Experiment 33: Moving in Steps
290 Chapter 5
Speed Control
If you are a truly exceptionally observant, you may have noticed that I left pin 5 of
each of the timers unconnected in the schematic for driving the stepper motor in
Figure 5-108. Normally, pin 5 should be grounded through a capacitor to prevent
it from picking up stray voltages which can affect the accuracy of the chip.
I left the pins unconnected because I had a plan for them. In fact, changing the
timing of the chip is exactly what we want to do now, as a way to change the
speed of the stepper motor.
If you tie pin 5 of all four timers together, as shown in Figure 5-116, and put
a 2K trimmer potentiometer (shown in Figure 5-117) between them and the
negative side of the power supply, you’ll find that as you turn the trimmer
to reduce its resistance, the timers start to run faster. Figure 5-118 shows the
breadboard layout. Eventually, when the resistance goes below around 150
ohms, everything stops. The LEDs go dark, because you’ve reduced the volt-
age on pin 5 below the threshold level that the 555 timer finds acceptable.
555
10K
10K
8K2
22uF
1K
1K
1K
1K
22uF
22uF
22uF
0.01uF
0.01uF
0.01uF
0.01uF
10K
10K
10K
10K
10K
555
555
555
Stepper
Motor
2K
Figure 5-116. To adjust the speed of the sequence of 555 timers, their control pins (pin
5 on each timer) are linked together and attached to a trimmer potentiometer that
adjusts the resistance between the pins and the negative side of the power supply.
Figure 5-117. Close-up of a trimmer potentiometer
with pins spaced at 1/10 inch for insertion in a
breadboard or perforated board. The brass screw,
at top-left, turns a worm gear inside the unit, al-
lowing precise adjustment of internal resistance.
Figure 5-118. The trimmer potentiometer has been
added to the circuit, allowing motor speed control.