A Whole Lot of Stepper Motors Make the Most Graceful 7-Segment Displays
Over the years we've seen many takes on the 7-segment display. Among the most interesting are the mechanical versions of what is most often an LED-based item. This week's offering is from [John Burd], who published a very odd video showing off the clock he made. But look beyond YouTuber antics and you'll see the stepper motors he used to turn the segments are dripping with graceful beauty. (Video, embedded below.)
Okay if you want to hear [Charlie Sheen] say "Raspberry P-eye", this is the video for you. [John] used Cameo to get the (former?) star to talk about what was used to build the clock. Like we said, the video is weird. Let's embrace that right away and then never talk about it again.
The thing is, the build is such a good idea. [John] went with some stepper motors you can source relatively cheaply from Ali Express and the like. Typically they're around a buck or two each and have a couple of wings for screw mounting brackets. This builds on the segment displays we've seen that use hobby servos by allowing you finer control of how the segments move. Sure, the 90° rotation isn't all that much to work with, but it will be much smoother and you can get fancy with the kinematics you choose. The only place we see room for improvement is the alignment of the segments when they are turned "off" as you can see the center segment in the video thumbnail below is not quite level. Maybe a linkage mechanism would allow for a hing mechanism that aligns more accurately while hiding the servos themselves behind the mounting plate? It's in your hands now!
In the demo video you'll also find some interesting test rigs built to proof out the project. One just endurance tests the mechanism, but the other two envision water-actuated segments. One pumps a hollow, transparent segment with colored liquid. The other tried to use water droplets sprayed in the air to illuminate laser segments. Both are cool and we'd like to see more of the oddball approaches which remind us of the ferrofluid clock.
#clockhacks #7segment #7segmentdisplay #charliesheen #mechanicaldisplay #servo #servomotors
Mechanical 7-Segment Display Uses a Single Motor
Seven-segment displays have been around for a long time, and there is a seemingly endless number of ways to build them. The latest of is a mechanical seven-segment from a master of 3D printed mechanisms, [gzumwalt], and can use a single motor to cycle through all ten possible numbers.
The trick lies in a synchronized pair of rotating discs, one for the top four segments and another for the bottom three segments. Each disc has a series of concentric cam slots to drive followers that flip the red segments in and out of view. The display can cycle through all ten states in a single rotation of the discs, so the cam paths are divided in 36° increments. [gzumwalt] has shown us a completed physical version, but judging by CAD design and working prototype of a single segment, we are pretty confident it will. While it's not shown in the design, we suspect it will be driven by a stepper motors and synchronized with a belt or intermediate gear.
Another 3D printed mechanical display we've seen recently is a DIY flip dot, array, which uses the same electromagnet system as the commercial versions. [gzumwalt] has a gift for designing fascinating mechanical automatons around a single motor, including an edge avoiding robot and a magnetic fridge crawler.
#mischacks #3dprinted #7segment #automaton #gzumwalt #mechanicaldisplay