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Victor reversed wiring...
Hi all,
Do to a mistake in our wiring we wired up 4 victors the wrong direction. We had the M+/- wired to the PDB. [Did not cross red/black] Then when we turned the power on the wheels started spinning right away, and after fixing it the victors seem to come out damage free. Is there some kind of protection for this built in? Or should we toss them now, even though they appear to still work fine? |
Re: Victor reversed wiring...
The only thing that should happen when you reverse the polarity of the wires is the motor spinning backwards.
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Re: Victor reversed wiring...
Mark,
You are extremely lucky. If this was me, I would be ordering some Victors as replacements. There is no protection built in. What is working today has been stressed to the point of near failure and will likely take a hike in the future. |
Re: Victor reversed wiring...
I expect there is back EMF protection built into the controllers which protects the controller when you cease applying power to a motor and the motor turns into a generator, backfeeding into the controller. If the controller was in brake mode it would have shorted the connection and could have damaged the brake mode functionality of the controller. Otherwise I would expect them to be equipped with some sort of supressors or diodes which (bearing in mind I have no clue how they are wired) could have fed back to the power input terminals? I would tend to think if the controllers work fine and they don't smell like magic smoke, you should be fine. I have seen many teams pushing their robots around while powered down and have watched various lights light up and fans spin from the current being generated and fed backwards through the controllers by the spinning motors.
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Re: Victor reversed wiring...
fox,
There is no protection. What you have observed (and what takes place during brake mode) is that the diodes that are a result of manufacturing in MOSFETs will conduct energy from the motors to the power supply or to a short with multiple FETs turned on. When power is supplied to the controller output, reverse currents may flow in the interface electronics and the microproc on board the controller. Many teams have reported controller failures as a result of this very same mistake just this year. |
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I don't want to sound alarmist, but you have to accept that you have caused some amount of damage to these parts. Have spares ready. |
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In 2000 when I was in grade 10, our school used to participate in the now defunct "Canada First" robotics competition- brainchild of the late Bruce MacMillan, a spinoff of FIRST before the GTR regional came into existence. That particular year the competition organizers had designed a custom control board that when interfaced with an RC aircraft system provided control to the robots. Unfortunately the system was plagued with problems in the form of exploding MOSFETs/Transistors and the on-board microprocessor. The cause was a poor design where the designer had overlooked this kind of protection. Voltages which backfed to the controller when the power was turned off (so we were told) was causing the processor to cook itself- just like you describe. The motors we were supplied with were windshield wiper motors with very little "spindown" and were virtually impossible to backdrive which meant only a very small amount of power was needed to cause this condition. This is why I am convinced the Victors and Jags have at least some tolerance to reverse voltages otherwise I am confident they too would cook. The solution to these issues that was implemented AT the competition was replacing all the power switching hardware on the boards with relays resulting in only "ON/OFF/ON" control. |
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Re: Victor reversed wiring...
Well if you're hooking up the battery where the motor goes then the current will flow through the motor (and possible backwards to the controllers) if one of the mosfets from the top and the opposite from the bottom is on. If both bottom or both top mosfets are on, such as in brake mode, then you'd be shorting out the battery.
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Re: Victor reversed wiring...
Fox,
Unfortunately the answer is NO, there is nothing in the way of backward protection. The FETs have a diode that is across the terminals that results from the manufacturing process. If you look at the spec sheet you can see the diode and the direction in which it conducts. The four legs of the "H" bridge do conduct as a full wave bridge and provide power of the correct polarity at a reduced voltage backwards to the power rails of the controller. These diodes do have a forward voltage drop though, so the conducted voltage isn't quite what you would think. Remember that when the controllers are powered correctly, and a 'coast' condition is commanded, all of the FETs are off and current only flows through the diodes (the same is true for pushing with power off). When a 'brake' is commanded both low side legs of the controller are turned 'on' resulting in a short across the motor but no power being delivered to the controller internals and no current flowing through the diodes. In the case of the power leads being attached to the output terminals, we don't know if they were wired in a normal polarity. In any case, considerable current may flow through the controller restricted only by the breaker feeding the device. Depending on the duration (or repeated attempts to determine the cause) significant damage to the device might be the result. Magic smoke is almost always the result. |
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That's entirely anecdotal, mind. |
Re: Victor reversed wiring...
If the wires were truley just connected and then powered up on the motor side they should actually be fine as long as no commands for driving were sent to the controller. Not saying there isn't any chance that damage occured but without activating the speed controller, there should be no real concern. Our lead mentor uses Victors frequently and his response to this situation was to shrug his shoulders and say "it's fine"
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