View Single Post
  #18   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 06-08-2007, 13:45
Qbranch Qbranch is offline
wow college goes fast.
AKA: Alex
FRC #1024 (Kil-A-Bytes)
Team Role: Alumni
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Rookie Year: 2006
Location: Indianapolis
Posts: 1,174
Qbranch has a reputation beyond reputeQbranch has a reputation beyond reputeQbranch has a reputation beyond reputeQbranch has a reputation beyond reputeQbranch has a reputation beyond reputeQbranch has a reputation beyond reputeQbranch has a reputation beyond reputeQbranch has a reputation beyond reputeQbranch has a reputation beyond reputeQbranch has a reputation beyond reputeQbranch has a reputation beyond repute
Re: HomeMade Motor Controllers

Quote:
Originally Posted by John Gutmann View Post
so a MOSFET is like the same thing but only, i guess you would say safer?
The main difference between your PNP/NPN transistors and P-/N-Channel (MOS)FETs is that standard transistor are "voltage" effect while Field Effect Transistos are more of "current" effect devices.

FET devices function much like variable resistors... their spreading resistance allows them to evenly share currents unlike transistors which, when paralleled, tend to put much more (or all) of the current on a single device while the others sit idle. A FET, since you can think of paralleling FETS like paralleling resistors of equal value, transmits curret equally between all of the devices in parallel.

One disadvantage of FETs is that they have strange drive characteristics... they are difficult to turn on and off. Thankfully FETs have become much more civilized and inideof most FETs many of the suppression diodes that were once external are now internal... (i suggest IR for FETs, they make the most friendly ones).

IR(InternationalRectifier) also makes some drive ICs which can handle driving your gates on and off for you, saving some circuit knowledge.

Also, using a PIC to drive your circuit helps as well. Many 16/18 series PICmicros incorporate ECCP peripherals which can directly drive (in hardware) the four lines for a full H-bridge.

If you want more detail... just let me know. Hope that answers some ?'s.

-q
__________________
Electrical Engineer Illini
1024 | Programmer '06, '07, '08 | Driver '08