Samudra, This is a good question for a first year engineering student like myself: How does one bring home the best bang for the buck out of an engineering dollar?
Feel free to ask around. A few on the list have driven unusual devices to get antennas moved.
How does a project get into the hands of people who will actually do it? A one off I can do for you in my basement. Probably with parts from radio shack, a grinder and a few hand tools.. A reproducible project 10 years from now? Hardly likely.
I submit to you that irrespective of the metalwork this is a simple project as you propose, however it must be reproducible. With a student copy of SolidWorks, a circular saw, drill and the Arduino IDE it could be prototyped by two people in a weekend. Refining it so that a relatively new ham with a smidgin of technical ability could do it might take a little longer. These days with the internet and cad, the real issue is the tooling. How do you design/layout such that it can be done with snips/file/saw/fill in the blunt instrument here.. 73 es have fun..
Norm n3ykf
On Sat, Feb 23, 2013 at 10:19 PM, Samudra Haque samudra.haque@gmail.com wrote:
I hope it is evident, I am not focusing on the controller/microcontroller/computer interface/az-el controller/etc. The real issue is how cheaply can an antenna be mounted on a kingpost somewhere on a surface, with a view towards the sky, and how conveniently can that mount be motorized, with a sensor to give feedback to the ground station. electronics, seem to be, (apologises to EE friends) a dime a dozen, cheaper if made in hundreds, but the key drawback of any design is the mechanical and electromechanical (can we use, mechatronics) system that serves as the actuators. I am not referring to a hand held antenna assembly, but rather something that we can all use in cold/hot weather and that can be put together by one / two persons on an average post.
Comments welcome, I think the future holds bright for amsats and edu based cubesats.
-samudra
On Sat, Feb 23, 2013 at 9:50 PM, Lizeth Norman normanlizeth@gmail.com wrote:
Gus and the group: Lots of birds going up in the next year. Success rate not 100% as it's rocket science oftentimes on a budget. Hopefully we'll get a few out of it. The Arduino IDE install supports PPM. The nice thing about that platform is that configuration is doable for just about all forms of hardware that you might drive with it and scaling can be done in software for the various different bits of kit.
I am sure that with the appropriate development environment and having the hardware on hand IN a well equipped lab, it should be a weekend project to get running.
The hard bit in my opinion is how to mount the antennas to the az/el clockwork. Will require a little woodwork/metalwork to finish.
Everyone who does this will have a problem with some phase of it. Needs to be simple and repeatable.
Norm n3ykf _______________________________________________ Sent via AMSAT-BB@amsat.org. Opinions expressed are those of the author. Not an AMSAT-NA member? Join now to support the amateur satellite program! Subscription settings: http://amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/amsat-bb