yea there this one , the electronics are all done ya just have to
plug things in , A guy on one of the groups here? got one , if its
this group maybe he'll chime in .
animal
On 1/23/24 6:19 PM, Rui Dantas via
groups.io wrote:
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
Greg?
I can soldier pretty good but all the tech stuff has my head
spinning as I grew up in the 80’s and do not have any experience
with that. Putting the components together should not be a
problem for me at all and am looking forward to it. The
programming however is going to be my challenge. I have seen all
of Clough’s videos and think this is the system I would want to
go with.
Is there other systems that are plug and play?
Thank you by the way for your advice!
On Jan 23, 2024, at 7:37?PM, Greg via
groups.io <gregj@...> wrote:
?
Rui,
?
Back home and can respond a bit
better.? ??Yes, mine is the Clough ELS.
?
If I have to? explain this it will
get technical real fast but Clough uses a TI
microprocessor that is designed for motion control.?
Seems to be well thought out and was simple for me to
build.? You program it from your PC and the directions
are pretty good with good You-tube? How-Tos.? For
instance the TI processor has subsystems for the encoder
inputs… Arduinos have to brute force it.
?
That said, my degree is in CS and I
am an old E-tech and electrician (can’t hold a job I
guess).? So while I didn’t need them I have a decent DSO
and meter(s), bench supplies and so on and do know how
to use them.
?
If you aren’t fluent in Arduino, then
there won’t be much difference between this and the
Atomic as far as difficulty.? The big question is can
you follow directions and can you solder fairly modern
electronics? ?Modern would be surface mount and that’s
different… easier IMHO but different tools.
?
I looked at all the ELS options I
could find and thought the Clough was the best option
for me with likely the highest RPM limit…? as always
YMMV.
?
?
Greg