Hi Scott, I've been trying to figure this out too for some time, and as far as I can tell you need something like this:
https://www.sparkfun.com/products/13063 Or any other sort of "slip ring" that is rated for sufficient current. The issue with a turntable is you would probably have to rig your power supply from the top since the slip ring has to be on the radial axis of the platform, and underneath the turntable you'd have a bunch of moving parts and gak. But this is all conjecture since I've never followed through on it. If anyone out there has executed something like this I would be really interested to see some pictures. Best, Ryder On Sunday, 24 July 2016, Scott Stark <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi all, does anyone have an idea of how to supply power to a projector > that’s set on a rotating device such as a turntable? Is there such a thing > as a rotating power supply? > > > > I saw this – the main cylinder wouldn’t do it but the part that attaches > to the wall does rotate 360, but I can’t quite figure how to make it work. > > > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u64Kn5ENkE0 > > > > Just wondering if anyone’s found a device designed for such. > > > > thanks – > > > > Scott Stark > > scottstark.com <http://www.scottstark.com/> > > Experimental Response Cinema <http://www.ercatx.org/> > > Flicker <http://www.hi-beam.net/> > > > -- Sent from mobile device, please forgive typographic errors. -RTW
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