Tuesday 14 November 2017

An Update

Silence for months must be followed with an update post, it is a rule of nature.

At the beginning of the (academic) year I listed some of the projects that I am working on at the moment. Question: how are they going? Answer: ummmmmmmmmm - I'll get back to you.

Immediately.

Blake Project:

Turns out not spending eight hours a day on a project can really slow progress. The AI has been semi constructed, the algorithm has been written, and so has the car driving code. All that remains is to plug it all together (which is always the longest part anyway!).

The track, is in pieces. Not as many pieces as it was, but it is many hours from completion. Luckily we have a reading week at the moment with many hours in it, many fingers are being crossed.

Its all there! Just not together.

 Telescope:

The updates that need doing have been identified, I really need to install a focussing mechanism better than a loo roll and friction. Also, upgrading the optical tube frame to be more portable, yet sturdier, is definitely on the cards at some point.

The telescope has had some good outings recently, trying but failing to see Uranus, getting a peek at Mars and a good look at the Orion nebula. I was going to try and point it at Jupiter and Venus on Tuesday, but the only place I could see them was from the middle of a road (I live in a city and they were close to the horizon), which I did not think was appropriate. They were awesome enough with the naked eye!

Solar Flare Detector:

Designed, the project decided to change the receiver to an SDR (software defined radio) based one, plugging the antenna (after a couple of filters and amplifiers) into a microphone slot and using a computer to do all the hard work. As it should.

Of course given that the solar flare detector should be running fairly constantly we have elected to use a Raspberry Pi as our enslaved processor - which means I have to relearn linux.

Also it got a name the GRand Assembly for Versatile Ionosphere Tracking and Astronomy of the Sun or GrAVITAS, a ripe source of puns, a source of gravitas (can't help myself), and of course an oblique reference to Iain M Banks. It looks very good in email headers.
The engineer at work, all four monitors in use. More screens = more work being done right?

Rubik's Cube Solver:

Good progress, but nothing of note yet. At least nothing worthy of photographing!


Lunar Rover Mk2:



Wow - got assigned to other projects within the space society for the moment, which was rather unexpected. The sneaky plan of the committee is to shuffle members around between projects as work amounts change. Ideally this means that some point in the future there will be much posting about rovers, the ideas coming out of the rover team so far are really rather cool.

Random Shiny stuff:

It always happens.

Robot Wars.

So the university electronics society run an ant-weight (150g, 10cm cube size limit) competition twice a year, so I should have seen this coming. Because this is going to be the fifth time we have entered, my team is going to attempt to build a cluster-bot, fitting multiple independent robots within the restrictions. This is leading to all sorts of fun and games trying to reduce the mass of the individual components of the robots which is likely to be the tricky bit.

This one also has a name, The Rock and a Hard Plaice, more details to come soon.

Who needs scales when you have string, water and a measuring jug?

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