Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "JERD" wrote in message ... I am wondering if anyone has managed to convert/use a standard antenna rotator for tracking purposes? I know that very expensive antenna rotators are available for this use but hey there is no fun or challenge in that! Want to use it to automate tracking the sun - have two solar panels mounted on one, currently using manual control. I invented such a thing in my head but have never built it. My idea could be adapted to what you already have. It is quite difficult to describe without diagrams, but I'll give it a shot. Imagine that your rotator is reset by you each sunny morning, pointing east at the rising sun. You flip a TRANSFER switch and westward rotator power is then applied through the contacts of a normally-closed (NC) relay . At that moment, however, the relay is held open with coil current provided by the amplified signal of a photosensor which is collocated with the collector panels. It is aimed in the same direction as the panels, but it has blinders on it so it has only a narrow field of view in the east-west direction. Thus, the photosensor is illuminated because it is pointing in the direction of the sun. First thing in the morning, with the panels and the photosensor pointing at the sun, nothing happens when you throw the TRANSFER switch. But wait ... As the sun rises, it gradually moves to a point where it is NOT illuminating the photosensor. The relay drops and energizes the rotator. The rotator moves but an instant later, the whole rig is again aimed at the sun, which illuminates the photosensor. The relay re-energizes, removing power from the rotator and movement stops. This process might repeat ten or twenty times a day, depending on the angle of view of the photosensor. For the fans of disclaimers, let me say I fully realize the relay could be of the normally open (NO) variety and be pulled closed when the sensor is in shade. (I had to pick one possibility for the description.) Photosensor means any one of several types of light-to-electricity transducers. Relays have solid-state alternatives. The TRANSFER switch is a minor modification of the rotator control box he's probably using now. Clouds will louse this up. With no sunshine, the tracking process should be halted; thus, the circuit requires the addition of an all-seeing photosensor (no blinders) to test whether the sun is shining and interrupt the power if it's not. This is hardly the only autotracker design that would work and you could even add elevation tracking.(However, in addition to all the mechanical things, elevation tracking control would require at least another pair of sensors and possibly a lens system rather than simple blinders. Probably too hard.) Automatic daily resetting could be accomplished with a dedicated sunrise-sensing photosensor and additional modification of the control box. This would enable you to sleep in. (You could involve the "all-seeing photosensor," above, in this, but the logic would have to include a test for the approximate time-of day, so the daily reset could happen only in the morning.) Lest anybody be concerned this has nothing to do with antennas, let me hasten to state that my last unconventional use for an antenna rotator was to make a true tracking polar mount for a Ku-band satellite dish. Looks like crap but tracks the arc perfectly. So there is a tenuous connection. "Sal" |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Will these rotator control boxes work? (was Can you help identify this rotator?) | Antenna | |||
antenna rotator cause hum in receiver | Equipment | |||
FA: New in the box CDR AR-40 antenna rotator | General | |||
FA: New in the Box CDR antenna rotator AR-40 | Equipment | |||
Antenna Rotator problem | Antenna |