Project

# Title Team Members TA Documents Sponsor
32 Automatic trading card sorter
Andrejun Agsalud
David Medina
Steve Guzman
Nikhil Arora appendix1.pdf
design_document1.pdf
final_paper1.pdf
photo1.jpg
photo2.jpg
presentation1.pdf
proposal1.pdf
video
# Automatic trading card sorter

# Team Members:
- Andrejun Agsalud (agsalud2)
- David Medina (davidrm3)
- Steve Guzman (steveg3)

# Problem

Trading cards have become a market which have sold collectibles for as high as thousands of dollars. Knowing this, it has become important to be able to differentiate and sort cards when trying to sell. The problem is that some people own thousands of cards. Going through each card individually to find what’s worth selling as a single and what can be sold in bulk would take a significant amount of time.

# Solution

We plan to automate the process of sorting trading cards using OpenCV to control a machine to sort cards into separate bins. The machine would take a single card out of the card holder and place it into a spot to be read by a camera and raspberry pi using OpenCV. Using info from the pi, the machine would place the correct bin to the correct place before dropping the card off.

# Solution Components

## Mechanical module

This system will encompass a physical card holder that will be emptied out by two wheeled motors that will grab one card and move it onto a conveyor belt. Once on this belt, powered by another set of motors, the camera will detect what color the card is and move the card to the appropriate grouping. This could be achieved through rotating banks that will organize the cards into different slots or a set of banks in sequence for them to drop into, another set of motors will be needed to move the card off the camera spot. To sense the distance the cards will be moving, we can use software to calculate the distance of each step of a stepper motor.

## Card Analysis

This will consist of a raspberry hat that will allow for the use of a small esp32 camera that will be sending its picture to the raspberry pi for OpenCV analysis. The module itself will house the camera and the pi since both will need to be in communication with each other. From here, the module can then send the necessary signals to the mechanical module for reading of the next card.
Raspberry Pi
Pi-cam
Other resistors/regulators for the motors


# Criterion For Success

To demonstrate the success of the project, a deck of pokemon cards should be able to be inserted and sorted by color in a reasonable manner. This should function without any of the cards being damaged and without jamming. If an error occurs, there should be a mechanism to stop the system for the user to see what has happened and reset.
Correct calculations for stepper motors to move the card into camera and sorting bins
90% color rating accuracy for the camera.

Drum Tutor Lite

Zhen Qin, Yuanheng Yan, Xun Yu

Drum Tutor Lite

Featured Project

Team: Yuanheng Yan, Zhen Qin, Xun Yu

Vision: Rhythm games such as guitar hero are much easier than playing the actual drums. We want to make a drum tutor that makes playing drums as easy as guitar hero. The player is not required to read a sheet music.

Description: We will build a drum add-on that will tutor people how to play the drums. We will make a panel for visual queue of the drum and beats in a form similar to guitar hero game. The panel can be a N*10 (N varying with the drum kit) led bar array. Each horizontal bar will be a beat and each horizontal line above the bottom line will represent the upcoming beats.

There will be sensors on each drum that will fire when the drum heads is hit. The drums will be affixed with ring of light that provides the timing and accuracy of the player according to the sensors.

Of course with a flip of a switch, the drum could be a simple light up drum: when the player hits the drum, that particular drum will light up giving cool effects.

The system will be on a microprocessor. Or for more versatile uses, it could be connected to the computer. And a app will be written for the tutor.

Project Videos