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Victor Burnouts
This year for the first time we had recurring problems blowing victors.
The (6) FETs on one direction of the “H” would all burn out for some reason. Luckily no underlying damage was done, so it was only a matter of replacing 90 cent FETs, but we haven’t come up with a definitive reason for the failure. The obvious suspects are metal chips, but the victors seemed to be clean when they are pulled apart. Any of you have unusual victor issues this year, or have other interesting theories on blowouts? |
Re: Victor Burnouts
When do they blow for you? What where you doing when they failed? High amperage draw or just some 'fun driving' out-n-about with the robot...
I don't think we had any problems.... |
Re: Victor Burnouts
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We didn't have any problems with victors we'd rebuilt, so I suppose it could have been a bad batch. I found it interesting that all the FETs would be burned out, but that may have been because we weren't noticing when just one FET went and only recognized it when power to a motor was gone completely after the remaining FETs were overloaded. |
Re: Victor Burnouts
Were you powering the fans and were they running at the time of failure? What exactly was the failure? Did the FETs short or open? Did the circuit breakers click prior to the failure?
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Re: Victor Burnouts
We had at least two Victors fail on us. We had a few extras and didn't have time to mess around with figuring out what was wrong, but, yes, we did have problems with them... :)
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Re: Victor Burnouts
My team had no problems with the Victors this year. We have run the robot even harder than we did at competition once we got it back. Today we ran it for almost 2 hours straight with breaks every once in a while, pushing objects around, showing off, etc. and we still havent had any problems..........even after carrying me around. I do know that we check to make sure our fans are running before we start up the bot for an event but they have been fine. I still havent had a Victor die on me (883's or 884's) though i have melted the pwm cables going to them :cool:.
-Aaron [edit] Also what type of drive system are you running? Are the Victors dealing with high current loads often? [/edit] |
Re: Victor Burnouts
We had no problems with the victors (or fuses) at all this year. On the other hand, our driving was done with 2 drills, the bosch gearbox and a 2wd setup - According to what I've been told, that setup puts a fraction of the strain 4wd and 6wd bots on the motors. We ran the same 2 motors for almost our entire build season, the sacramento regionals (9 seeding rounds, and a few quarterfinals), and the practice day at atlanta. We saw the bot was moving slower than usual, and the driver said it was reacting slower. We had 4 extra drills in boxes, and they didnt take too long to swap.
We had spare victors ready to go, because we were told (and read on CD) about the magic smoke. Hopefully innovationfirst doesnt change them for the 2005 season .. and we can use the spares if we need to :D |
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I believe the FETs opened, but I'll have to verify and get back on that. |
Re: Victor Burnouts
We had a lot of problems with them at Chesapeake I believe. Twice I think, we extensively went back over the code and wiring and then it was like "Maybe we should try a different speed controller." and the new one worked. I dunno if we ever figured out what it was though. Too busy trying to get the robot ready.
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Re: Victor Burnouts
our fan blow on us once. It was very mysterious. We were testing out a camera on the robot by driving around just the day before. when we came in the next day, the fan just wouldn't work. Nothing serious, just replaced it, but its very puzzling.
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It almost always involved different motors/speed controllers each time it happened (globe, drill, CIM). We never had a problem with a rebuilt Victor, and we didn't replace any of the motors this year. By Nationals all Victor problems had gone away, but we'd replaced/rebuilt a half dozen by then. Static is a possibility. Any ideas on tests we can run in the off-season? I'd like to make it into a research project for the students, but I don't want to risk expensive mistakes. |
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The electrical layouts were reworked many times as mechanical designs changed, so there was a lot of controller handling (but no powering up). Some of the controllers were taken off last year's robot when we started to run shy, so those were reused. They were never used or installed without circuit breaker protection, or near bare wires. We've never blown victors before, so initially we thought it was foreign object debris, but your description of the damage caused to the Victor case and the lack of other evidence seems to reduce the probability of that as a cause. The dead zone is restricted by software with a smooth increase in power outside the dead zone compatable with the measured Victor deadzone. We verified via the dashboard the PWM output as neutral when it should be. The new joysticks didn't usually center properly (weak springs). The blown Victors were a mix of factory calibrated and team calibrated. We did calibrate all later ones, because we weren't measuring full power out of the Victors in bench tests with the factory calibration. We had an issue early on with the drill/CIM victors receiving 127 according to the dashboard, but sometimes passing low power through to the motors anyway. That could be a related symptom. That problem also seemed to be gone by Nationals. The wiring photos I have don't show the Victor mounts clearly. I'll have to wait for the robot's return from Nationals. Quote:
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