"Ian W. Wright" <[email protected]
Hi,
A number of measuring systems I have seen use the Moire effect - is this a tecnique which might be used to overcome the lack of a suitable pitch grating? As I remember, two gratings are used mounted at a slight angle to each other. this has the effect of producing strong dark bands moving at right angles to the lines of the grating and allowing finer measurement from relatively coarse gratings. The angle at which the gratings are set affects the width of the bands and IIRC a smaller angle increases resolution - or have I got it all wrong? The kind of system I envisage would be easily made on the mechanical side and would consist of a tape with a number of straight black lines running the length of the machine - say ten at any even spacing - and a reading head incorporating another strip of the same kind of stuff and say ten IR phototransistors looking through the crossed gratings via small slits in a metal plate. I think that by choosing the number of lines, the grating angle and the number of phototransistors to give an accurate repeat rate, it should be possible to achieve good resolution by simple means. The grating could proboably be made by dragging a strip of acetate across the cutting adge of a screw tap in a suitable frame. Obviously, the electronics would have to discriminate which of the Phototrannies was dark and interpret this into a measurement but I'm sure this shouldn't be too difficult to achieve. I haven't tried this as I'm working too hard on my CNC mill but I'd be interested to hear your views. Ian Mouse electronics count fringes. A serial port mouse sends the positionBest wishes Ian -- Ian W. Wright LBHI Sheffield Branch Chairman of the British Horological Institute. Bandmaster and Euphonium player of the Hathersage Brass Band. UK. See our homepage at:- or or 'Music is the filling of regular time intervals with harmonious oscillations.' |