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Exercise Bike Surgery

Pro_Form_XP_70_Exercise_Bike-resized200.jpgMy exercise bike broke today, well not mechanically, the circuit board is toast, I have no clue why. Well, because I am so very excited about working out everyday, I am really bummed. [And if you believe that I have a nice tropical paradise in Antarctica to sell you.]

So I do want to exercise more, but at the moment I cannot increase or decrease the tension on the bike, Nor can I get the RPMs or anything like that. There is a solution though.

  1. I could buy another Junky "Console" from sears and replace the old one for $169.99
  2. I can make a small circuit with a microcontroller, low power motor driver, and a character LCD display for under $50, and Have fun while doing it.
Well guess what I am doing. The beginning details follow.
I took apart the console... Oh the horror... There were messy wire harnesses everywhere all with the wires directly soldered to the circuit board then plastered with RTV to keep the wires from snapping. Oh well easily taken care of screwdrivers and pliers work wonders.

After about a half an hour I had the circuit board exhumed from the plastic shell. Here are the front and back pictures.

  Bike_Circuit_Card_front.JPG Bike_Circuit_Card_back.JPG

 After that I took off the side panel to get to the tensioning motor… I had to do that once before darn Flywheel Bearings. I then tested the motor with a 6v power supply to see if it could handle it. [After testing I then noticed the label on the top that said 6v Tension motor… darn could have saved some time]. For positioning information it uses a potentiometer… well at least what looks to be a potentiometer, It has 3 pins and seems to connect to some sort of voltage sensing circuit on the circuit board. I couldn’t confirm it because my multimeter is at work at the current point in time.The RPM sensing is done by a magnetic proximity sensor that senses the rotations of the pedals which can easily be counted by microcontroller.
 
Another edition in the bike controller resurrection design will come soon.

Nice

Robogeek, my friend, you are a true nerd. I would have done the same thing. While you're at it, you could probably also get a large motor, battery bank, diodes, and a regulator to charge up batteries while you are riding and then use them to power something else. That way you could get twice the excitement out of it. Either that or put some cool lights inside the wheel well attached to a motor and resistors so they light up when you ride. Heck, while you're at it, go for a window and some quad-LED fans with laser cut grills on them! Maybe I'll just try all that out on my stair stepper...

--schultzi--

Thanks

I'll add a hit to my Nerdlyness meter it is currently at 9.7 out of 10.

You know since I don't have a PIC programmer, It was slightly harder, Because I had to design my own ICD2 Programmer First.

curious to know what did you

curious to know what did you do next. i am in the same situation. opened everything up, and got dazed... desided to power the motor with a battery pack and a double switch.

any ideas how to salvage the heart beat counter?

PC Board

Actually I have the PC board I designed on my desk, But I have not written the control code for it yet.

I would be willing to make another board for you... once I get it working.

Tim