Quote:
Originally posted by KenWittlief
Its ok if the high speed motor is always engaged - if you know the speed of the robot, you can contol the power to each one seperately - and you wouldnt 'lean' on the high speed motor until your speed was within its desired range.
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Couldn't you establish a correlation, in programming, between the output values of your high speed motor and your high torque motor?
So, rather than operating the high speed motor at near-stall loads under 12V, you could 'artificially' slow it down by applying less voltage via the program.
The free-speed we associate with each motor is for 12V only. If we reduce the voltage to the motor, we reduce it's free-speed. So, if I understand how this might work and what you are saying correctly, it's possible, I think, to make it so the high-speed motor sees little load at low speeds by matching it's potential free-speed to the actual speed, under-load, of the high torque motor.
Does that make sense?
Edit: I really like this idea.