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This module was first described in the original ethoscope paper (Geissmann et al 2017) and used quite extensively after that. We do not recommend using this module for long term sleep deprivation experiments for two reasons:

Having said this, the module is very easy to build and can be used successfully for short term sleep deprivations or for arousal detection.

Testing the motors

Parts and building procedure

<aside> ☝🏾 Buy more motors than what you think you need. They will fail quite frequently and you will have to replace them quite often.

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Start the assembly by fitting the pulley into the motor gear. A 9g motor would normally ship with a series of plastic adapters and three small screws. You will have no use of the plastic adapters for this module, but it is convenient to use the tiniest of those screws to secure the pulley to the motor. It is also a good idea to secure the two together with a drop of superglue too, obviously having care of not letting the glue interfere with the mechanism.

Use the remaining two screws to secure the motor in position in the chassis, as shown in the photo below. Note the orientation of the motors. The pulley should face the side where the ethoscope will sit on (i.e. not the fully open side). Optionally, you can use two cable sleeves or 2-3 short zip ties to bundle the 5 wires together and clean the cable mess a bit.

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Once all the motors are secured, proceed to connect them to the board using the pairing illustrated with below. The 10 motors need to be connected (in order) to pins 0-9 on the board. The ground of the motors must be connected to the ground on the board (the pin closest to the edge of the board is the ground). The motors' cables have a colour code that indicates ground either in black or brown.