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combined free speed of 3 motors
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The combined stall torque and stall current of 3 motors (or combination of motors and gearmotors) is simply the sum of the stall torques and stall currents, respectively. But what about free speed? If anyone has published the math for this, I didn't find it with a quick search. So I took a crack at it. Comments? |
Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
I've been wrestling with this problem this week as well. I'll be following along closely and will give it some more thought soon.
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If the motors are not tied together, each will have a free speed specified by its motor performance data. |
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
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I can see how the concepts of free speed, stall torque, stall current, and free speed current can all apply if you only consider specific voltages for each. However, I can't seem to figure out what the motor velocity or motor torque constants mean in the context of having multiple motors, as you will have multiple voltages (ie, you can change the voltage being applied to each motor independent of the voltage being applied to the other motor). But I went ahead and threw in the numbers for getting a reasonable model of a gearbox with two motors (adding a third would just make equations messier).
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To be clear, the derivation assumes the motors will be used to drive a load (like a drivetrain or heavy arm for example) with a reflected inertia much larger than the rotor inertia, so the dynamic contribution of the rotor inertia can be ignored. |
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I agree that you can calculate a stall torque, stall current, free speed, resistance, and free current for the motor combination, but just because those numbers may be meaningful does not necessitate that the single motor equations are true. In other words, just because you have formulas for combined stall torque, stall current, free speed, resistance, and free current, why is it that these equations are still valid for values of V, I, omega, and Torque other than those at stall torque and free speed: V = I*R + omega / Kv Torque = Kt * I I may be missing something, but I have not seen any proof that these equations continue to hold, and I like to see proofs :). |
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Ether,
Joe Johnson and I worked through this for two motors some time ago. Joe had a post on it back in either 2002 or 2003. His terminology and mine were different, but recently I made sure our two analysis methods came to the same conclusion. They did and yours matches our conclusions, but adds one more motor. We did this analysis to try to kill the myth that you had to match free speeds. Joe went into detail about loading conditions that will cause one motor to actually be pushing the other, therefore the slower motor would contribute negative work to the system. Again, your analysis corroborates our conclusions back then. I attached my hand calculations to prove Joe and my analysis methods were the same. I now use Joe's terminology because it is easier to put in Excel. Paul |
Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
Many teams that put 3 motors on a drivetrain gearbox want to know the acceleration characteristics when full voltage is applied to all 3 motors. Finding the single-motor "equivalent" motor curve permits the use of existing spreadsheets and models that don't support multiple mixed-motors on the gearbox. Quote:
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