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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Has anyone worked with or know of a supplier of low cost motorized
rotary panel-mount audio potentiometers? I'm designing an analog keyboard amp/mixer and want to use a simple cheap microcontroller and external flash memory card so that the user can "save/recall" the settings of all their pots with a bank of pre-set buttons or control the pots via midi channel. The pots I am looking for should have a way for the shaft position to be known by the controller for the "save function" as well as the motor itself "recall function". I'm thinking the microcontroller will use a simple position/motion servo feedback loop routine to move any pot from it's current position to it's new position. Motion will stop when feed back indicates desired position is met until all pots are done. Anyone who's worked with motorized pots like this? Thanks for any opinion on this. Or if you know of a relatively inexpensive rotational servo that can be added to a standard pot or an all-in-one pot/motor/servo solution. |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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In article m, "windcrest" wrote:
Has anyone worked with or know of a supplier of low cost motorized rotary panel-mount audio potentiometers? I'm designing an analog keyboard amp/mixer and want to use a simple cheap microcontroller and external flash memory card so that the user can "save/recall" the settings of all their pots with a bank of pre-set buttons or control the pots via midi channel. The pots I am looking for should have a way for the shaft position to be known by the controller for the "save function" as well as the motor itself "recall function". I'm thinking the microcontroller will use a simple position/motion servo feedback loop routine to move any pot from it's current position to it's new position. Motion will stop when feed back indicates desired position is met until all pots are done. Anyone who's worked with motorized pots like this? Thanks for any opinion on this. Or if you know of a relatively inexpensive rotational servo that can be added to a standard pot or an all-in-one pot/motor/servo solution. Low cost. http://www.allelectronics.com/cgi-bi...IZED_POT_.html Its a dual pot so the resistance could be measured for position. greg |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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Don't look for an analogue solution in a digital world! Forget the
pot, look at encoders. These are basically clever switches designed to look like pots. Using simple 74** to count the "clicks" of the encoder, it is possible to save the position and recall a position without turning the pot to the "old" position, and if you wanted to be really flash, put some LEDs around the knob as an indicator to the actual position. |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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![]() "kt" wrote in message oups.com... Don't look for an analogue solution in a digital world! Forget the pot, look at encoders. These are basically clever switches designed to look like pots. Using simple 74** to count the "clicks" of the encoder, it is possible to save the position and recall a position without turning the pot to the "old" position, and if you wanted to be really flash, put some LEDs around the knob as an indicator to the actual position. Yes, but better to use a seven segment display per channel to give a 0-9 indication of each setting. And of course you control it all with a PIC these days. MrT. |
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