TEST DEVICE AND PROCESS FOR TESTING THE CONFIGURATION OF AN EXTERNAL CIRCUIT FOR AN RC RECEIVER
20230034166 · 2023-02-02
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01R19/14
PHYSICS
G01R31/31905
PHYSICS
G01R31/68
PHYSICS
G01R31/31728
PHYSICS
International classification
G01R19/14
PHYSICS
G01R19/165
PHYSICS
Abstract
A tool with three pins arranged in a row that three pinholes arranged in a row such as those found on a motor controller could easily connect to and disconnect from, that, when connected to a motor controller, identifies which of the three wires is positively charged, and whether the voltage difference is above 9 volts. Should one of the outer two wires be positively charged, and consequently not the middle one, or should the voltage difference be greater than 9 volts, then the motor controller would be faultily wired, consequently breaking any receiver that the motor controller connects to.
Claims
1. A test device for testing the configuration of an external circuit for an RC receiver, comprising: a three-pin male connector that is configured to connect to three female pins of the external circuit, and a test circuit attached to the connector that detects at least one of the following: which female pin is positive, and whether the voltage difference between the positive female pin and other female pins is greater than a preset value.
2. The test device of claim 1, wherein the circuit is configured to detect which pin is positive.
3. The test device of claim 1, wherein the circuit is configured to detect whether the voltage difference is greater than a preset value.
4. The test device of claim 3, wherein the preset value that the voltage difference is being compared against is between 7 and 11 volts.
5. The test device of claim 1, wherein the circuit detects which pin is positive and whether the voltage difference is greater than a preset value.
6. The test device of claim 5, wherein the preset value that the voltage difference is being compared against is between 7 and 11 volts.
7. The test device of claim 5, wherein the preset value that the voltage difference is being compared against is 9 volts; the circuit detects which pin is positive using red LEDs, and the circuit detects whether the voltage difference is greater than a preset value using a Zener diode in series with a red LED.
8. A method of testing the configuration of an external circuit for an RC receiver, the method comprising: connecting a three-pin male connector to three female pins of the external circuit and thereby electrically connecting a test circuit to the external circuit; detecting with the test circuit at least one of the following to determine that the external circuit is incorrectly wired: which female pin is positive, and whether the voltage difference between the positive female pin and other female pins is greater than a preset value; reconfiguring the connection of the three female pins to the external circuit to correct the wiring thereof; and connecting the external circuit to the RC receiver so that the external circuit is configured to receive signals from the RC receiver and initiate motions in response to such signals.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0016] The embodiment of the present invention known as the RP is illustrated by the accompanying drawings and will be described below in detail.
[0017] As shown in
[0018] Because the wiring of a motor controller can be faulty due to either misplacement of the positive wire or an excessive voltage difference between the positive and negative wires, the RP tests both the placement of the positive wire and the voltage difference.
[0019] The RP has 3 red LEDs, in this case of model type MCL053PD, that each correspond to one of these three wires. When the RP connects to a motor controller, the pinhole that is positively charged causes its corresponding wire to be positively charged, which in turn lights up the corresponding LED as shown in
[0020] The RP also has an LED of model type MCL053PD that lights up when the applied voltage exceeds 9 volts, as shown in
[0021] The circuitry of the RP is designed to fulfill both aforementioned functions.
[0022] Leading into the circuitry of the RP are the three wires that were soldered to the three pins. These wires each have an LED leading away from them. The other ends of those three LEDs are connected. The three wires not only have an LED leading away from them, but also a diode leading toward them, of model type 1N4001. The ends of these three diodes are also connected. This arrangement has three LEDs that each correspond to one of the wires. When a wire is positive, current runs through the LED leading away from the wire, lighting it, which alerts the user which of the pins is positive and effectively warns the user when the wiring is faulty due to a misplaced positive wire. When a wire is negative, current will run towards the wire from the diode leading toward the wire. The point where the ends of the LEDs converge will always be positive when a motor controller is connected to the RP. The point where the diodes leading towards the wires converge will always be negative when a motor controller is connected to the RP.
[0023] A 2,000-ohm resistor connects the point where the LEDs converge that is always positive with the point where the diodes converge that is always negative. In parallel with that resistor is a 5.6 volt Zener diode biased against the always positive point in series with a 700-ohm resistor in series with another MCL053PD red LED leading toward the negative point. When the voltage difference between the pins on the Dupont connector is below 9 volts, the Zener diode blocks current, preventing current from flowing through the 700-ohm resistor and the red LED. The current instead flows through the 2,000-ohm resistor. When the voltage difference between the pins at the start of the circuit exceeds 9 volts, the 5.6-volt Zener diode reaches its breakdown point, allowing current to flow through it, the 700-ohm resistor, and the red LED. This causes the red LED to emit light. In summary, the red LED will emit light when the voltage difference between the pins exceeds 9 volts but will not emit light when the voltage difference between the pins is below 9 volts or equal to 9 volts, thereby effectively warning the user when the voltage difference between the pins is dangerously high for a receiver.