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jaysun 21-02-2012 20:42

Consistent encoder rate
 
Hi,

Our team is having trouble getting a consistent rate value from one of the optical encoders. The Rate value jumps around a lot, even when we use 1x decoding and choose to average 127 samples. When we made our own rate code based on the encoder's Distance, the variance persisted. It really messes with our PID loop when it tries to keep the speed of the motor consistent. (Note: the jumpiness occurs when the PID loop is not controlling the speed of the motor, so the problem is not caused by the PID controller.)

Any idea what the problem could be and how to fix it?

Thanks for any advice.

Ether 21-02-2012 22:00

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jaysun (Post 1132081)
Hi,

Our team is having trouble getting a consistent rate value from one of the optical encoders. The Rate value jumps around a lot, even when we use 1x decoding and choose to average 127 samples. When we made our own rate code based on the encoder's Distance, the variance persisted. It really messes with our PID loop when it tries to keep the speed of the motor consistent. (Note: the jumpiness occurs when the PID loop is not controlling the speed of the motor, so the problem is not caused by the PID controller.)

Any idea what the problem could be and how to fix it?

Thanks for any advice.

What is the encoder brand and model number ?

If you rotate it slowly by hand and read the encoder counts, do you get consistent results for each rev of the shaft?

Check to make sure the optical disk is properly mounted to the shaft.



jaysun 21-02-2012 22:13

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
We use this. Tomorrow I will make sure the optical disk is properly mounted to the shaft and I will rotate the shaft slowly by hand and read the encoder counts and I'll let you know if I get consistent results for each revolution of the shaft.

Ether 21-02-2012 22:28

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jaysun (Post 1132145)
We use this. Tomorrow I will make sure the optical disk is properly mounted to the shaft

Look at the 2:15 minute mark of this video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4hJfzhxZwKw



jaysun 22-02-2012 16:25

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
Since I forgot my team is not meeting until next Tuesday, I will check it then.

Averaging the rate further with a moving average gives us a mostly constant speed (+-2%), but the problem is that when the PID loop adjusts the motor speed, it will oscillate the motors because the "moving-averaged" process variable that the PID uses does not accurately reflect the present rate of the motor. Would applying any of the filters described in this thread give us a smoothed rate that more accurately reflects the present speed of the motor?

jaysun 28-02-2012 19:23

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
No luck. We have decided to look into testing the magnetic encoder from the KOP on a test motor.

slijin 28-02-2012 20:48

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jaysun (Post 1132145)
We use this. Tomorrow I will make sure the optical disk is properly mounted to the shaft and I will rotate the shaft slowly by hand and read the encoder counts and I'll let you know if I get consistent results for each revolution of the shaft.

How did this work out?

Ether 28-02-2012 20:56

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by slijin (Post 1136433)
How did this work out?

Like so:

Quote:

Originally Posted by jaysun (Post 1136368)
No luck. We have decided to look into testing the magnetic encoder from the KOP on a test motor.


slijin 28-02-2012 21:55

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Ether (Post 1136446)
Like so:

I wanted him to clarify whether that post was pertinent to the attempt at filters or rotating by hand. I should've been more clear on that point.

jaysun 28-02-2012 22:15

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
I tightened the encoder discs on the axle as shown in the video, and I made sure there wasn't any slipping. When I rotated the encoders by hand, the Distance count was kind of consistent: I'd say about +-10 counts.

I tested an IIR filter of the encoder speed and compared it to a moving average. You can see an example of my results in this video. The problem with the PID loop adjusting the speed is still present. I'm still not sure if there is a good filter or not.

slijin 28-02-2012 22:34

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jaysun (Post 1136502)
I tightened the encoder discs on the axle as shown in the video, and I made sure there wasn't any slipping. When I rotated the encoders by hand, the Distance count was kind of consistent: I'd say about +-10 counts.

I tested an IIR filter of the encoder speed and compared it to a moving average. You can see an example of my results in this video. The problem with the PID loop adjusting the speed is still present. I'm still not sure if there is a good filter or not.

That's an extraordinarily noisy signal. Is the green the moving average and the red the IIR? Also, just out of curiosity: how are you obtaining the encoder input, through a Jaguar or the DSC?

I don't know about you, but we ran into issues with scratched encoder wheels and damaged encoder wires (there was no visible damage; I assume it was internal from abusive zip-tying, but swapping out the wire resolved the issue).

A bit of advice I've been given by my mentor (although I've never personally experienced this problem) is to always separate signal runs from power runs so that the power runs don't induce noise in the signal; if they have to cross, run them at right angles. Ether would be able to elaborate more on this.

jaysun 28-02-2012 22:58

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by slijin (Post 1136520)
That's an extraordinarily noisy signal. Is the green the moving average and the red the IIR? Also, just out of curiosity: how are you obtaining the encoder input, through a Jaguar or the DSC?

I don't know about you, but we ran into issues with scratched encoder wheels and damaged encoder wires (there was no visible damage; I assume it was internal from abusive zip-tying, but swapping out the wire resolved the issue).

A bit of advice I've been given by my mentor (although I've never personally experienced this problem) is to always separate signal runs from power runs so that the power runs don't induce noise in the signal; if they have to cross, run them at right angles. Ether would be able to elaborate more on this.

I should clarify my last post and note that my video was not based off my actual data. I generated the "measurement" (green line) by adding a random number to the rate I set - in reality the "amplitude" of the noise is about half of that. The red line is the IIR, and the blue line is the moving average.

With the optical encoder I use the DSC.

Yes, I made sure the encoder wheels were not scratched - I scratched a lot of them when we first started using them last year. :) We did twist the encoder wires with a hand drill to make the wiring look good - maybe that's a problem?

Thanks for the ideas. I'll try to use a new, different encoder cable and separate the power and data wires and see if the rate I get is any less noisy.

Ether 28-02-2012 23:55

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
Here are a couple other things to consider:

Quote:

Originally Posted by jaysun (Post 1136502)
I tightened the encoder discs on the axle as shown in the video, and I made sure there wasn't any slipping. When I rotated the encoders by hand, the Distance count was kind of consistent: I'd say about +-10 counts.

+-10 out of how many? and roughly how accurately did you rotate it (i.e. by "eye" or did you make a mark etc)

Quote:

Originally Posted by jaysun (Post 1132081)
The Rate value jumps around a lot, even when we use 1x decoding and choose to average 127 samples.

127 samples at 20ms per sample? That's 2½ seconds. That's not what you meant is it?

Quote:

When we made our own rate code based on the encoder's Distance, the variance persisted.
This doesn't sound right. Would you mind describing exactly what you did?

- 1x or 4x?

- Counter class or Encoder class or something else?

- sample time? how controlled? measured or assumed?

- did your code look like this: read count, subtract previous count, divide by measured elapsed time since previous sample?



slijin 29-02-2012 00:13

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jaysun (Post 1136548)
I should clarify my last post and note that my video was not based off my actual data. I generated the "measurement" (green line) by adding a random number to the rate I set - in reality the "amplitude" of the noise is about half of that. The red line is the IIR, and the blue line is the moving average.

With the optical encoder I use the DSC.

Yes, I made sure the encoder wheels were not scratched - I scratched a lot of them when we first started using them last year. :) We did twist the encoder wires with a hand drill to make the wiring look good - maybe that's a problem?

Thanks for the ideas. I'll try to use a new, different encoder cable and separate the power and data wires and see if the rate I get is any less noisy.

Twisting the wires like that is some serious abuse; you're placing a lot of tension on a solid length of copper. Wire may flex, but spinning it is asking for trouble. If anything, braid the wires.

To clarify, I don't mean separating the power and data lines coming from the encoder; I meant separating all 4 encoder lines (+5, A, B, GND) from the power lines going to the motor. Ether, could you comment on how recognizable this effect would be?

Ether 29-02-2012 00:30

Re: Consistent encoder rate
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by slijin (Post 1136596)
Ether, could you comment on how recognizable this effect would be?

I don't have any pertinent test data. It would make a good project. Put a scope on an encoder signal wire and observe the noise when it's routed near motor wires. Has anybody done this and have data to share?




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