Range Lights Interactive Museum Display: Difference between revisions
Ttenbergen (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary Tag: Reverted |
Ttenbergen (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary Tag: Manual revert |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Project | {{Project | ||
|shortDescription=A display where a ship's wheel controls a virtual ship on a screen to demonstrate how [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Range_light Range Lights] work | |shortDescription=A display where a ship's wheel controls a virtual ship on a screen to demonstrate how [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Range_light Range Lights] work | ||
|longDescription=This project is in progress as of 2022-07. | |longDescription=This project is in progress as of 2022-07. |
Revision as of 20:15, 2022 July 29
Projects | |
Project: | Range Lights Interactive Museum Display (I) |
Description: | A display where a ship's wheel controls a virtual ship on a screen to demonstrate how Range Lights work |
Skillset(s) : |
3D Modelling • 3D Printing • Arduino • Electronics • Graphic Design • Making • Programming • Python • Raspberry Pi |
Project Type(s) : | |
This project is in progress as of 2022-07.
The Selkirk Marine Museum asked us to set up a display about Range Lights, maritime navigation aids that help a vessel stay in a channel. We set up an Interactive Display that uses an Arduino to detect the movement of a ship's wheel, which lets the user control a display created in Pygame on a Raspberry Pi that simulates steering a ship to bring it in line with a set of range lights.
The museum provided an antique ship's wheel for this. We designed, 3d printed and integrated the hall sensors into the wheel to measure the wheel movement via quadrature encoding. We also provided the graphics and video components for the game.