Add this shim and magnetic disc to your micro metal gearmotor to upgrade it into a super smart encoder motor, available in regular or sideways configuration (select option before adding to cart).
Solder this board to the back of amicro metal gearmotor (you'll need a motor with a thin rear spindle), push the magnetic disc onto the end of the motor shaft and tada - you have yourself a quadrature encoder motor, which uses Hall Effect sensors and magnetic discs to provide your microcontroller with feedback on how fast and how much your motor is moving.
Once your motor has this MMME apparatus attached, you can connect it up to a controller board like Motor 2040 or Inventor 2040 W using a convenient 6-pin JST cable. Using cables to connect up your motors means they're easy to incorporate into your robotics designs, and straightforward to connect/disconnect if you need to swap out your motors for ones with different gear ratios.
Solder the contacts on your motor to the two pads on the shim, making sure the positive contact goes to the positive pad. If you get the polarity mixed up then the motor will still work, but it will spin in reverse!
Slot the magnetic disc onto the rear motor shaft, making sure to leave a small gap (<1mm) between the disc and the sensors. Note that the magnets will only work one way round - the side with the dots on should be pointing away from the motor.
Notes
Connector pinout: M+, M-, 3v3, A, B, GND
The regular variant of MMME has the connector coming out of the bottom of the motor (or top, if you mount the motor upside down!). Use the sideways variant if you want a connector on the short side of your motor.
Payment & Accreditations
Payment methods
Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.
Accreditations
Overall product rating out of 5: 5.00
5.00
Based on 1 review
Write Review
Product Reviews
DH
Verified Customer
David H
Worthing, United Kingdom
Micro Metal Motor Encoder (MMME) (pack of 2) Regular
Great (relatively) inexpensive way to get very fine control over a standard Micro Metal Motor.