Overcoming Inertia

The design of PewtyBot 1.0 left something to be desired: the whole top section (stepper motor, assembly & laser) is moving, and that is a decent amount of mass that need to be accelerated rapidly many times over.

As I was tuning parameters, it became obvious that I needed to slow things down to avoid inaccuracies from the vibrations of a fast accelerating mass. I found happy parameters which led to several public deployments, but deep inside I knew I wanted to try the mirror approach. Instead of moving the laser, it remains static and only a couple of light mirrors are doing all the moving.

Introducing PewtyBot 1.1!

There’s a funny story in there about losing code, reimplementing, and a core issue I was struggling with being solved without knowing why. As always, a few unforeseen challenges got in the way, but ultimately the math is exactly the same as PewtyBot 1.0 so that was a relief. It’s just the motion code that needs to be adjusted some to deal with mirrors.

And well the results are cool, but somewhat mitigated. Definitely not “rocks your socks off” levels of cool. I can definitely move the laser a lot faster. Although through the exercise, I’ve realized that the “slow” speed of PewtyBot 1.0 may have been in the perfect sweet spot for laser light retention on a photoluminescent medium. And so maybe I got lucky there. Of course I could get a beefier laser that emits more light to compensate for the reduced time it spends on any particular area. I’m pretty convinced though that I want to remain in the “cat laser” realm for risk & safety. And so the other variable I get to play with is mirror quality, and I shouldn’t be surprised that there exist a whole world of mirrors of various specs. I got some very cheap craft type acrylic mirrors at first to test concepts. But you can tell the pointer hits the medium diffused and discolored. And so ultimately I’ll want to spend the money on a few square centimeters of first surface mirrors rated for blue light wavelengths. But first I’d like to convince myself that the mirror approach actually brings something extra to the table.

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