How hard could it be? It turns out that there were several challenges to making a submersible ROV. But it was a fun project and I think it was quite successful. My goal was to have it not cost a fortune, have it easy to drive, and to have a camera to show what it sees underwater. I didn't like the idea of having a wire dangling from the driver's controls, and I have a variety of radio control transmitters already, so that's the direction I went, with the transmitter and control box separate. On the 6 channel transmitter I used, the right stick is used for forward/back and left/right. The left stick is Up/Down and turn Clockwise/CCW. This is the same setup used on quad-copters, etc.
I looked online and saw some pricey ROVs and saw a few with "vectored thrusters". This means the side thrusters are mounted at 45 degree angles and combine their forces to move the ROV in any direction. I had built a mecanum wheel rover already and I thought the math there would apply. (Ref. Driving Mecanum Wheels Omnidirectional Robots). Separate thrusters are used for diving and surfacing. And "vectored thrusters" sounds cool.
For ease of driving it, I wanted depth hold and heading hold. This way the driver doesn't have to move the left stick at all except for diving/surfacing or turning to a new heading. Turns out this was also a bit of a challenge.
This Instructable is not intended as a set of directions for doing it yourself. The intent is more to provide a resource that someone might draw from if they intend to build their own submersible ROV.
This was an easy choice. Looking to see what other folks had done pushed me in the direction of 1/2 inch PVC pipe. It's cheap and easy to work with. I came up with an overall design that would accommodate the side thrusters and the up/down thrusters. Soon after assembly I sprayed it yellow. Oh yeah, now it's a submarine! I drilled holes in the tubing top and bottom to allow it to flood. For attaching stuff I tapped threads into the PVC and used 4 40 stainless screws. I used a lot of them.
Shown at a later stage are skids that are held away from the bottom by 3d printed risers. The risers were needed to make it so the battery could be removed and replaced. I 3d printed a tray to hold the battery. The battery is secured in the tray by a velcro strap. The Dry Tube is also held onto the frame with velcro straps.
First pic is the buoyancy test. Second pic attempts to show how thruster wires are led into potted bullet connectors. Third pic is more of the same plus the additional bump for potting depth meter and its wires. Fourth pic shows pulling apart the dry tube.
Buoyancy
The Dry Tube contains the electronics and provides most of the positive buoyancy. The ideal is a small amount of positive buoyancy, so if things go wrong the ROV will eventually float to the surface. This took a bit of trial and error. The assembly shown here during a float test took several pounds of force to get it to submerge. This led to any easy decision to mount the battery on-board (as opposed to power coming over the tether). It also led to cutting the tube down in length. It turns out a 4 inch tube provides about 1/4 pound of buoyancy per inch of length (I did the math once but this is a guess). I also ended up putting PVC "skids" on the bottom. They have screw on ends where I put in lead shot for fine tuning the buoyancy.
Water Tight Seal
Once I settled on using epoxy to seal seams and holes, and settled on using neoprene hub-less connectors, the ROV was reliably watertight. I struggled for awhile with "waterproof" ethernet connectors, but in the end I gave up on these and just drilled a small hole, led the wire in, and "potted" the hole with epoxy. After the hub-less connectors were tightened in place, trying to remove them was difficult. I discovered that a little smear of white grease made the Dry Tube pull apart and push together a lot easier.
To mount the acrylic dome I carved a hole in a 4" ABS cap leaving a ledge to receive the edge of the dome. Initially I tried hot glue, but that leaked immediately and I went to epoxy.
Inside
All the inside electronics are mounted on a 1/16 inch aluminum sheet (with standoffs). It's just under 4 inches wide and extends the length of the tube. Yeah, I know it conducts electricity, but it also conducts heat.
Wires Coming Through
The rear 4" ABS cap got a 2 inch hole drilled into it and a 2" ABS female adapter glued in. A 2" plug got a hole drilled in for the Ethernet wire to come through and be potted. A little piece of 3" ABS glued on also made a little circle area for "potting".
I drilled what seemed like plenty of holes (2 for each thruster), but I wish I had done more. Each hole got a female bullet connector shoved into it (while hot from the soldering iron). The thruster wires and battery leads got the male bullet connectors soldered on.
I ended up adding a little ABS bump to give me a place for the depth gauge wire to come through and be potted. It got messier than I would have liked and I tried to organize the wires with a little holder with slots in it.
I got a lot of ideas from the web and decided to go with bilge pump cartridges. They're relatively cheap (about $20+) each and have about the right amount of torque and speed. I used two 500 Gallons/hour cartridges for the up/down thrusters and four 1000 GPH cartridges for the side thrusters. These were Johnson Pump Cartridges and I got them via Amazon.
I 3d printed the thruster housings using a design from Thingaverse, ROV Bilge Pump Thruster Mount. I also 3d printed the propellers, again with a design from Thingaverse, ROV Bilge Pump Thruster Propeller. They took a little adapting but worked pretty well.
I used a 50 foot length of Cat 6 Ethernet cable. I pushed it into 50 feet of polypropylene rope. I used the end of a ball point pen taped onto the cable and took about an hour pushing it through the rope. Tedious, but it worked. The rope provides protection, strength for pulling and some positive buoyancy. The combination still sinks but not as badly as the Ethernet cable by itself.
Three of the four cable pairs are used.
Based on comments from another Instructables contributor, I realized that having the tether dragging on a lake bottom would not be good. In the swimming pool test it was not a problem. So I 3d printed a bunch of clip-on floats, using PLA and thicker walls than usual. Picture above shows the floats deployed on the tether, grouped more closely close to the ROV but averaging about 18 inches apart. Again per the other contributor's comments, I put floats into a mesh bag tied to the tether bundle to see if I had enough.
First pic shows camera and compass. Second pic shows what happens when you keep adding stuff. Third pic shows underside-mounted motor controllers with aluminum slabs as alternative heat sinks.
Dry
Wet
I had concerns that a lot of electrical contacts were exposed to water. I learned that in fresh water, there is not enough conductivity to cause a problem (short circuits etc.), that the current takes the "path of least resistance" (literally). I'm not sure how all this would fare in seawater.
Wiring Outline (see SubDoc.txt)
The first video shows Depth Hold working pretty well.
The second video is a test of the Heading Hold feature.
Pseudocode
The Arduino Mega runs a sketch that performs the following logic:
Vectored Thrusters
The magic for controlling the side thrusters is in steps 4.1, 4.3 and 4.5 above. To pursue this, look in the code at the Arduino tab titled runThrusters functions getTransVectors() and runVectThrusters(). Clever math was copied from various sources, primarily those dealing with mecanum wheel rovers.
6 Channel RC transmitter
Control Box
The original control box (old cigar box) that held electronics not on the sub has been replaced by a floating control station.
Floating Control Station
I began to be concerned that my fifty foot tether was not long enough to get anywhere. If I'm standing on a dock, then much of the tether will be taken just getting out into the lake and there won't be any left for diving. Since I had a radio link to the control box already, I got the notion of a floating waterproof control box.
So I did away with the old cigar box and put the control box electronics onto a narrow piece of plywood. The plywood slips into the 3 inch mouth of a plastic three gallon jug. The TV screen from the control box had to be replaced with a video transmitter. And the RC transmitter (the only part still on shore) now has a tablet with video receiver mounted on top. The tablet can optionally record the video it displays.
The lid of the jug has the power switch and voltmeter, tether attachment, RC whisker antennas, and rubber ducky video transmitter antenna on it. When the ROV pulls out into the lake I didn't want it to tip the control jug too far so I installed a ring near the bottom where the tether is led and where a retrieval line will be attached. I also put about 2 inches of concrete at the bottom of the jug as ballast so it floats upright.
The floating control station contains to following electronics:
On Screen Display (OSD)
In the quad-copter world, telemetry data is added to the FPV (First Person Video) display at the drone end. I didn't want to put any more stuff into the already crowded and messy Dry Tube. So I opted to send the telemetry up to the base station separately from the video and put the info on the screen there. An OSD Shield from Amazon was perfect for this. It has a video in, video out, and an Arduino library (MAX7456.h) that hides any mess.
SubBase Software
The following logic is run in a sketch on an Arduino Uno in the control station:
I did add a mini DVR module to the control box to sit between the OSD (On Screen Display) and the little TV to record the video. But with the change to the Floating Control Station I now rely on the tablet app to record video.
I may, if I get real ambitious, try to add a grabber arm. There are unused radio control channels and an unused cable pair in the tether just looking for work.