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Help with Prototyping Board
Every year we get into a situation where we need to speed-control a motor in some prototyping system and I always say I'm going to build some simple control circuit. I have limited electronics knowledge (enough to be dangerous) and I have found a simple circuit called: "Square Wave Signal Generator with Pulse Width Modulation". The circuit
http://www.rmcybernetics.com/project...generator2.htm allows variable control of the frequency (which I understand needs to be 15kHz for controlling a Jaguar) and the pulse width. Will this do what we need? (By that, I mean, can we connect the Jaguar pwm input to this generator and control motor speed without needing our control system?) |
Re: Help with Prototyping Board
I ran into the same need on our team. My solution was to just pick up an RC servo tester. HobbyKing carries a bunch of them: http://hobbyking.com/hobbyking/store...h=servo+tester
These will cable right to the speed controller via the PWM port. I just got a cheap one and powered it via a 3S lipo and a UBEC that I had laying around, but some of the better ones have more power options. |
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Can I not just create 5VDC from a stock adapter, or from a bank of batteries? |
Re: Help with Prototyping Board
For prototyping purposes, we took apart an old drill and refitting things. Basically, a battery connector goes in the butt, and two wires with some quick connect fittings come out the top. Then it's just a matter of plugging it into a battery and the motor, and you have instant, easy to use speed control.
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If you want to buy, like ILAMtitan said, you can find many options at any hobby shop (usually called a servo tester). If you want to support FIRST vendors, here are a few other options, with varying capabilities. http://www.andymark.com/product-p/am-2732.htm http://www.andymark.com/product-p/am-2503.htm http://robotlogic.com/wp/product/servo-tester/ Several people have posted circuits on chiefdelphi. I've never seen one with a 555 and a comparator, I usually see them with 2 555s. You could even use a really old computer: http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/papers/2702 |
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A UBEC is really just a highly efficient voltage regulator. It takes a voltage input above 6V, and drops it down to 5V. So the 3S battery connects to the UBEC input, and the output is 5V. This 5V is the standard TTL value used in servos and motor control systems. I used this one becouse it's cheap and I didn't need much current: http://hobbyking.com/hobbyking/store...BEC_3A_5v.html I actually don't recommend the LiPos if you aren't familiar with them. They require highly specialized chargers and can be very dangerous is mistreated. A better battery option would probably be a cheep 4x AA holder. This would give you enough voltage to power the UBEC and feed into the tester and subsequently your servo or motor controller. This is of course the low cost cobbled together way to do this. If you can spend a bit more, the two AndyMark products that Joe Ross linked will be much easier to us, and likely provide more features. |
Re: Help with Prototyping Board
Thanks everyone for all the information. I managed to find an inexpensive servo tester on ebay that will ship and arrive quickly. I would have preferred to find something that I could have bought or built from local sources so I could have it immediately - but the closest reliable source for RC stuff is about an hour drive.
While I'm waiting for that to arrive - I'll tackle the 5V power situation. Ideally, I'd like to create something that uses the same 12V robot battery that we will be using to power the motor on the other side of the jag, or some old power supply I have sitting around from an old laptop or something. I think my "enough to be dangerous" electronics can handle getting 5V out of something we have available. Thanks again! |
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Just that the robot battery wont catch fire if you drop it the wrong way. Those LiPos pack quite a punch. |
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Can I use the 12V-5V power converter that we use for the radio on the robot? We have a couple of those laying around.
If the answer is no (which I suspect it's going to be) please tell me why - in Math Teacher language - not EE language. |
Re: Help with Prototyping Board
Yes, or in math teacher language possibly "1"
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We use arduinos to run our motors. I have read about others wanting to do this so our team is going to post the code on our site when our members get a chance. I fyou want our code PM me.
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Thanks both of you:
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