And its been sitting in the bottom of my junk drawer since last summer ...
Anyway this is hardly a new idea, but most of the time when people make these out of VCR heads they end up with a bunch of junk glued, taped, screwed, and wired to the outside of the head, making for a functional but unattractive device. I wanted mine to be as nice looking as possible (considering my limited tools and workspace) and for me that meant one thing, all the junk needs to be in the tiny space inside the VCR head
Okay then why do you want one? what does it do? Well it functions just like the wheel on your mouse, except its larger and has momentum which is good for scrolling through long web pages or piles of source code, or heck a large document.
Its also good if you do any media editing as you can scroll around in large video or audio files effortlessly, with the heaviness of the VCR head you can just set it in motion and its inertia will keep it spinning for quite a while, when you come up on something you want to work or read you just stop it with your finger.
Is it for everybody? No not really, but if you constantly wheeling the mouse in some application (and forgot the Home, End, Page Up and Page Down, and cursor keys exist) you might like it
PDR_0047.AVI2 MB
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Signing UpStep 1: Parts and Tools
- A scavenged VCR tape head and its mounting bracket
- A USB wheel mouse, the chip from inside the mouse must fit inside the VCR head, mine was a cheap 5$ Microsoft basic optical mouse, and the whole thing ran from 1 central chip where the camera was located (plus I didn't really like this mouse much anyway, its too light)
- Blank copper clad PCB
- 1.75 to 2 inch machine screws (3 in my case to mount the bracket to the base)
- Some washers, mainly for looks
- 0.75 inch or 1 inch hollow spacers (I used some 0.25 inch wide 0.75 inch tall hollow hex spacers though some metal tubing would do fine also)
- Paint of your choice
- Resin of your choice (if you want to fill in the gap on the top of the head, I used black polyester resin, epoxy mixed with some model paint would work too)
- A chunk of wood for the base
- 1* LM393 (dip 8 probably would work, the one I scavenged was in a SOIC 8 package and it worked great)
- 2* 150 ohm resistor (all resistors used were standard 1/4 watt radio shack variety)
- 2* 470k ohm resistor
- 2* 33k ohm resistor
- 4* 10k ohm resistor
- 2* 0.1uf capacitor
- 2* infrared LED
- 2* infrared photo-transistors
- 2* 330 ohm resistor
- 1* 1uf capacitor
- 1* "mouse chip" (mine was marked with house numbers)
- 1* "mystery cap" (I think its a capacitor the code on it comes up to 24 picofarad, though it also has WS printed on it which is odd)
The usual hacking stuff ... though I used a few power tools at work, you don't have to but its so much faster and easier
- Soldering iron and usual soldering accessories
- Wire cutters, needle nose pliers (I have this craftsman set, though mine are older)
- Flathead screw driver
- Screw driver or hex wrench to take your VCR head apart (mine used hex head screws)
- Hammer
- Hacksaw
- Bandsaw
- Hole saw
- Belt sander (actually the right angle disk sander on the side)
- Drill and bits
- Sandpaper and abrasive pads
- Files
- Latex gloves
- PCB Enchant (and in my case a old pickle jar)
- Digital Calipers (are a huge plus, though a ruler would work)
- Pencil / Paper
- Hobby Knife / scalpel / Xacto (and a box cutter / utility knife if you want)
- Rubbing alcohol
- Multimeter (and an oscilloscope is nice but not necessary, I use this sub 20$ craftsman meter)
- A new Sharpie or similar permanent marker with a "fine point"















































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Just thought of the ultimate use for this, you should use it to control the puck Arkanoid on the MAME arcade emulator it would be as smooth as the arcade machine.
1. Heat that etchant up! I find somewhere around 100F makes the etchant work the way you think it should. I use a hot water bath around the etch tank.
2. Agitate the etchant with atomized air. I rigged up an aerosol agitator using an old areosol spray head salvaged off a dead spray paint can connected to tubing that I attached to a schrader tire valve plugged into one of those junky little 12 volt tire inflator compressors. This is better than rocking the tank because it introduces oxygen into the tank and aids the etching process. It may sound difficult but really it isn't it is totally worth doing.
Of course you have to brighten the copper cladding before you mask it off. But do all of this and you should enjoy perfect etches in about 2 minutes. Which sure beats playing rock the tank for 20+ minutes and getting ragged undercut traces that need sloppy repairs. Try it you'll like it.
Pretty (well my PNP mask smeared some I suck at ironing):
http://img412.imageshack.us/img412/7408/p1010001cq.jpg
Etch tank and compressed air supply (before I switched to the 12V)
http://img97.imageshack.us/img97/7184/etch1.jpg
Another board:
http://img15.imageshack.us/img15/5069/cleanresist1.jpg
I got sick and tired of ferric chloride myself now I want to try out muratic acid and hydrogen peroxide. Supposedly it is a self regenerating etchant, as in copper added doesn't saturate the solution. Though I hear dumping some sulfuric acid into ferric chloride can rejuvenate it sometimes. I've never tried it myself. Anyhow I hope you try out my suggestions. It really works!
2) I dont have the equipment to do the atomized are, though I did swirl it
I did brighten the clad up with scowering pads of fine grit, and cleaned with alcohol, and it only took about 10 min in a pickle jar swirling it around
+ keep in mind I did not use a transfer method, the only tiny 2mm spot that had a mishap was where there was a thin coat of marker, overall I think it turned out quite well for a marker
Well that is why I left the comment. because I've swirled too and it is for the birds compared to pumping some air into the tank. Getting the equipment isn't hard, you would be better off with a bicycle pump than swirling. But shoot for an actual $6 12V tire inflator I mean splurge! OK I just looked seems like the cheap pumps run about $10 online I'm sure you can find one at a garage sale for a buck. Or ask around most men have 3 in the basement they never use.
Theoretically the best material to use to brighten copper clad prior to etch masking is Scotch Brite but I use plain old steel wool (plain as in no soap) myself then wipe with a clean dry soft rag. I suppose sandpaper would be OK too. I consider any etch that takes longer than 5 minutes to be problematic. I've cooked boards in under 2 minutes but I use air. And it isn't about the time it is about detail retention, but time is the simplest measure of etch technique success.
I used to do the exact same hand drawing method prior to the advent of personal computers and the widespread availability of free CAD software for PCB design. I wouldn't want to go back today. I use CAD for all my board layouts now, even ones I point to point wire up.
http://img709.imageshack.us/img709/9816/tb6560boardb.jpg
Etching a board wouldn't have helped much:
http://img545.imageshack.us/img545/2833/tb6560ahqacr.png
It works well:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgbeyNNBZ68
Even with perfboard:
http://img191.imageshack.us/img191/4185/ppbbpic1.jpg
Worth doing.
http://img717.imageshack.us/img717/567/ppbbr4brdr.png
:D
http://pdf1.alldatasheet.com/datasheet-pdf/view/333277/PIXART/PAW3502.html
Years of practice multiplied by massive amounts of dumb luck!
:)
For similar ideas this is where I got the info before:
http://tinylittlelife.org/?p=122
This hack looks way nicer than what I put together... I just used the mouse electronics and hardware directly, so the result was really a mess of wires and awkward structure.
At the time, I was sad that a lot of people didn't go out and make their own scroll wheels out of VCR heads... but seeing this project makes me appreciate the quality vs the quantity.
Nice job!
I had a similar problem to solve many years ago: detect motion of a stainless steel shaft *in vacuum* with a minimum of changes to the shaft.
A modern optical mouse, out of the box, a light sanding of the steel, and the job was done.
I can send details if needed.
http://www.teleic.com/PDF/OM02-Spec040210.pdf
... just like a pair of encoders on a scroll wheel.
You need to find the pins (X1,X2; Y1,Y2 in the above).
Then, find how the IR wheel encoders are piped into a PS2/USB controller of some sort.
Snip the wheel encoders' tracks, and wire in the X or Y lines from the optics chip.
I actually looked at 4 mouses, my GE optical, my Microsoft optical and some crap keytronix or something at work were all like that, and all were bought within the last year or so
my ~5 year old dynex had 2 chips in it, but it is a 5 button mouse and the controller chip was a dip 20 and I could not visualize how to get that joker inside the vcr head
If I did it might not have a couple pits on the top metal (which were caused by a bench vice while banging these things out to saw off0 , but I would probably would still be working on it right now, and 1000X more devastated when I got a scratch on it
It just goes with "mostly hand made" I guess
It just never occured to me, and that would make great SMD resistors in a pinch
though thanks to eyeballing angles I did not have much trouble stuffing them all in there, the weirdest solder joint is on one of the led's where "not the greatest" planning left a odd 3d s-bend in one of the cathodes
but hey I dont think it was too bad for eyeball being the only funky bend :)
on this security model it only had 1 head for read 1 for write with 4 loops
read write ??? and common maybe
I dunno I am not a motor expert