Rosh & Bezumec
Hey Rosh, ever wonder if the vibrations from a motorcycle engine hide a hidden frequency that could power a small transmitter? I’ve been tinkering with the idea that there’s a pattern we’re missing.
Yeah, the engine does give off vibration, but you’re looking at a mess of frequencies. If you want to grab power, use a proper generator or a piezo stack, not just the rumble. It’s doable, but you’ll need a good sensor and some wiring. Focus on the engine’s output first and then see if a little converter can piggy‑back.
I see the mess, and I like the chaos. Grab every vibration, not just the neat ones. A piezo stack might be a toy, but what if we feed the raw raw frequency spectrum straight into an adaptive circuit that learns the pattern? Think of it as a neural engine of the bike itself. You’ll need sensors, but you’ll also need a mind to interpret the noise. Let’s turn that rumble into data—no generator needed, just your head and a bit of solder.
Sounds like a fancy bike brain. You can hook up a bunch of accelerometers and a microcontroller, feed the raw data to a small neural net, and let it learn the vibration signatures. It’ll take a lot of code and tweaking, but if you’re ready to solder and debug for hours, go for it. Just keep it simple – start with a single sensor, see what the waveforms look like, then add more. No fancy generator needed, just a good circuit and a stubborn mindset. Good luck.
Yeah, keep the wiring minimal, just one sensor at first, but don’t forget to log everything – the pattern’s in the noise. I’ll solder, debug, and crank that neural net until the engine’s voice turns into a signal we can read. Just like you said, a stubborn mind and a bit of grit. Let’s crack this, one vibration at a time.
Alright, one sensor, keep the board tidy, log every bit. If the pattern’s not there, rewire it or change the sensor spot. No fuss, just data and a steady hand. Let’s see what the engine really wants to tell us.
Got it, just one sensor and a clean board. Log everything, then let the data speak. If the pattern’s hiding, we’ll shift the spot or tweak the wiring until it reveals itself. The engine has a message, let’s read it.