It's time for another construction project! For a long time, I've been toying with the idea of adding a modified rotating gobo wheel to my existing projectors. I'm starting out with one to test. About 6 years ago (jeez, has it been that long) I bought a rotating gobo wheel on ebay that was in an intelligent light. I thought it would be perfect for adding rotating scanglass to a projector. Unfortunately, this was missing the center gear and other projects put this on the back burner for a very long time. I finally got some time and resources to make this a reality.
The first thing I needed to do was buy or make the center gear. Since I have no idea what light this wheel came out of (I suspect it's from a Design Spot 575E but I'm not sure), I didn't know where I could get parts for it. I decided to just make one. I contemplated 3d printing it and decided it would be better to cut one from acrylic. I must say, I absolutely love the gear creation tool in Fusion 360. Making this thing was a snap. I also needed to make the center spindle hub. That, I decided to 3d print out of tough resin. After that, I mounted the whole thing to a 6mm shaft coupler. DONE!
Next, I needed to design the mount for it. After designing the mount, I had my Taz 6 build it. Once everything was fabricated, I knocked it together. The selector is a NEMA 17 stepper that's driven, in servo mode, by a DMX Stepper controller found here: https://shop.dmx4all.de/en/dmx-stepper-control.html. These things are pretty cool. Very configurable.
This wheel is going to sit right in front of my scanner pair since the useable area of each effect is about 20mm dia.
The effects I'll be running are:
Straight (no effect)
Lenticular line optic (thanks Displaser!)
6 point star filter
Fuzz Glass (acrylic disc with a dusting of clear coat. Thanks to Laserist for the idea!) this effect will not need to rotate
fresnel lens (this will also not need to rotate)
grid diffraction grating
2x grid diffraction gratings, one fixed and one rotating.
Here are the pics of what I have done so far and also a video showing the operation of the wheel and the review of the DMX boards. For the record, in the video, it looks like the wheel alignment shifts, it doesn't, the temporary laser I was using was moving around a bit. The effect selection stays true and accurate.
That's all I have for now. More to come.