollars on 100 boards, and I doubt I could order less than that many.
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ok, that's fair enough, so how many of these boards do you expect to make? i know i will probably want one...
and i would expect at least another 100 people to want one.
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looks kind of like the mega...
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nice !
What about a kit? Or just sell bare board?
I would be interested by a kit, I wanna try SMD anyway ;)
Chelmi.
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looks kind of like the mega...
well it pretty much is one with some added features
What about a kit? Or just sell bare board?
I doubt two many other people would want to build it as a kit. Soldering .5mm spaced leads is not an easy task without the proper equipment and skill.
ok, that's fair enough, so how many of these boards do you expect to make? i know i will probably want one...
and i would expect at least another 100 people to want one.
I'll be back in school this fall and I won't have a ton of time so I don't know.
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I doubt two many other people would want to build it as a kit. Soldering .5mm spaced leads is not an easy task without the proper equipment and skill.
well, we all have to learn sometime... aren't most dip chips soon only going to be smd?
i would also like a kit, just a pcb with the required components would be fine... it would save you all the work...
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A kit or a plain PCB would be a piece of cake for me that is true.
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A kit or a plain PCB would be a piece of cake for me that is true.
be nice for us too, how much do you reckon a kit would cost, if you bought parts in bulk?
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A kit or a plain PCB would be a piece of cake for me that is true.
be nice for us too, how much do you reckon a kit would cost, if you bought parts in bulk?
Depends on the amount I'd buy up front, but I'd say ~50-55. It will be harder to sell kits and I will also have to sell more to just break even. I'd prefer selling pcb's at ~$10 and provide a list of parts you can buy, but again I think less people would go for that.
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less people would opt for that option as we don't get the bulk part prices...
it would probably cost us more...
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well at ~$50 a kit I'd have to sell 30 or so just to break even that's a large number for a surface mount kit. Its very easy for a person to screw up the kit and be out of $50 too. It doesn't seem like a good business plan to me. Its not like you can just say "well I fried my MCU let me order a new one, and that's that". A new MCU costs $12 to $16 and its very difficult to put a new chip on without a hot air rework station.
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hmm, well... would it be too hard to sell a thru-hole kit? i understand you are short on money and all... but its just an idea...
i can see the trouble people would have with frying the chips... do you think you could get the pcbs out for $10 a piece?
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still the hardest thing to solder is the MCU everything else is pretty much cake. There is no through hole ATmega640/1280/2560
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There is no through hole ATmega640/1280/2560
yep, thats the problem... what about a kit with the Mega soldered in, that's all? or would that defeat the point of a kit?
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that would defeat the purpose. I can solder the other stuff up very quickly its the atmega that is difficult.
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that would defeat the purpose. I can solder the other stuff up very quickly its the atmega that is difficult.
well, please consider using an external company to assemble the board, or maybe just put the atmega on if thats cheaper, i really would like to see this become a product!
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I would too, just the circumstances just might not be right for it to happen. I'm not giving up I'm just a bit skeptical at the moment.
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Show the design to places like curious inventor, ladyada, sparkfun, etc. One of them may like the design and choose to produce it. All you have to do is sit back and get a few bucks every time they sell one.