@ecabanas I am pretty sure you can compile OpenCV to run on the PI. I built a machine for my computer vision dev with a good video card so I could use the cuda cores build. Have you worked with any computer vision libraries? You will likely need a decent machine to do the processing. Maybe you could branch and build your own code base designed for the hardware you are considering. My experience is you have to do a lot of threshing of images, converting to gray scale, etc to do what you want. Your project is probably a little ambitious for a starter. You probably want to dl OpenCV and play around with the samples and take a look at some youtube videos for starters.
Posts made by manicfarmer
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RE: Ocr for Arduino or raspberry question
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RE: Radio issue on relay sample
Got my HLK-PM01in the other day so I removed the buck converter from my test board and added one of these and now it communicates fine. Thanks for the advice.
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RE: Radio issue on relay sample
@sundberg84 I did see that project but didn't look at the design in detail. I really like the idea of the relay and power being in one unit. I definitely have some reading to do.
I did try and ground the relay to the Arduino. The results seem to be not as good as before. I got it to function a couple of times but most of the time it didn't seem to work. Of course when it is powered from USB on my PC it works great. I hooked up the TX, RX and DTR so I could hook it up to the serial monitor to see what the output says and I was getting some readable output and some that wasn't. Pasting output below. Typically each send command prints on its own line so maybe this has something to do with the issue I am experiencing.
send: 1-1-0-0 s=255,c=0,t=18,pt=0,l=5,sg=0,ót=ok:1.5.1send: 1-1-0-0 s=255,c=3,t=6,pt=1,l=1,sg=0,st=ok:0
repeater started, id=1,!parent=0, d¿/W–k•õÅrþsend: 1-1-0-0 s=255,c=3,t=11,pt=0,l=14,sg=0,st=ok:Relay & Button
send: 1-1-0-0 s=255,c=3,t=12,pt=0,l=3,sg=0,st?ok:L‚
send: 1-1-0-0 s=1,c=0,t=3,pt}0,l=0¬sg=0,st=ok: -
RE: Radio issue on relay sample
Thanks for the tip(s)! I have actually stayed away from openhardware because it sounded like it was out of my league at this point. I have relied on google for most of my searching and found some cool in wall PCB projects but none that were a finished product and worked the way I had hoped. I just found your project on OpenHardware and am very impressed. Great work!!! It looks like you have already done what I am trying to prototype. I am going to take a closer look at your project. I would probably be better served starting with something that is much closer to a finished product. I think I am going to look at the components and try to build a few to test them out.
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RE: Radio issue on relay sample
I will definitely give that a try. I am also going to order about 10 of these HLK-PM01 for in wall switches. Maybe all the buck converters I have can be used for something that doesn't use relays and live inside a small enclosure. Thanks for the suggestions. I'll give them a try and post my results.
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RE: Radio issue on relay sample
Ground from the relay is wired directly to the source (buck converter). All power and grounds come from that single source with the exception of the radio. I used the voltage regulator to step down the 5V to 3.3V. I used the ground from the buck converter to ground the voltage regulator. Are you suggesting that I try to ground the relay from the Arduino instead of the buck converter? I was also thinking of putting one of these on order to test it out.http://www.ebay.com/itm/1PCS-HLK-PM01-AC-DC-220V-to-5V-Step-Down-Power-Supply-Module-Household-Switch-/221950420477?hash=item33ad46a5fd:g:8WYAAOSwxN5WVRA-
I hate to order just one in case it works because I have to wait on China shipping. Does anyone know if this is a better solution than the buck converter I posted up top?
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RE: Radio issue on relay sample
@manicfarmer Oh yeah, it is a mechanical relay I believe. Not a solid state, one that uses magnetism.
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RE: Radio issue on relay sample
How I have setup the perfboard is to bridge the connections from the relay to the buck converter. It works great when plugged into usb from the pc. I experience the issue when the Arduino is powered from the buck converter. Button never seems to work although I have tested the voltage and it appears to be sending the correct voltage the the pin on the Arduino. I get intermittent results when I toggle the relay using my vera controller. So you are suggesting I try a new way of powering the unit? Here is a link to the buck converter that I am using to power the unit.
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Radio issue on relay sample
I really like this project and am a noob when it comes to Arduino. That said, I feel like I am picking it up quickly. I am wanting to try and automate some light switches in my home. I bread boarded the relay sample and it works great. So I decided to try and build a prototype that I soldered. I used cat 5 wires for my low voltage jumpers to connect things. I used a pro mini and to power it I found some buck converters on ebay that folks claimed work great. I created a soldering bridge to connect the buck converter to my positive and negative AC that is connected to my relay. I want to hijack the AC power source from my switch to power my Arduino and step the power down to 5 volts (kids, don't try this at home). So far so good. Everything I soldered together works when I hook up to 5V usb. I have a vera home controller so I detect the new switch and it is found and enrolls in the system as expected. The button locally on the device functions great and the status updates in vera. Vice versa, I can control the relay from vera and the relay opens and closes on the device accordingly. When I hook this up to the AC is when I get differing results. It always can enroll after a reset. I can usually get it to turn on and off once after a clean reset. After that it is hit or miss. It seems if you wait a few minutes it starts working again but it is far from reliable. From what I have read I suspect it is a power issue. I have purchased the suggested electrolytic capacitor (4.7uf) and the 3.3V regulator (the real tiny ones, I must have missed that prior to purchasing). Somehow I got them soldered on and it works as it is what powers the radio. I put a multi-tester on it to measure voltage when hooked up to USB VS. AC power source. When hooked up to PC I get 4.91 V and the regulator has 3.33xV going to the radio. This seems very stable. When I hook up to AC I get a very consistent 4.96V from the buck converter and the regulator steps that down to 3.37xV. I am getting a slightly higher voltage going to my radio so I was curious if that slight difference could be causing the issue. I am getting pretty close to having something that I can fabricate and put cleanly into a gang box but I need to get it working before I start trying to make it look pretty in a switch box. I also have the capacitor bridged across the radios positive and ground. I feel like I am so close...yet so far. Great work to all the sharp minds that made this project happen!!!