I recently obtained a ‘keyboard’ for a Bruker NMR system at my work, which suffered water damage.
This is what it looks like:
As you can see there’s a large dial knob at the bottom. It’s an optical encoder, this one: S1 Optical Shaft Encoder and the datasheet.
I think it’s quite a durable one because it has a ball bearing and has a very long smooth spin time.
I was wondering if i could use it for my MB project which uses that same Bruker keyboard case/housing.
The case has a wheel on the bottom which makes the dialknob spin more or less freely/easily, a nice feature if i say so myself ;D
Here is some info, copied from the website:
2-channel quadrature,TTL squarewave outputs
3rd channel index option
Tracks from 0 to 100,000 cycles/sec
Ball bearing option tracks to 10,000 RPM
If this encoder can be used, what would be the use of having two channels sending the same data?
I found this info somewhere: Quadrature encoders have 2 IR sensors reading two slightly out of phase patterns to determine if your wheel is rotating clockwise or counterclockwise.
Is this what the two channels are for? Or can i just use one channel? And what is the index channel for?
The +5V can be taken from any +5V pin left unused on the core/DIN/LTC modules, right?
I can wire it using the normal method and mix it up with standard ALPS encoders on the same DIN board, right?
Thanks!