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Solar Powered Dragonfly |
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This design is intended as a D&T electronics project for groups at secondary schools, or after school clubs. It is an exercise in soldering to make a moving robot (instead
of one of those ubiquitous plant watering indicators!), which hopefully
provides a cheap but gratifying practical
project to get kids hooked on practical sciences and engineering.
No it doesn’t fly, but it does twitch its wings every few
seconds as it basks in sunlight. The sun’s energy is collected by the solar cell, which is stored
in the blue capacitors that make up the body. When the capacitors are fully charged (as detected by the
various components that make up the head, eyes and mouthparts), this
accumulated energy is released into a small electromagnet to make the wings
move. |
The electromagnet coil assembly is scavenged from an old
computer CD Rom drive, where they are used to move a tiny lens to focus the
laser beam on the other tracks on the CD
Children are often intimidated by technology,
("Its broken so I'll buy another one" - rather than "I'll see
what's inside and try and mend it") so the dragonfly is deliberately
aimed to allow them to get inside some hi-tech equipment. In order to 'salvage' the electromagnetic coil the children
must dismantle a trashed drive CD drive, and at the same time they’ll hopefully
learn how it works, (perhaps aided by the excellent pages on CD drives on www.howstuffworks.com)
Full
circuit details and component suppliers etc can be requested by e-mail: adrian@craftytech.co.uk |
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