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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
So I'm venturing into animated props this year, which I've never done. I have basically zero experience with motors or electronics of any kind. I'm going with a creepy carnival theme, and I thought I would start with something simple...a big carnival wheel game that spins slowly in my front window. I was hoping I would just be able to google a low RPM motor that I could just plug in and attach a wheel to, but it seems there's more to it than that :p

The wheel itself will be lightweight, made of foam, probably about 3 feet in diameter. Can someone with more experience with this point me in the right direction on what I should be looking for here? I'm not opposed to attaching various pieces together (motor, power supply, etc), although something ready to plug and go would be great :D

Thanks guys
 

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Here is my wheel using a 5-6 rpm 110vac motor. You can see it moves okay if that is all you want it to do. (it was made out of an old lazy susan I got at Goodwill).
If you order the mirror ball motor (which is essentially the same thing) it will turn at only 1-2 rpm. That is really slow. I want mine to move faster and to vary. I think that i will get a DC motor that is faster and then hook it up to an arduino and an H-bridge so that I can program how fast or slow I want it to turn. That way I can make it look like a ghost is spinning it and then it slows down and stops. then it can start up again randomly.


 

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Discussion Starter · #10 ·
This would work and it's cheap. You'd have to attach a cord with a plug.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/STOCK-SYNCH...065846?hash=item1c645f84f6:g:lBsAAOSwS7hW~zAH
Bear with me here, like I said I've never played around with electronics. If I were to go this route, would any AC cord work as a power supply? I have tons of old cords laying around, could I just cut and splice one to the motor and then plug it into the wall? Or can you recommend something better to purchase?
 

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Bear with me here, like I said I've never played around with electronics. If I were to go this route, would any AC cord work as a power supply? I have tons of old cords laying around, could I just cut and splice one to the motor and then plug it into the wall? Or can you recommend something better to purchase?
Yes, any cord will suffice. Just be sure to insulate the splices well.
 

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There are also versions of these motors with full metal gear sets in them. they are slightly more expensive (like $10) But feel a bit more robust. The weak spot on the common ones with plastic gears is where the metal output shaft leaves the motor. It is pressed into a plastic gear and you just have to be careful you don't put too much pressure on it when it is not running because you can twist the shaft right out of the gear. Ask me how I know...... :confused:
 
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