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-   -   New Talon Speed Controller (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=108727)

Rangel(kf7fdb) 09-26-2012 01:55 PM

New Talon Speed Controller
 
Andymark just released their new Talon Speed Controller. What do you guys think. One question our team is wondering is will this controller handle lower speeds as good or better than the jaguars?

http://www.andymark.com/Talon-p/am-2195.htm

Nemo 09-26-2012 01:59 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
I'm super interested to hear what the electrical nerds have to say about this product. Is there any reason to stay with the Victor over the Talon (cost aside)?

Here's hoping we get some of these in the kit of parts.

ehochstein 09-26-2012 02:09 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
I'm excited! If you look at the comments/ratings page on the AndyMark page for Talon, it says that Team 67 demoed them at IRI, they didn't reset like jaguars do, do to high current!

Tom Line 09-26-2012 02:18 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
We'll be receiving a number of Talons and will be testing them alongside our Labview beta testing. It's an extremely exciting product. Active cooling isn't needed. It's got a conformal coating so it's got all the debris protection of the old victors. The higher switching frequency should give a linear response on the order of a Jaguar.

I'm a curious about their PWM input rate though. We know that a standard victor is around 17ms. A Jag is somewhere in the ballpark of 5ms.

What does .9 - 2ms @ 50hz mean? Does that mean it will respond in .9-2ms, but only accepts a change in input at a maximum of 50hz (meaning that the actual best response is 20ms)?

cbale2000 09-26-2012 02:20 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Wiifi (Post 1187418)
I'm excited! If you look at the comments/ratings page on the AndyMark page for Talon, it says that Team 67 demoed them at IRI, they didn't reset like jaguars do, do to high current!


Personally I'd be a bit more interested to know how these perform compared to a Victor rather than a Jaguar (especially considering how much better reliability Victors have from Jags anyways).

If this turns out to be a controller that would give us the reliability of something like a victor, but with the smoothness of control from something like a jaguar, I'd think it would definitely be the way to go.

Jon Stratis 09-26-2012 02:21 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
A few notes:
- First, this is not an AndyMark product. It's made by Cross the Road Electronics, and AndyMark is only an outlet for sales.
- It sounds like the new Victor 888 will give this a run for its money, since both have a linear output.
- The passive cooling is a very nice touch
- The conformal coating is something that has been much, much needed in FRC applications. It's nice to see a speed controller that finally has one!

All that said, keep in mind we don't know what will be legal next year. Worst case, we'll still be limited to the Victor 884 and the Jaguar. Best case, those will both still be legal, but they'll add the Victor 888 and the Talon to the list!

Personally, I don't see any benefits the Victor 884/888 has over the Talon. The only benefits I can see from data provided for the Talon over the Victor 888 are the heat sink and conformal coating. Obviously, the linear output is another benefit over the Victor 884. Looking at the documents for each, I believe the Talon also has a slightly smaller footprint than the Victor 884.

Bringing the Jaguar into the mix, we know it has a larger footpint, which is a negative. However, it also has a linear output like the Talon and 888, and provides some additional functionality through the CAN interface and the ability for direct sensor feedback when using CAN.


For me, Jaguars have been preferred up until now (specifically for drive train) due to their linear output. These new controllers though, if FRC legal, completely change the equation. It seems that it now becomes a question of size versus functionality - if you don't need those inputs on the Jaguar, why use one? Depending on the number of speed controllers used and the number of DIO ports used, there might be size/weight tradeoffs available for using Jaguars and CAN, avoiding the need to include a second DIO module and DSC. Definitely something to look at!

Ether 09-26-2012 02:26 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Tom Line (Post 1187422)
What does .9 - 2ms @ 50hz mean?

Per the user manual, .9 to 2ms is the pulse width (duration of pulse).

50Hz is the frequency (max? or nominal?) of the pulses that can be processed.



falconmaster 09-26-2012 02:28 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
I am curious if they perform the same as Jaguars at the low speeds, does anyone know? Andy? Mark? Do you know? How about Cross the Road?

Ricky Q. 09-26-2012 03:20 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jon Stratis (Post 1187425)
A few notes:
...
- The conformal coating is something that has been much, much needed in FRC applications. It's nice to see a speed controller that finally has one!

Personally, I don't see any benefits the Victor 884/888 has over the Talon. The only benefits I can see from data provided for the Talon over the Victor 888 are the heat sink and conformal coating. Obviously, the linear output is another benefit over the Victor 884. Looking at the documents for each, I believe the Talon also has a slightly smaller footprint than the Victor 884.

Just for a point of clarification, the Victor 884 featured conformal coating. The new Victor 888 will as well.

Best,
Ricky

Camren 09-26-2012 03:21 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
The best part of this is the fact that a rectifier prevents back flow into the controller. Which fried the majority of are jaguars.

Jon Stratis 09-26-2012 03:38 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Ricky Q. (Post 1187437)
Just for a point of clarification, the Victor 884 featured conformal coating. The new Victor 888 will as well.

Best,
Ricky

Awesome, I had no idea it did... I looked through the users manual and didn't find any mention of it... where is this sort of information documented?

Ether 09-26-2012 03:39 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Camren (Post 1187439)
The best part of this is the fact that a rectifier prevents back flow into the controller. Which fried the majority of are jaguars.

It's not clear what your intended meaning is. What rectifier are you referring to? Which controller? And what is "back flow"?



plnyyanks 09-26-2012 03:51 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Camren (Post 1187439)
The best part of this is the fact that a rectifier prevents back flow into the controller. Which fried the majority of are jaguars.

Do you mean reverse polarity protection?
Quote:

Originally Posted by Talon User Manual
WARNING! The Talon does not have protection against
reverse polarity. It is important that the user ensures that
power has been connected in the correct polarity before
powering the Talon. If polarity is reversed, the Talon will be
permanently damaged.

(See Page 4)

Camren 09-26-2012 04:10 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
Ok to clarify my above post.

Are team has found that any sort of free wheel action on the robot (ie pushing it) Causes the motors to become a generator that sends current back into the motor controller. Well with the Jaguars they didn't have anything to stop it so we fried a lot of them. The new Talon controller has
Quote:

The Talon features locked anti-phase rectification that provides more efficient delivery of power to Brushed DC motors. This type of rectification returns current to the power source during the freewheeling period of the motor and during direction change.

IndySam 09-26-2012 04:12 PM

Re: New Talon Speed Controller
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Camren (Post 1187450)
Ok to clarify my above post.

Are team has found that any sort of free wheel action on the robot (ie pushing it) Causes the motors to become a generator that sends current back into the motor controller. Well with the Jaguars they didn't have anything to stop it so we fried a lot of them. The new Talon controller has

We have been pushing around robots with Jags as long as they have been available and have never experienced this problem.


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