Currently, I have a 555 circuit that blinks an LED, and a second that blinks another LED, alternating. Also, there's a potentiometer so you can adjust the rate at which they alternate. To finish this up, I'll be using a servo motor which has it's + and - wired to + and -, and it's signal pin wired to the output on the first 555, which in theory will tell it to spin one direction when high and the other direction when low. When this is done, I can remove the second 555 because it's really only for show. ^_^
After that, I'll need to install a second potentiometer to adjust the speed of the pan, and a power switch to turn the entire thing off. The full set of controls will be two knobs and a switch, allowing you to adjust the speed of the pan, the rate at which the camera switches directions, and turn it off. "Even a kid could use it!"
The problem is that the circuit is on a breadboard, which I'm guessing isn't great for mounting on a camera. Can anyone suggest a method of casing this up? I'm thinking a 2x2x2" box with the controls on the side would be pretty good, and it can sit right under the camera. As far as the electronics, I imagine I would use perfboard and solder accompanied by liberal amounts of electric tape, unless someone cares to educate me in a more professional way.
Thanks for reading!
-Will
That's not the type of signal the servo would like. It wants to see a pulse of 1 to 2 milliseconds every 20 milliseconds.
I have a prototype board with an avr atmega48 and some servo headers if you want. I even have a small box for it. I can also give you the servo library I am using.
Most tripods are indeed 1/4 20.
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