RBBBs and Pololu SSCs

Posted by Erin, the RobotGrrl on Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

I received the two RBBB’s, 1 FTDI TTL USB cable, and two Pololu Serial Servo Controllers (SSC) I bought a few weeks ago. :) Since then… I’ve been tinkering with them quite a bunch. I learned an incredible amount too from just a tiny board!

Building up the RBBB wasn’t too hard. At first, I printed off the wrong ‘instructions’ – which mind boggled me a bit until I noticed that they were indeed wrong. Once I had the right instructions printed… it was more simple. I was worried about the polarity of the bigger capacitors. :) After I had it all finished… I went and looked up the FTDI-USB cable specs. This cable is pretty interesting if you think about it, 1 wire turns into 6 more colourful wires :) -Gnd, CTS (clear to send), +5V, TX, RX, RTS (request to send). I downloaded the Blink program without any problems… until I wanted to test it. The LED wasn’t blinking! After about 5 minutes of intense thought, I realized that there was no LED on pin 13. That was a stupid mistake!

Another stupid mistake, but this one is funnier, was when I was trying to test the other RBBB.
… I forgot to put the chip into the IC socket. =D That really made me ‘lol’ for 10 minutes.

Then, I was trying to fit it into the breadboard… lets just say it took a longer than normal time.

When the Pololu SSCs showed up, I was pretty excited! Then when I saw them… they are REALLY tiny! It was a big challenge to solder these without them flying out of my hand. I don’t have a 3rd hand tool to hold it steady, so I would sometimes have to hold the ‘pinchy-things’ with my elbow and hold the solder and soldering iron with my hands. :) The headers were extremely difficult too…

Getting the Pololu to work with the Arduino is pretty aggrivating. I think I’m almost there, I just have to switch the input to the logic level side as I was using the RS-232 one. I thought that the Arduino used RS-232 on its TX line, but it doesn’t. It uses a non-inverted logic level (er well, that’s at least what I read). Tomorrow I plan on looking up the difference between the two :D

Here are some pictures… I finally threw the desoldering pump out the window (joking) and bought solder wick. Also finally bought NON-LEAD SOLDER! =D

RBBB nice and shiny Everything on the kitchen table for RBBB RBBB and instructions RBBB Finished! RBBB FTDI Cable (black is Gnd) RBBB Soldering iron is all gooey and yuck! FTDI confusion RBBB not working!! RBBBs RBBB on Breadboard Pololu Board in Bag with Seal thing… Fits! What is that weird blue thing? It’s really tiny… Pololu Board is challenging o_o Meanwhile, turtle is escaping… (LOL) Ooo Hard to solder… Omg- so small even for my fingers Soldered it to the pinchy-thing (LOL) 2 Headers are difficult! You can see where the servos will go! THIS IS SO DIFFICULT AND FRUSTRATING! (and worthy of caps lock too) O-O :) Pololu! Yaay! Complete by the looks! NO LEAD!

Other than playing with these, I’ve been flow-charting A LOT of AI programs, and learning more first-order predicate logic. I really like logic and the probabilities and Bayes and everything!!!!! Also having fun thinking about random and bell curves… More back-dated Stanford blog posts to come (so many photos hahah)!

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Posted in: Programming, Projects, Robot.
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One Response to “RBBBs and Pololu SSCs”

  1. Ron Says:

    A good investment would be some Panavise equipment. They sell a Panavise Jr (Model 201) for about $20 US–a good inexpensive one for getting started. If it tips over, just screw it to a board. They also make a wide range of PCB holders, bases, etc. Their Multi-Purpose Work Center – Model 350 is great. Most everything is interchangable (swap out bases, mounts, etc) so their stuff is a great long-term investment.

    In general, good tools are a wise thing to spend money on. A good tool will save you a LOT of time and annoyance. Plus, a solid tool will last a lifetime.

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