Skip to main content

user interface

miniE - 2x16 UI and minimal engine

Hello,

miniE is an engine sketch to provide control over a single stepper motor and camera, using an Arduino and DFRobot LCD Keypad shield. It is a minimalist design providing all the necessary features to do shoot-move-shoot or continuous timelapse with a built-in UI. The 1st version of this code was heavily inspired by the OpenMoCo Engine by C.A. Church and is basically based on it. Thank you for your great work and help!

Thanks to ozeraser for contributing and for the version 0.10! miniE is now compatible with Arduino SDK v1.0.

The DollyShield: Arduino Shield for Timelapse Motion Control

The DollyShield is an adaptation of the Arduino Motor Shield v3 that provides directional PWM control of two DC motors, at up to 1A of current each.  In addition to the motor drivers, it also provides a stereo plug with dual opto-coupled outputs for direct camera control, a 2x16 LCD, five user input buttons, and four auxilliary inputs or outputs through two stereo jacks.  It is designed to provide an inexpensive and easy-to-use interface for two-axis motion control integrated with a camera.

 

 

DollyShield v1.0 Front 

Download OpenMoco Slim

OpenMoco Slim User Interface

 

This software is released as open-source under the GPL Version 3

 

Current Version: 0.12

Download:

 

Previous Versions:

 

Documentation:

 

SVN on Sourceforge:

Getting Up and Running with OpenMoco Slim

While the Timelapse Engine provides all the functionality needed to perform the motion control for your time-lapse video, you'll still need a way to interface with the engine. The engine can communicate with any computer that has a USB port, so we'll just need some software to tell it what to do. OpenMoco Slim is the first, and most basic interface to the time-lapse engine. It's a simple application that provides a low-profile way to interact with the engine and script complex sequences of motion in Windows, Linux, and OSX.

We'll cover how to get Slim up and running, and walk through the basics of using it.

Syndicate content