PrisonBrick Posted April 10, 2017 Posted April 10, 2017 This was an experiment of automation of a tramway line with an old LEGO RCX brick: All sensors and cables are 100% LEGO. There are 8 light sensor, 4 (two couples, one couple for station and one for switch zone) on input 1 and 4 on input 2. 3 output, output A (station 1 - switch), output B (station 2 - switch) and output C (switch zone). Everything is handled by NQC program Quote
Duq Posted April 10, 2017 Posted April 10, 2017 Nice! I like the passing station! I've done a similar thing with a commuting train as well as a train on a loop that pauses at a platform. Can't beat the RCX for this sorta thing. Do you use a pair of light sensors to shine at eachother? How does that perform? I've used PF LEDs opposite the light sensor. Quote
zephyr1934 Posted April 11, 2017 Posted April 11, 2017 That is a slick little layout, I really like it (I'm working on a streetcar myself, my first 9v moc in a while, and perhaps I should say this is even inspirational). All in all exceptional work (especially with your station MOCs). I did a couple of RCX layouts in the long distant past that might be relevant to what you are doing. First, the light sensors in this thread. They use a PF LED to shine in to the light sensor. I put the LED behind a 1x1 technic brick with a 1/2 pin to keep the beam focused on just the sensor and the light sensor having a "tunnel" pointed straight at the LED to keep the ambient light out. Also, I wrote the code so that the first thing it did was to auto-calibrate the light sensors to the ambient lighting. The other RCX layout I did that is of relevance was a simple one track "ping-pong" similar to your layout only with one train and no switches. I was running a longer, heavier train at a show. By the end of the 3 days the 9v motors were burned out, probably in part due to the PWM of the RCX. You might want to consider putting a capacitor in to the circuit to smooth out the PWM and get something closer to DC. Quote
Bernie56 Posted April 11, 2017 Posted April 11, 2017 Cool. Are these sensors from the Mindstorms EV3 series? Quote
PrisonBrick Posted April 24, 2017 Author Posted April 24, 2017 On 11/4/2017 at 0:48 AM, Duq said: Nice! I like the passing station! I've done a similar thing with a commuting train as well as a train on a loop that pauses at a platform. Can't beat the RCX for this sorta thing. Do you use a pair of light sensors to shine at eachother? How does that perform? I've used PF LEDs opposite the light sensor. On 11/4/2017 at 7:47 PM, Bernie56 said: Cool. Are these sensors from the Mindstorms EV3 series? I've used this sensor: https://www.bricklink.com/v2/catalog/catalogitem.page?S=9758-1&name=Light Sensor 9V&category=[Mindstorms][RCX]#T=S&O={} A pair of light sensors works fine, but occasionally oscillations of ambient light trigger the sensors... I'll try with a technic brick 1x2 to do a tunnel light Quote
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