View Single Post
  #12   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 01-04-2016, 13:00
Kevin Sevcik's Avatar
Kevin Sevcik Kevin Sevcik is offline
(Insert witty comment here)
FRC #0057 (The Leopards)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Rookie Year: 1998
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 3,659
Kevin Sevcik has a reputation beyond reputeKevin Sevcik has a reputation beyond reputeKevin Sevcik has a reputation beyond reputeKevin Sevcik has a reputation beyond reputeKevin Sevcik has a reputation beyond reputeKevin Sevcik has a reputation beyond reputeKevin Sevcik has a reputation beyond reputeKevin Sevcik has a reputation beyond reputeKevin Sevcik has a reputation beyond reputeKevin Sevcik has a reputation beyond reputeKevin Sevcik has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via AIM to Kevin Sevcik Send a message via Yahoo to Kevin Sevcik
Re: remote control air regulator

Quote:
Originally Posted by wireties View Post
The +5V can go through a simple resistor ladder. Unless we discount the laws of physics one can't get something greater than the 60PSI setpoint from a passive control circuit. And mechanical regulators move all the time, they are not impervious to the effects of vibration whereas the electrically controlled regulator basically is not.

I'm not a strong advocate here - just playing it out, exploring the tech. I posed a Q&A, we'll see what they say.
Yeah, except we all know how electronics go wrong on our robots. Swarf, plugging things in wrong, nicked wires. The main regulator is supposed to be a safety valve for the pneumatic system, like one of the breakers in the PDP. Once the wiring is verified, it takes a fair bit of ingenuity to bypass one of those breakers. Even more to bypass them all. With the electronic regulator, I'd be concerned that you're significantly lowering the ingenuity level to bypass the main regulator.
__________________
The difficult we do today; the impossible we do tomorrow. Miracles by appointment only.

Lone Star Regional Troubleshooter
Reply With Quote