Followup to the Onewheel XS
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I tamed my scrollsaw and managed to cut the tiny U slot in the axle bracket then made minor corrections with some tiny jewellers files. Very very snug, I was concerned I would need to braze these together making dissasembly a bit of a puzzle however it's so snug that there is no play.
Managed to cut the lid of the controller and drill the holes out, genuinely happy with how it's beginning to look.
Redid the controller housing with 0.1mm layer height so it's capturing a lot of the minor details I needed for it to work. Sadly I left support on for the logo which I couldn't remove so I've left it there assuming this won't be the final version.
Tapped the holes in the lid, will probably have to extend the material there like on the stock one since there isn't enough for the threads to last many uses.
Inside I moved the battery voltage rail below the VESC because pins were getting too close to the lid for my liking. Fortunately I had room to have that run below between the handle bit and the PCB mount posts.
Ignore the mis-alignment on the front pad, I'm redoing that later.
Wanted to complete the battery this weekend but ran out of time D:
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@lia That is a work of art! Great job!
I think I missed it somewhere, is the motor from a e-skate? -
@lemur Really appreciate that :)
Correct, it's a 74mm 200w Esk8 motor what originally had a PU cover on it for the wheel. Here's an old pic of it before I encased it fully inside the hub shell.
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On reddit I've had a few people genuinely think the XS will be something they could use properly. I admire their optimism and praise of my work but I don't think they realise just how small half scale is.
(No banana for scale, sorry not sorry)
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PCBs came for the headlights so will solder those up tomorrow (hopefully) :)
Min quantity was 5 so I have 3 spares for now.Also had the desire to make the charger so spent a few hours making a replica of that in Sketchup~
Will use a USB C interface in place of the normal C8 (figure 8) mains connector. Printed the top half and it came out okay.
Also you can see I re-did the battery housing and rear bumpers in 0.1mm layer heights which makes a huge difference to the surface finish and detail retention. Also printing the bumpers upside-down helps a lot with making the "Onewheel" wording show up albeit hard to see through camera.
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EDIT : Nevermind I had nothing else to do and flowing solder paste is quiet (minus my cursing as I burn myself). First time ever using solder paste and using the hot air part of my solder station properly. I don;t think I did too badly :)
Here's a vid of me testing it. Didn't have a 3.3v supply handy so I just borrowed an old Arduino Uno I have laying around to pinch it's 3.3v rail. I realy should buy a decent lab bench power supply but all the ones that have voltage and current ranges I want are hella pricey.
Connector is temporary, just needed something easy to poke a jumper into for testing :)
Originally I was going to drive these off 5v but the drop required to get the LED's running at a proper voltage meant the resistors would have to be much bigger. At the time I was using more LED's so didn't have space. I could go back to 5 white 4 red but I think this is fine for the scale version.
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@lia Literally drooling over this project and the most fascinating one i ve seen to date. You must make a limited run of these cause i'm pre-ordering NOW with the money FM did not take from me yet .
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@Lia my brain be like:
... and yes of course its a png with transparent canvas! what am i? an animal? -
@notsure Very trippy, nice work rotoscoping that :)
PNG is best format~ -
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@maciak So happy to hear that <3
It is tempting, make a few commissioned ones for some riders. If I do have a change of heart and consider it I'll let you know ;)
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Everything is on a "go-slow" especially with work driving me insane. Feel like there's been enough progress for an update though :)
Battery housing lid before being trimmed to size.
Cut the lid to size, still need to add the extended threaded sections since the 1mm plate is not going to last.
Cells fit, need to push up the middle of the lid as it's deformed in a tiny bit but other than that it all fits :)
Made a new bracket for the capacitors that also will hold the front light bar. Got iPhone vibes from this part. Anyone that's taken apart an older iPhone and seen how things like the speaker look with the long tiny plastic brackets will know what I mean.
Unfortunately there is a 0.5mm clearance issue with the LEDs so it's hard to remove for now so I'll redo the lower controller housing to accommodate this.
Finally it's come time to test the electronics... D:
So far so good, no fire. Set the PSU to around 16v (4s) and only a max of 5amp rather than the full 10amp this can do. Time to mount it back in the XS and test the motor.
Time test see if it spins (sorry for the crap footage, the lighting mixed with a smudge on the lens makes it look hazy AF >.>)
It works~ :D
Rattly but works. Need to braze the axle bracket and rail together which will stop that since those are loose and definitely the cause of it. To be fair it only does it when spun up max speed (under current settings) so I'm happy with how it is so far. -
@lia I really admire your work, amazing attention to detail!
How did you fabricate the aluminum top plate ? Looks like it was pressed out with dies. -
@lia said in Onewheel XS:
So far so good, no fire.
This would be the pre-pre-alpha test . . . Good job!! ! :D
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@lemur Thanks :D
You nailed it, made 2x 3D printed plates to encase the 1mm thick sheet then over several repeated sessions of crushing it in the vice it got the shape from the dies. Once pressed I drilled through the guide holes then used a final template to cut them on the mitre saw.
Controller was easy enough since I made that one correct to scale so it's barely raised. Battery side though I gave myself 3mm extra to work with since those cells stand no chance otherwise.
@OneDanGT Aha true xD Honestly was shocked nothing went pop like the caps.
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@lia That's great engineering!
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Oh, my god, is being a long time since I haven't seen that thread.
Lia, you are completely crazy!! You made it work!
So time consuming... this is just too much... Is not that I don't value what you did, which is superb. But your abilities deserved something you could ride ;) -
@ed_co Oh I'll totally ride it if not just for the humour of it :)
Just have to find the drive and brain power to figure out where to go next to finish it. The programming side and hooking up the gyro is daunting but is really the next step I should be taking.
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Wanted to get the gyro wired up but hit a snag where connecting it drops my usb connection to the VESC. Ignoring the Arduino and passing the gyro data straight into the FSESC to interpret since it has it's own balance app built into the VESC tool :)
I'm probably wiring it up wrong since the pinout for RX/TX on my FSESC seems to vary a little depending on whose documentation I'm looking at.
So in the meantime I've reprinted the controller housing to accommodate the LED bar a bit better.
Love seeing this thing move so decided to dangle the USB cable over and took it for it's first float. Still hooked up to external power of course. Last thing I want is to have a fault that sets 4 cells on fire D:
Motion is super rigid because the keyboard controls are full backward, -1mph , +2mph and full forward (under current restrictions programmed for now).
Still pleased with the amount of torque shown without even touching a single amp (I should be allowed up to 30A burst and 20A continuous).
Once I get the gyro hooked up I'll look at doing a balance test with my hands before working on making it structurally solid enough to definitely hold my weight.
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@lia Hilariously awesome watching the baby learn to float!
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@onedangt IKR. So adorable watching it flop around.
You can tell which side I biased the cells in the battery housing by how it naturally wants to turn left.