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DTMF-controlled Robot Design: 02 June 2007

The document describes a design for a remotely controlled robot using DTMF tones. DTMF tones generated by pressing phone keys are received by a CM8870 IC chip which decodes the tones and sends signals to motors and relays to control the robot's movement. The robot will have four-wheel drive powered by two drill motors and be able to rotate its camera left and right remotely within a range of several hundred feet using an old cordless phone.

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Nitin Saini
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
38 views

DTMF-controlled Robot Design: 02 June 2007

The document describes a design for a remotely controlled robot using DTMF tones. DTMF tones generated by pressing phone keys are received by a CM8870 IC chip which decodes the tones and sends signals to motors and relays to control the robot's movement. The robot will have four-wheel drive powered by two drill motors and be able to rotate its camera left and right remotely within a range of several hundred feet using an old cordless phone.

Uploaded by

Nitin Saini
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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DTMF-controlled robot design

Posted on: 02 June 2007

Today, I thought of a very simple robot control circuit using DTMF tones.

Dual-tone multi-frequency (DTMF) tones are the sounds you hear when you press keys on a telephone keypad. You can buy a very simple IC (usually used in answsering machines and the like) that takes care of all the filtering and decoding necessary to determine which key was pressed. And because it's just an analog audio signal that is being exchanged, I can use a number of ordinary, low-cost audio transmitter/reciever pairs for sending that audio signal.

The design of the circuit for decoding DTMF tones is pretty straightforward. The CM8870 IC interprets the tones as a 4-bit digital signal. The HCF4514 IC then decodes and stores this onto 16-lanes of output which will switch transistors, which will switch automotive relays, which will operate motors that move the robot.

DTMF (DUAL-TONE MULTI-FREQUENCY) SIGNALS 1209 HZ 697 HZ 770 HZ 852 HZ 941 HZ 1336 HZ 1477 HZ 1633 HZ

1 4 7 *

2 5 8 0

3 6 9 #

A B C D

When all put together, I will send the DTMF tones over an old 900MHz cordless phone, providing a range of several hundred feet. Because DTMF tones operate within the audible range, in the future I could swap out the cordless phone for a newer one, or a pair of FRS radios, or some other audio transmitter/reciever pair. It doesn't really matter.

So then based on which key is pressed, the robot will be able to interpret the tone and activate relays and such to turn on motors and move about.

The 16-lane output will drive a set of trabsustirs, which will in turn drive a set of much larger automotive relays, to switch a pair of drill motors, as well as motors that will rotate the camera-equipped head left and right.

Speed will be controlled in steps using a few high-load resistors taken from the drills. Three speed settings should be plenty.

There will also be a couple buttons left over for arms and stuff that I might add later....maybe to toggle an series of IR diodes for night-vision...or to discharge a linear magnetic accelerator....who knows?

The robot itself will basically be a box (made of either wood or sheet metal, depending on how the funds work out.) It should measure roughly 1 foot by 1.5 feet.

At the center of mass will sit a 12-volt SLA (sealed lead acid) battery (the kind used in uninterruptable power sources and electric wheelchairs). Two 12-volt drill motors will be connected with bicycle chains and sprockets to four wheels, providing 4WD mobility for the unit. I have no experience in making chained drivetrains, so I'll learn as I go.

Power for the robot will all come from the 12-volt SLA battery. One regulated DC-to-DC converter will provide 9-volt power to the telephone reciever and to the wireless camera. Another regulated DC-to-DC

converter will provide 6-volt power to the logic circuits. This power will then go through an L78M05CV 5-volt regulator to get the proper voltage to the sensitive ICs.

As I mentioned eariler, atop the robot will be mounted a wireless camera that will be rotatable left-to-right with the use of a motor. This will provide a remote view of the robot's surroundings, and should transmit a good 100-200 feet. And I may add a bank of IR LEDs to give it some nightvision. That would be sweet.

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