
Web Site: www.parallax.com
Forums: forums.parallax.com
Sales: [email protected]
Technical: [email protected]
Office: (916) 624-8333
Fax: (916) 624-8003
Sales: (888) 512-1024
Tech Support: (888) 997-8267
Copyright © Parallax Inc.
Page 1 of 5
Parallax Standard Servo KickStart (#900-00005)
What It Can Do
•
Moves to any position between 0 and 180 degrees
•
Keeps its position as long as power is applied
•
Motorizes most anything, such as a robot or mechanical puppet
Servo motors are made for hobby radio-control tasks, like model airplanes and model racing
cars. They’re also very popular in such things as robotics and animatronics.
R/C servos are made to spin in a limited circle, no more than about 180°. You set the precise
position of the output shaft of the servo motor by using a timing signal; this signal is provided by
a microcontroller. Once the signal is applied, the motor moves to that position, and stays there.
The control signal for a servo is a stream of pulses. The exact duration of these pulses, in
fractions of a second, is what determines the position of the servo. Each pulse is nominally from
1000 to 2000 microseconds (μs) in duration — one microsecond is one millionth of a second.
The pulses repeat about 50 times each second.