Steering angle sensor- best ideas!
Moderators: JeffC, rdoherty, stieg
We just used a string potentiometer on our Merkur XR4Ti as a steering angle sensor. About a 30 minute install and worked very well. Used stranded copper wire to link the potentiometer to the shaft combined with some aluminum tape to anchor it. A more elegant install might be stainless wire with a tapped anchor screw.
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Here is the listing for the pot that I used:
http://amzn.com/B00HKJ2J08
Unfortunately it appears the price on these have nearly doubled since I made my purchase. It might be worth looking around for a better price or equivalent/similar part.
The gears I used came from here:
http://amzn.com/B002Q0PA34
The rest is just aluminium stock and standard hardware.
http://amzn.com/B00HKJ2J08
Unfortunately it appears the price on these have nearly doubled since I made my purchase. It might be worth looking around for a better price or equivalent/similar part.
The gears I used came from here:
http://amzn.com/B002Q0PA34
The rest is just aluminium stock and standard hardware.
This looks better for price:
http://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/BI- ... xGp6s.link
http://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/BI- ... xGp6s.link
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- Joined: Wed Apr 16, 2014 11:03 am
- Location: Florida
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I think it would be a really good fit for a 3d project. I'm not sure what the variations in steering column diameters/dimension are, but a press fit onto my column (94 Integra) would work well and simplify things. If the bracket from the pot was slotted, then it could be made to be pretty generic I think.
Taking into account that gearing 1.33:1 I've got enough for what I want to look at. I decided I wanted more resolution in the region that the wheel should be spending the majority of it's ontrack life. If I'm using more steering than that I'm either in the pits/paddock or things have already gone pear shape and I should be looking a what happened in the data previous to this The pot also doesn't have a hard stop so it can continuously rotate with out any mechanical issue.jakekooser wrote:Is a single turn pot enough? I have some 5-turn pots from some old equipment I was going to use. I think mine is 2.7 lock to lock.
However for other applications I can see that more turns would be most likely needed/desirable and if you have existing parts that you don't need to pay for, then I'd go for it!
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- Joined: Wed Apr 16, 2014 11:03 am
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