Good Morning sir...
I am a degree student who want to ask about obstacle avoiding robot using PIC 16F877A coding using assembly language. For your information in my project, i'm using ultrasonic sensor but i can not display my output on LCD. i hope you can help me for ultrasonic sensor and PIC coding. hope can get your respond as soon as possible.
Thank you for your concern.
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One of the biggest challenges in building your own robot is controlling its motors. You can find new or surplus motors and gearboxes in many places, and low-cost micro controllers and books on how to use them abound. However, microcontrollers cannot directly drive DC motors, leaving robotics beginners with the possibly overwhelming challenge of building their own motor controller. This task is even more complicated if the motors
require bidirectional operation and speed control.This project demonstrates how easy it is to make a simple robot controller using the Pololu micro dual serial motor controller [http://pololucatalog/product/410] with a Microchip[http://microchip] PIC16F628 microcontroller. We then use the circuit with the Pololu robot chassis[http://pololucatalog/product/250] to create a small, obstacle-avoiding robot that can serve as a starting point for more advanced projects. The low-voltage operation of the motor controller allows a small, 3.6 V cordless telephone battery pack to power the entire robot. Since the motor controller only requires two of the PIC’s 13 I/O lines, there is plenty of opportunity for expansion.