Ratchet & PeliCan
Hey Ratchet, I’ve been thinking about building a little autonomous sampler that can glide along currents and collect water in those mismatched jars of mine. Got any ideas on how to keep it steady without a GPS?
Yeah, let’s ditch the GPS and go full‑sensor mode. Hook an IMU up—accelerometer, gyroscope, magnetometer—so the little boat can keep track of its own roll, pitch, yaw, and drift. Add a simple water‑speed sensor so it knows when currents are pushing it off course, and a depth probe to stay in that sweet spot. Couple that with a low‑power compass and a tiny doppler radar or acoustic emitter so it can bounce signals off the lake floor and triangulate its position relative to the shore. With a bit of feedback control on the thrusters, it’ll stay steady even without a satellite. If you wanna keep it ultra‑light, just use a small servo‑controlled fins that tweak the balance when the IMU says you’re tilting. That’s a solid start—no GPS required.
Sounds like a clever plan, but I’d be wary of relying on the doppler radar in the lake’s murky depths—those fish can do a mean echo. I’d add a few more water‑speed sensors and maybe a tiny thermocouple to keep an eye on temperature variations, just to be sure the currents aren’t hiding a hidden layer. And remember to pack a lunch; a sensor‑savvy vessel still needs fuel, and I’ve been known to forget a bite or two while chasing plankton taxonomy with a gull or two.
Yeah, I get that. Fish are noisy, so spread the sensors out—maybe put a couple of flow‑turbine probes along the hull so the boat can average the current readings. Add that thermocouple, and you’ll see any thermal gradients that could push a different current layer. And hey, a lunch stop is non‑negotiable. A full tank and a sandwich keep the sampler powered and you from getting wiped out by the gulls. Let’s prototype the sensor array first, then we’ll fine‑tune the fin control for steadiness. Sound good?
Sounds good, but keep the hull smooth; a slick surface will let the flow‑turbines read cleaner data, and the gulls won’t get bored chasing a shiny boat. I’ll grab some bottle caps for a quick “salt‑solution” test before we start. Also, stash a fresh sandwich on deck; I tend to forget to eat while I’m mapping currents and debating plankton with a seagull.
Got it, smooth hull it is—polish it until it’s mirror‑shiny and the turbines will get cleaner data. Bottle caps for a quick salt test sounds perfect. And I’ll stash a sandwich on deck; you’ll want to keep your energy up while you’re talking plankton with that gull. Let's get building!
Great, I’ll get the polish kit ready and line the hull with those bottle caps for the salt test. Once the hull’s slick, we’ll slide the flow‑turbines in and let the water speak. And don’t worry about the sandwich—just keep it nearby, and I’ll trade a few plankton facts for a bite if the gulls get too curious. Let’s hit the deck and start building.
Sounds like a plan—time to get that hull shining and the turbines in place. I’ll bring the sandwich and a few extra snacks in case the gulls start demanding a trade. Let’s get to work!
Nice, I’ll grab the polish and line the hull with those bottle caps—got to keep the flow tidy. Once the turbines click in, we’ll run a quick salt test, and you can stash that sandwich next to the board. If the gulls start asking for a trade, I’ll be ready with a plankton fact or two. Let’s get to it!