View Single Post
  #7   Report Post  
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
Wild_Bill Wild_Bill is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,001
Default Wireless dial test indicator

Wireless gear that operates in the 2.4GHz frequency seems to be abundant.. I
dunno how much crap they can/expect to cram into that bandspace, but there's
a hell of a lot cheap 2.4 consumer stuff around (albeit weak RF).

I had a cordless phone that was interrupting the display of a wireless video
camera at intervals of about 1 second, even though the handset was on the
base unit.
I gave the phone to a friend (I don't particularly like cordless phones,
even though that one was supposedly a spread spectrum model) and the camera
worked fine in a city neighborhood environment after that.

--
WB
..........


"Pete C." wrote in message
ster.com...

Wild_Bill wrote:

The received wireless mouse signal (possibly only X or Y) would require
some
sort of D/A conversion, would it not?
I dunno about the EMI-RFI issues.. someone here with a PC in their shop
could probably comment on that.

A tiny low voltage gearmotor to operate the variable current pot might
work,
but you could likely do it with circuitry, handy as you are with
electronic
stuff.

The motor idea just popped into my gourd as I was thinking about a
stabilized output variac I have, that operates by a small (non-digital)
circuit board and a small motor.

I'd temporarily forgotten about the rotating indicator's relationship to
the
spindle.. thanks for the reminder.

--
WB


The generally accepted solution to eliminating the foot pedal cable is
to eliminate the foot pedal and use a torch mounted control, either a
variable control like the foot pedal, or a simple pushbutton when used
with a sequencer.

As for wireless links in the shop, I think it's workable in most cases.
Modulation methods, data rates and receiver sensitivity have improved
over the years and a data link these days can readily overcome the
variable RFI in a shop environment with redundancy and error correction.