π»π Drive a radio controlled car with Node.js and HackRF. This module should work with most radio controlled cars operating on a frequency of 27MHz.
Contributions are welcome! Add your own tricks and manoeuvres and make a Pull Request π€πβοΈ
Use from the command line:
npm install monster-drift --global
Use programmatically:
npm install monster-drift --save
Simply run the monster-drift
command to start. Use --help
to get
help.
Drive forward for one seconds and stop:
var drive = require('monster-drift')()
drive.forward()
setTimeout(function () {
drive.stop()
}, 1000)
Some cars might not support all commands.
This module exposes a MonsterDrift
object that you can initiate to get
a drive
object.
Options:
channel
- The channel to transmit on in the 27 MHz band (default:19
)freq
- The frequency in Hz to transmit on (overwriteschannel
)speed
- The default forward speed. Must be between 1 and 3 (default:1
). Can be overwritten withdrive.forward(speed)
(experimental)swaplr
- Boolean for inverting left and right (default:false
)stop
- Milliseconds in which to automatically stop the card if no drive commands have been issued (default: never)id
- The HackRF device id to use (default:0
)gain
- The HackRF TX gain (0-47 dB in 1 dB steps, default:47
)sampleRate
- The sample rate used when transmitting (default:8e6
)
Drive forward.
An optional speed
can be given between 1 and 3. The default speed is
1
. Note that not all cars support all speeds.
Drive reverse.
Turn wheels left.
Turn wheels right.
Drive forward while turning right.
Drive forward while turning left.
Drive reverse while turning right.
Drive reverse while turning left.
Stop the car and turn off transmitter. Calls optional callback
when
done.
Stop the car, turn off transmitter and close the HackRF USB connection.
Calls optional callback
when done.
Make a 180. Calls callback
when done.
Issue a series of driving commands to the car and call optional
callback
when done.
The commands
argument is an array of commands. Each command is a
double tuple with the following format: [function, duration]
. The
function
part is a drive function, e.g. drive.forward
, and the
duration
part is the number of milliseconds to perform the operation.
If the last tuple contains a duration
then drive.stop
will be called
automatically. Leave out duratuon
to continue forever.
// make a 180
drive.batch([
[drive.forward, 1000],
[drive.right, 125],
[drive.reverseLeft, 100],
[drive.reverse]
])
MIT