Project

# Title Team Members TA Documents Sponsor
13 Otter RFID Antenna System
Charles Huang
Jinwoo Bae
Shariq Shaikh
design_document0.pdf
final_paper0.pdf
presentation0.pdf
proposal0.pdf
An RFID antenna system to be deployed for tracking otter movement into and out of a pond. The system comprises of an antenna and RFID receiver that will read the IDs from tags implanted in otters when the otter walks over the antenna. The system will record the ID, the time, and the direction of movement (entering or leaving the pond); the data will be accessible to prairie researchers via a USB flash drive. The design includes passive infrared motion sensors to activate the receiver unit, so that it is not continuously drawing power as well as solar panels to supplement the batteries powering the entire system.

Electronic Automatic Transmission for Bicycle

Tianqi Liu, Ruijie Qi, Xingkai Zhou

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Tianqi Liu(tliu51)

Ruijie Qi(rqi2)

Xingkai Zhou(xzhou40)

Sometimes bikers might not which gear is the optimal one to select. Bicycle changes gears by pulling or releasing a steel cable mechanically. We could potentially automate gear changing by hooking up a servo motor to the gear cable. We could calculate the optimal gear under current condition by using several sensors: two hall effect sensors, one sensing cadence from the paddle and the other one sensing the overall speed from the wheel, we could also use pressure sensors on the paddle to determine how hard the biker is paddling. With these sensors, it would be sufficient enough for use detect different terrains since the biker tend to go slower and pedal slower for uphill or go faster and pedal faster for downhill. With all these information from the sensors, we could definitely find out the optimal gear electronically. We plan to take care of the shifting of rear derailleur, if we have more time we may consider modifying the front as well.

Besides shifting automatically, we plan to add a manual mode to our project as well. With manual mode activated, the rider could override the automatic system and select the gear on its own.

We found out another group did electronic bicycle shifting in Spring 2016, but they didn't have a automatic function and didn't have the sensor set-up like ours. Commercially, both SRAM and SHIMANO have electronic shifting products, but these products integrate the servo motor inside the derailleurs, and they have a price tag over $1000. Only professionals or rich enthusiasts can have a hand on them. As our system could potentially serve as an add-on device to all bicycles with gears, it would be much cheaper.

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