![]() |
New Speed Controllers :)
Do you think we will get Victor 885's in the Kit next year?
click here to see 885 OOooh soo excited. :) Already have half an OI built on Photoshop :] -Pavan |
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
120A continuous? Pretty wicked :D Maybe we will get them with the new RC I have been hearing so much about :rolleyes:
|
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
To use more current, we'd need bigger motors. Bigger motors increase robot power and also mechanical stresses, thus requiring more strength (and therefore more weight) in the mechanisms that use them. And of course more powerful robots would require a more robust field to contain them. I think the robots are wearing out the carpet, field boundaries, field elements, and game pieces fast enough as things stand now -- more power is not needed. More (robot) intelligence is. :] |
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
We can dream cant we? Pavan |
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
Though it would probably be very fun, I doubt it would be safe to drive around 250lb metal beasts at 30fps in a FIRST game... |
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
The Victor 885 is intended for 24 volt applications.
|
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
Quote:
Anyway, as long as we're using 40A snap action breakers on each circuit, the capability of the 885 won't be exploited. We'd get a small benefit in reduced voltage drop. For FRC use that doesn't seem worth the difference in price. 885s seem to be intended for big bots. 24V x 120A is 2880 Watts; at about 75% efficiency that would be about 3 HP at the motor shaft. Way too much power for a FIRST robot, even if we were to get motors that could handle it. |
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
They cost to much. I would rather see some programmability in the speed controllers. Like current limiting, current feedback and protection circuitry. Also maybe a small cheaper ESC for the window motors and van door motor. International rectifier has allot of new automotive stuff with some reference designs that could be Incorporated into First robot motor control. If we had intelligent speed controllers, the 2005 Fisher Price motor problem could have been solved at the speed controller. While servo pwm has worked well, maybe its time to think about going to a motor control bust or something.
|
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
who says we are even going to have carpet next year (my vote(and hopes) is on water... :D )
|
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
|
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
:) Pavan |
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
draining 120A continously will COMPLETELY drain your battery in 9 minutes flat. SO think about it if you have 2 motors (probally drive) running around 120. you battery will completey be drained in 4.5 minutes. Not to mention everything else your running. This means (estimate only) that by the end of the match your battery would be around 6-7 volts maybe. do you really wanna drain your batteries that fast? Besides doesn't that ruin them?
|
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
|
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
well anyway why would they let you use 120A continuously if they can just step up to the old 883's that run up to 60A continuously. I think that is more acceptable, plus you dont have to use practically a solid copper rod for a wire.
|
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
By the way, you would be much better off using thick stranded wire than one solid piece of wire. Current flows on the surface of a conductor, so the amount of current a single piece of wire can transmit is limited by its size. |
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
Since only a small component of the motor current in a FIRST robot is ac (due to the pulse-width modulation of the Victors), using stranded wire does not improve the current carrying capacity significantly over that of solid conductors with the same total cross section; i.e., the same AWG. However, using stranded wire is still a good idea because it is less prone to damage from bending and flexing, and it forms better electrical connections when crimped to standard terminals. |
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Are these actually new? I was pretty sure the 885's have been out for a while now. Maybe I'm just confusing myself though.
|
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
|
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
I can't even Imagine trying to run wires like that to a motor. Besides you can really draw more current then the wire already on the motor will allow(if any), like the CIMs with out modifying it. Or if there is no wire you would have to go by cantact area, and the other motors dont have a big contact area. |
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
I really don't see these being used in FRC anytime soon, they're just too powerful. The price for a V885 is higher and the motors would be ungodly, an example of the type of motor these are for is the PERM PMG 132, it can pull 110A constant, it costs almost one thousand dollars! That is way to pricey for FIRST. Instead, I would also, like Gdeaver, like to see a little more computing in the 884. Maybe a just single, low-end PIC (although it might need shielding), some sort of sensing to keep you from frying it from wiring the inputs backwards, maybe a lower profile fan, and an improved PWM slot. (maybe like the old ones with just pins, then add a clip on the top to hold it in place) It could be the Victor 884-Xtreme (or 886), some cheap 20A speed controllers for the weaker motors would be nice too... (Maybe it's time for IFI to plunge into the Hobbyweight battle bot market with low current speed controllers, maybe name them the Rufus series)
|
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
All this talk about draining batterys, don't you think maybe just maybe FIRST might hand out new batteries for next year b/c just like the field elements and some of the KOPs used they are old and we may just see some new stuff next year (Batteries, Control Systems, Motors and of course Field Elements) One could only hope =) |
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
Quote:
![]() I like that too. http://www.robotmarketplace.com/mark...e_ifi_esc.html |
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Having little electrical background [besides knowing that the inputs must be wired correctly or the thing will melt], this is my perspective on the use of these-
As promising as these look, there is a setback to them: the $200 price tag, [only] $85 more than an 884. Unless the KOP includes enough victors to control every motor properly, there will be teams that will be at more of a disadvantage. Also, the 120A continuous draw seems potentially dangerous in situations where mechanical systems malfunction [robot damage] and cause the motors to run near stall. To me, it seems like you have your either-or choices of: 1)Victor Meltdown [and another $200 down to replace it] 2)Motor burnout and the stench of Eau de Fisher Price for the rest of day 3)Battery damage from high current draw. My vote goes to the 884. Cheaper and Safer. _Alex |
Re: New Speed Controllers :)
Quote:
|
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:42. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi