View Full Version : 12V power supply for roborio
acastagna
14-12-2015, 16:07
Has anyone ever powered a roboio (or cRio) using a plug-in 12 volt power supply? I was thinking that it would be convenient to power it that way instead of using the battery/PDP when testing out code to drive sensors, arduino, etc (anything with low current requirements).
I picture the 12 volt supply feeding directly into the PDB, or possibly right to the roborio (although that would bypass any over-voltage protection provided by the PDP).
Joe Ross
14-12-2015, 16:24
I use a 12v 2A wallwart directly into my roboRIO (but I'm not trying to run anything else). The only protection the PDP provides is a fuse.
Alan Anderson
14-12-2015, 16:28
We regularly power a robot control system with a 12v linear power supply. The one I have wired to an SB50 connector is capable of only a few amps, so we can't run any motors, but everything else works okay.
(Trying to use a switching power supply on the older PDB, with its own internal switching power supplies, was not a consistent success.)
otherguy
14-12-2015, 19:33
I've also used a 12v, 2A supply directly wired into the roboRIO. Something like this (http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B00VM292AO/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?qid=1450139568&sr=8-1&pi=SY200_QL40&keywords=12v+2a&dpPl=1&dpID=414zfc85igL&ref=plSrch).
Also have used an old ATX computer power supply with the cRIO and roboRIO with no issues.
In a pinch I used a CAN Connector to connect a 12V wall supply to andersons, and have been using it ever since [hey it works for power too :) ]
I suppose I could have grabbed a RIO connector instead.
acastagna
14-12-2015, 22:20
Thanks for all the feedback - I feel more comfortable going forward. This will be a convenience as we are trying to step up our use of sensors and automation this year.
In past years we've used the power adapter included with the D-Link radios as a power source for cRIOs/RoboRIOs.
In past years we've used the power adapter included with the D-Link radios as a power source for cRIOs/RoboRIOs.
IIRC the D-Link took 5V and the cRIO took 12-24V. That doesn't sound like a good combination. Do I remember incorrectly?
We have a 12V power supply we use to test both the cRIO/roboRIO for programming and the entire robot if we are doing long bench tests and don't want to have to keep switching batteries.
riftware
08-01-2016, 14:38
I'm thinking about getting one of these for our benchbot
http://www.ebay.com/itm/100-AMP-CONTINUOUS-POWER-SUPPLY-12-Volt-POWER-YOUR-LINEAR-AMPLIFIER-CB-RADIO-dc-/131177533516?hash=item1e8aca504c:g:-9EAAOSwBahVA8Ar
Supposedly 12 100 AMP - Put the normal connector on it (Anderson? ) and use it through the pdp just like it was a battery. I'm thking 100 AMP would be enough even to power 2 CIM's if they have no load on them right?
I'm thinking about getting one of these for our benchbot
http://www.ebay.com/itm/100-AMP-CONTINUOUS-POWER-SUPPLY-12-Volt-POWER-YOUR-LINEAR-AMPLIFIER-CB-RADIO-dc-/131177533516?hash=item1e8aca504c:g:-9EAAOSwBahVA8Ar
Supposedly 12 100 AMP - Put the normal connector on it (Anderson? ) and use it through the pdp just like it was a battery. I'm thking 100 AMP would be enough even to power 2 CIM's if they have no load on them right?
According to Andymark, a CIM motor's free current is 2.7 amps. That is if it has absolutely no load on it. 100 amps will be more than enough to power 2 CIM motors at free speed. The problem comes when you attach them to gearboxes and wheels. I'd still say with a properly geared gearbox that you're pretty safe doing a 2 CIM drive off a 100 amp power source.
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