Find out how fast you can run

Lead Image © David Grigg, 123RF.com

Fast Times

Time your sprints over and over again, so you can track your improvement.

The littleBits team recently came out with a new Number module that, in addition to the original two modes – which display either relative values entering the module from 0 to 99 or incoming voltage from 0 to 5V – now also counts up or down and has a reset snap on top (Figure 1). Briefly called the Number+ module, the new incarnation is now the default Number bit [1] included in kits or when you order the bit itself. The new functions make this bit much more useful in several projects, including any project in which you want to time or count something.

Figure 1: The old (bottom) and the new (top) Number bits. In this project, the bit is set to count up.

In the littleBits project in this issue, I'll show you how to build a system that times sprints. The starting block of bits (Figure 2) uses the Pressure sensor bit to sense when the runner has left the starting pad and sends that information to the timing block at the finish line via the Wireless transmitter bit. At the starting line, you also have a button that resets the timer before you start your next sprint.

Figure 2: The starting block comprises two sections: T1, the Pressure sensor circuit, and T2, the reset button circuit. The function of each bit is described in Table 1.

Table 1

Starting Block Setup

Block

littleBit

Function

T1

p1 power and 9V battery

Power for T1 block

 

Button

Sets system state (pressure LED on)

 

Latch

Maintains system state

 

Wires 1/2

Isolate pressure sensor

 

Pressure sensor

Starts timer

 

LED

State indicator (on = ready; off = system state not set)

 

Wireless transmitter

Sends start signal via channel 1

T2

Coin battery

Power for T2 block

 

Button

Resets timer to zero

 

Wireless transmitter

Sends reset signal via channel 3

The timing block (Figure 3) receives information from the starting block via the Wireless receiver bit and includes the timer (Number bit) and a motion detector that turns the timer off. The input from the start and finish lines is sent through a logic bit that determines whether the timer should be running or not.

Figure 3: The timing block comprises two sections: R1, the Motion trigger circuit, and R2, the timing circuit. The function of each bit is described in Table 2.

Table 2

Timing Block Setup

Block

littleBit

Function

R1

Coin battery

Power for R1 block

 

Motion trigger

Turns timer off when activated

 

Buzzer

Indicates when motion sensor is triggered

 

Latch

Maintains motion sensor trigger state

 

LED

Motion sensor indicator (on = triggered; off = not triggered)

 

NOR

Receives input from starter and motion sensor

 

Wireless receiver

Receives start signal via channel 1

 

Wire 3

Sends NOR output to R2 block

R2

p3 USB power

Power for R2 block

 

Wireless receiver

Receives reset signal via channel 3

 

Wire 4

Sends reset signal to Number module

 

Wire 3

Receives NOR output from R1 block

 

LED

Timer indicator (on = running; off = not running)

 

Pulse

Sets timer speed

 

Number(+)

"Time (switch in "count up" position)"

Starting Block

The first order of business after the bit design was settled was figuring out a way to isolate the Pressure sensor so it wouldn't be crushed by the runner's foot. I pulled out some of my Actobotics [2] materials to build a runner's block (Figure 4), but you could use other materials, such as Legos or wood blocks, or you could even 3D print a starting block if you have access to a 3D printer. A mouse pad over the sensor affords further protection (Figure 5).

Figure 4: The runner's block shows the Pressure sensor bit placed in the open block (left), in the closed block (middle), and from the side (right).
Figure 5: The runner's block protects the Pressure sensor (left). Wire bits from either side of the sensor to the rest of the starting block circuit put the reset and state buttons in reach of the runner (right). The lit LED on the right indicates the system is ready to go.

Table 1 describes the function of the bits as they are used in this project. Each section (refer to Figure 2) has its own power supply. In section T1, the state button is followed by a Latch bit before it feeds into the Pressure sensor. The state button is described in the System State section later in this article.

A Button bit is often paired with a Latch bit. If you build a circuit with a Button and an LED, you'll notice the LED only lights up when you press the button. This is called a "momentary" switch. If you put a Latch bit between the Button and the LED, you have created an "on/off" switch. Now when you press the button, the LED stays on, and it does not turn off until you press the button again.

The Wireless transmitter and receiver each have three channels over which to send a signal. In the T1 section, the signal from the Pressure sensor goes to an LED and the Wireless transmitter on channel 1. The T2 section is just a Button bit that sends a reset signal to the timer on channel 3.

Timing Block

The timing block (refer to Figure 3) at the finish line is a bit more complex, because it comprises the timer circuit in section R2 and the Motion trigger circuit in section R1, with a logic bit that arbitrates between the signals from R1 and the starting block section T1.

Table 2 describes the function of the bits as they are used in this project. Starting with section R1, the Motion trigger bit feeds into the Buzzer-Latch-LED bits. Once the motion sensor is triggered, it maintains a signal for a few seconds before it goes off. That's fine for the buzzer, which I am only using as a trigger indicator, but I want the timer to stay off once the sensor has triggered, which is the function of the Latch bit in this circuit, turning the motion sensor from a momentary switch to an on/off switch. The LED indicates whether the sensor is in the triggered state.

In section R2, the output from the NOR bit goes into an LED and a Pulse bit to the Number bit. The LED indicates whether the timer is running or not, and the Pulse bit sends a pulsed signal that increments the count on the Number bit. The speed of the pulsed signal is adjustable; I adjusted it to approximately a pulse per second. Finally, in section R2, the reset signal from channel 3 of the Wireless receiver is wired to the reset snap on the Number bit (wire 4).

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