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Welcome to the Elcano Project Wiki

As the title says, WELCOME TO THE ELCANO PROJECT! Over the past few years, many different teams have been working hard to create Cheap and Modular autonomy at the University of Washington Bothell. We are currently working on our first two prototypes which are now in the form of tricycles. With the use of affordable microcontrollers, such as the Arduino Due Jetson Nano and Pixhawk, we are working towards creating Autonomy for anyone to rebuild anywhere, and that under $2000 and fully open-source. But we don't plan to stop there, no. That is just the first step in reaching our ultimate goal, which is making our systems applicable to any desired ground vehicles, such as cars and other vehicles. Autonomy is nothing new, in fact, it has been around for over 40 years, the difference is that now we have the ability to make it available for anyone who desires to further their knowledge or simply finding a safer way to work.

Visit our github repositories here.

To edit articles or upload files, please create an account and request editing rights from a member of the "bureaucrat" group.

For editing, help visit https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Editing_pages or https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Formatting.


Catrikes.JPG

Overview

The basic concept of how the Elcano Project vehicle works.

System Architecture

How processors connect to sensors, each other, actuators, and other hardware. Includes processor-to-processor communication protocol.

Communication (CAN Bus)

How processors exchange data on the vehicle and a description of data packet contents.

Power System

How different modules connect to the batteries or power subsystem hardware.

Drive-By-Wire

How the version 5 Drive-By-Wire system (aka Low-Level) uses inputs to control actuators to steer, move, and stop the vehicle.

Navigation Computer

How the system uses GNSS to formulate movement instructions sent to Drive-by-Wire.

RemoteControl

Human control of trike movements through Low Level using hardware connected to Low Level by a radio communication link (drive-by radio). Includes onboard controls (drive by wire).

Simulator

Instead of the Drive-by-Wire board and navigation computer controlling the real trike, another Arduino routes their I/O to a virtual vehicle.

SensorsPage

SteeringSensor

The front wheel angle detector.

Camera

How the camera and vision subsystem connected to High-Level works.

ActuatorPage

Current Board Diagrams

Images of Elcano Project's printed circuit boards for reference. PCB source files and schematics are maintained and stored at [1].

Software development procedures

Software repositories

What's in each of our GitHub repositories.

Luke Kustra's repo: https://github.com/luke-kustra/JetHawk-LKustra.git

Luke's contribution was experimenting with the LiDAR sensor. He was able to get the LiDAR to deactivate and display information about its surroundings, including the number of objects and their distance from the LiDAR sensor. Of course, the sensor should never deactivate when in real use; however, this deactivation is proof that the LiDAR is ready to be utilized in a larger system such as a vehicle.


Henry Haight's repo: https://github.com/Autonomous-ATV-Capstone-Team-Sequence/-LIDAR

Arduino software

Getting started; references; development tools. Dealing with libraries and different parameters for each vehicle.

Using Git and GitHub

Practices for maintaining code and source files on Elcano Project's GitHub repositories.

Files

These are media files (pictures, videos, etc.) that are part of the project but are not maintained under version control.

Elcano Project Main Website

Archived material

Old Architecture

ATV Power System

Low Level

High Level

Old RemoteControl

CARLA Simulator

Old Sensors

Old Actuators

Board Diagrams