Re: The Elasti-drive Intro (V1 and V2)
First off, thanks to everyone for the kind words and well-wishes. And special thanks to Ben for the tips on how to improve things!
LeQuack has informed me that I have a couple of errors on the preview board that I posted. Nothing major, but I didn't want someone to look at it and scratch their head thinking, why is THAT component THERE?
I did not have a fully working version on hand last night, (LeQuack does and has been testing it on diodes, o-scopes and I think his tongue!) so I soldered up one very fast. Unlike LeQuack, I use a cheat sheet that I create from the board files and print out and I think that I crossed wires on one version's build sheet and that board, so I will do a more careful one tomorrow and post the correct version. My main intent was to let you see the basic layout and size of the board.
I ended up staining a wood fort for the kids (my wife tricked me into helping her!) and I wasn't able to get started until later in the afternoon than I intended and I was rushed. I just wanted to make sure that no one thought there were any games being played. I just wanted to get a picture up ASAP.
So that might best be described as a mockup. That is an earlier revision board, but it is not an actual working copy. I will try get one posted tomorrow.
And a note on R15, that is a pad that can take two 0805 resistors, but we found that often we could get by with one single value rather than paralleling two, so that is why it is on a large pad.
As to the open source idea, I think that is really cool! BUT I also am a big believer in capitalism and I think LeQuack has been very dead-set on making this a very flexible and powerful driver at a VERY affordable price. That was a very important thing to him. He made it clear from the start that his main goal was to provide a driver that was way cheaper than the flex, which this will hopefully outperform in EVERY way.
And as some of you know, he has already provided a free/open source Li-ion charger:
http://laserpointerforums.com/f67/open-source-li-ion-charger-board-77267.html
I think as a "starving college student" it would truly be better for him to make a little cash in this endeavor so that he will;
A. Be inspired to keep up with it and be motivated to continue with this and other projects.
B. Have funds for other projects that might benefit us all in the future.
C. Have funds for college activities like eating.
I'll let him answer as well, but he and I did talk about that and I honestly encouraged him to make some profit and
he was very insistent that it only be a MODEST profit as his goal was to provide a flex alternative/improvement
AND provide an affordable driver.
Unfortunately, this driver uses an expensive main IC and the op amps and inductors are no bargains either! It is not an inexpensive driver to build. I PROMISE that his pricing is aggressive and that was his goal!
Also, right now the price of the drivers is very much a work in progress. These drivers use one of the TOUGHEST IC's for a hobbyist out there. At least in my humble and frustrated opinion.
So if he is able to get production to flow smoothly and usable boards versus DOA's stays high, then price could come down further, but if overall cost per board stays high, then price will have to remain where it is for now.
You would probably (except Ben and a few other designers) be amazed at how many parts you go through just getting these things to work and then death testing and mistakes (I was the one who pushed very strongly for reverse polarity protection
) and you kill an easy thousand dollars just bringing one of these to life. So the first builds are all at a loss anyway. I did defray some of that expense, but it still took a lot of time and effort to get just this far.