- No alchohol nor cotton sticks available at home to clean my skin for accurate EMG readings
- The prosthetic hand user may use different batteries
- No multimeter available to detect any potential short circuits
- Not enough power from the Servo motors to curl the fingers enough to grab things
- Little to no Serial data support on Raspberry Pi
- Used tape to remove oil, dust, and other dirty particles from my forearm before testing
- Read the voltage outputs in intervals and curl the prosthetic fingers only if consecutive intervals produce consistent results
- Always left a 220Ω resistor in the circuit before completing any circuits & used small LED lights to test if a circuit works as intended
- Repositioned the servo motors, as shown in the Torque↑ Test above
- Switched to Arduino Uno Rev3
- Assuming there're no abnormal spikes in voltage outputs, it's fairly accurate. However, muscle sensors bought from Amazon sometimes give off abnormal spikes in the voltage outputs
- Only tested this once, but solved the abnormal spikes problem by tracking the lowest voltage reading and analyzing the history of 20 voltage readings