Trying something crazy. I want to emulate analog circuits on a Raspberry Pi Pico. Specifically to emulate Tilden type floating bicores in a way that allows it to properly scale in size and sophistication. As I said, I am interested to see if this can work and I’m willing to pay. I’m outsourcing someone to conduct an experiment for me since I’m a novice at this. Price negotiable.
Analog circuit simulators that provide professionally useful results are large programs, with large databases, that are typically run on a modern PC.
What is the point of trying to do that on a RPi Pico?
Not trying to do a exact 1 to 1 simulation of analog circuits. But more like bicore inspired logic. The reason: Trying to find a way to scale to more sophisticated systems.
Hi,
This is a solid project idea.
I have worked with BEAM robotics concepts and Pico microcontrollers before, emulating bicore oscillator behavior digitally is doable with the right PWM and timing approach.
The scalability part is where it gets interesting since you need to consider how the cores interact as you add more nodes.
Happy to chat about the technical side and see if we are a good fit for this.
You can reach out to me on my email here
Colin
Hello. I think the scaling issue can be mitigated, since I seem to have found where someone actually did this in software emulation. Let’s discuss this and see where this leads. Thanks for the reply.
