eftychia: Tine, damper, and hammer of lowest note on Fender-Rhodes piano, in action (rhodes)
posted by [personal profile] eftychia at 09:48am on 2015-10-27
True, an analog clock-radio with a busted radio would work for this ... or anything else with a motor that runs continuously likea clock.

I've never built anything using stepper motors. What's the learning curve like? (And would the motor from a printer or CD drive put up with continuous operation forcweeks at a time? Though I guess hard disks spin for ages at a stretch, and I think I have a few 100 MB drives that I could take apart. I'd need to gear down the speed a lot more on one of those, I think (but in turn, that means that sufficient torque wouldn't be something I'd need to even worry about, right?). I'll look at the hard disk pile tomorrow.)
 
posted by [personal profile] whc at 11:21am on 2015-10-27
True industrial step motors would have the endurance and I'd think one from a printer or drive would be worth a try.
A hard drive spin motor is certainly rated for continuous operation, but would need to be geared down a lot, I was thinking about the step motors used for head positioning on CD drives and some floppies.

I have an extra step motor driver board (they're cheap these days) that would just need a digital signal at the correct frequency. You can have it if you decide to go the step motor route. I can build up a circuit with a 555 IC to drive it. I may even have a step motor that I don't need.
 
posted by [personal profile] whc at 02:38am on 2015-12-16
I found a step motor from an old printer and should be able to build you a drive circuit. What RPM would you like?

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