Remote Control Duck Decoy (RCD2) Mid-Semester Presentation Senior Design Spring 2015
Taylor Dees – Team Leader Meet The Duck Dawgs Taylor Dees – Team Leader Dustin Maulden Tyler Owen Jamie Smith Joey White Dr. Moorhead - Advisor
Content Background Problem Constraints Technical Practical Approach Timeline Progress
Background Duck decoy origin First Electronic Decoy Handmade/carved Live duck as decoy Mass production of plastic decoy First Electronic Decoy 1990’s Spinning Wing Decoys Motion is the advantage
Problem There is not a product on the market that combines the features of a live duck into one decoy.
RCD2 combines the following features into one realistic decoy Solution RCD2 combines the following features into one realistic decoy Full Motion Wireless Control Wake Creation System Flapping Wing Simulator Swarm Control
Technical Design Constraints Name Price Size The decoy must house the electrical and mechanical components, and it must be life-sized to be appealing to incoming waterfowl. Range The decoys must be controllable up to 75 yards from the main remote control. Battery Life The battery life of each decoy and the microcontroller must be a minimum of six hours. Watertight Enclosure The decoy body must be waterproof to protect the electrical components house inside. Swarm Control RCD2 must grant the user the ability to control a single duck or up to six multiple ducks at the same time.
Practical Design Constraints Type Name Price Sustainability Reliability The decoys must be sufficiently robust to account for harsh conditions. The batteries must have at least a six hour life and be rechargeable. Economic Cost The total cost of parts per duck shall not exceed $300.
Sustainability Waterproof Weatherproof Rechargeable Durable
Market Edge Quiver Duck Decoy [1] • Built-in quiver magnet for ripples and motion • Weighted keel with waterproof quiver mount Lucky Duck Rapid Flyer Duck [2] Life-like flapping motion Duck mounted above water Swim’n Duck [3] Operating range 30 yards Tow additional decoys
Remote Control (movement) Multiple Decoy Control Economic Name Price Moveable Wings Remote Control (movement) Multiple Decoy Control Wake System Lucky Duck [2] $99.99 X Swim’n Duck [3] $119.98 Mojo Outdoors Swimmer [4] Mojo Mallard Machine [5] $169.99 RCD2 <$300 Combined total for all functions = $489.95
Approach – Wing System Motors Type Pros Cons Decision Stepper High Torque Position Control Expensive Bulky DC Cheapest Fluid motion Smaller Less torque Servo Cheap Positon Control None
Approach – Steering Control Type Pros Cons Decision Dual Rudder/Single Motor More control Expensive External mount No Rudder/Dual Motor Simplicity Power consumption Space Single Rudder/Single Motor Cheaper Smaller Less control
Approach – Wake System Type Pros Cons Decision Design Our Own Cheaper Time consuming Internal space H20 Quiver Magnet [8] External mount No design time Balance Not as cheap
Approach – Motor Control Adafruit Motor Shield V2 [7] 4 H-Bridges providing 1.2A per bridge Connects 4 DC motors 2 Servo motors Separate power supply Noise filtration
Approach - Microcontroller Type Pros Cons Decision Arduino Yun Capability Space On-Board Wi-Fi Difficult “Bells & Whistles” Expensive Xbee only Cheap Range (120m) Low Power I/O Accessibility Complex Decoy Selection Process Arduino Uno + Xbee Simple Range Space Consumption
Approach - Microcontroller Arduino Uno [6] Atmega328 20 I/O pins Low power usage Large libraries and community
Approach – Communication Xbee - 2mW PCB Antenna 400 ft. range Low power usage Average – 40mA Broadcast capability Arduino compatible Xbee Pro Shield
Decoy #1 Decoy #2 Decoy #3 Decoy #4 Decoy #5 Decoy #6 Controller
Timeline January - Research design, determine cost, order parts February – Begin code, hardware testing, and mechanical build March – Merge code and hardware April – Final testing and debugging
Progress Parts Ordered Arduino Uno Propulsion Motor Rudder Servo Motor Driver Shield Propeller and Shaft Rudder H20 Quiver Magnet Xbee & Shields Power Supplies
Progress Mechanical Build Access Hatch Created Propeller/Shaft Positioned Waterproof Seal Added Motors mounted
Progress Coding DC Motor Propulsion Servo Rudder Control Pushbutton Enabled Control
Progress Hardware Testing
RCD2 Completion Hardware Dustin Tyler Taylor Software Joey Jamie Research Documentation Taylor
Reference [1] [Online] Available: http://www.amazon.com/Edge-Innovative-Hunting-Quiver- Drake/dp/B001BMMEYQ [2] [Online] Available: http://www.cabelas.com/product/Lucky-Duck-Rapid-Flyer-Lucky-Duck- Decoy-Drake/909781.uts [3] [Online] Available: http://www.uv-tackle.com/Ultimate-Hunter-Hunting-Products.php [4] [Online] Available: http://www.mojooutdoors.com/index.php/vendor-products-menu- item/product/476-mojo-swimmer/category_pathway-166 [5] [Online] Available: http://www.mackspw.com/Item--i-MAL63825 [6] Arduino Uno. [Online]. Available: http://arduino.cc/en/main/arduinoBoardUno [7] Adafruit Motor Shield V2 for Arduino. [Online]. Available: https://learn.adafruit.com/adafruit- motor-shield-v2-for-arduino?view=all [8] [Online] Available: http://www.amazon.com/Edge-61135-7-H20-Quiver- Magnet/dp/B0000AVX8Y
Remote Control Duck Decoy (RCD2) Mid-Semester Presentation Senior Design Spring 2015