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| View Poll Results: Favorite Motor Controller | |||
| Talon SRX |
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58 | 49.57% |
| Victor SP |
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29 | 24.79% |
| Jaguar |
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4 | 3.42% |
| Spark |
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13 | 11.11% |
| SD540 |
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13 | 11.11% |
| Voters: 117. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#1
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Motor Controllers
So this is a question that I have had for a few years now, and never really gotten a good answer to it:
Which motor controller is the best for which situation? Meaning is there specific applications were one controller is better then the other, or is there just one motor controller which is the best, period? This question has resurfaced for me especially with the creation of the new motor controllers such as the spark. Thanks, JP Co-Captain Team 806 |
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#2
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Re: Motor Controllers
In 2013 we liked the Talon because chips and aluminum dust kept destroying our Jags. We also like the 888 because the fan is already installed.
Going forward we are trying out the new Talons with a CAN bus. Would like to here from others on how they connect the Talon green and yellow CAN wires together. Vex sells a nice device but it's expensive and it takes up a lot of room. Dave |
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#3
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Re: Motor Controllers
Quote:
![]() They are locking. They are cheap. And they are small. Simply awesome. Crimping guide here explains how to crimp them (and APPs as well): https://www.ebikes.ca/documents/GrinConnectorGuide.pdf They are just small enough that they are a royal pain to crimp though. EDIT: We got ours from here because I know someone will ask: http://www.aliexpress.com/item/Free-...352919222.html Last edited by marshall : 22-12-2015 at 21:52. |
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#4
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Re: Motor Controllers
Let's look at this logically:
-There's no reason for a Jaguar to be anyone's favorite -Some people have chosen the Jaguar as their favorite Therefore, there is there must be some fraction of people who are answering randomly. We'll assume that the people who choose randomly choose each option with equal probability. -At this time we see 4/22 people have chosen "Jaguar" as their favorite. -There are 5 different choices for the poll Therefore 4/22*5 should give us the fraction of people who are choosing randomly. This comes out to approximately 90%. QED ![]() |
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#5
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Re: Motor Controllers
Jaguar is my least favorite, but I couldn't let that challenge pass. I came up with three reasons for Jag to be someone's favorite (I left out nostalgia and thinks like being the biggest, heaviest, and having the smallest continuous current capability, and having a nonstandard PWM response):
Edit: Quote:
.Last edited by GeeTwo : 26-12-2015 at 23:50. |
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#6
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Re: Motor Controllers
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![]() I am waiting for the single IC speed control module. It is coming. Just a chip with bolts on the top like an IGBT and an electrically isolated metal plate on the bottom. Last edited by techhelpbb : 26-12-2015 at 19:08. |
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#7
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Re: Motor Controllers
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Heat dissipation is a big issue here, unless you're talking about replacing the spike rather than a speed controller. The amount of electrical isolation demanded by FIRST is also a steep challenge. I expect brush-less motors and controllers to be FRC legal before single-chip brushed motor speed controllers. I'm not holding my breath on either one. Last edited by GeeTwo : 26-12-2015 at 20:04. |
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#8
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Re: Motor Controllers
Quote:
http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...52&postcount=1 I used to play .mod MIDI files on a parallel port justing just a resistor ladder and a capacitor to couple still have that stuff somewhere and that was on a Intel 80386 DX 16MHz. That's complex analog audio at up to 15kHz. So yes I am sure if I sat there with some C code I could control several FRC PWM speed control on FreeDOS. I would not attempt this in on any Windows NT kernel because you need a kernel mode driver. It is likely possible on BSD/Linux. DOS runs in real mode. You will not block the timer interrupts or other interrupts doing this. I used to run this silly trick even with EMM386 running and Windows 3.11. HighTreason take it away old school... https://youtu.be/4KUdBgg8Oe4 Then again....I still maintain Commodore 64 code I wrote....so I am pretty dusty. Quote:
.The issue is merely distributing the heat away from the parts that get hot. Either make them more efficient or make the removal of heat more efficient. Same reason we could fill power supplies up with canola oil....as long as you do not let the pressure build or reach the flash point it will not conduct but it will make the heat distribute around (do not try at home kids). That silly trick allowed almost double the wattage from a power supply. By the way - TDI in Hackettstown, NJ was selling a design like this actively before AstroDyne bought them. There was a time when people argued no FRC speed control would last without a fan either. Power MOSFETs keep getting better and better. Lower the switching losses and on state resistance enough and the heat dissipation will follow. Just please do not do it with silver in the semiconductor die (let's just say it makes the power semiconductors go bad eventually and leave it there). Last edited by techhelpbb : 27-12-2015 at 01:10. |
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#9
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Re: Motor Controllers
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I think you made my point better than I did. |
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#10
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Re: Motor Controllers
The actual problem is not actually the heat:
It is the whether doing that tight integration is financially workable given the market. A massive power transistor has a much wider market than FRC and a much higher price point. However with all the interest in drones and places like SuperDroidRobotics selling kits that are FRC size like for plows and snowblowers...the market is growing. I suspect back in the day when audio receivers were individual power transistors many people also thought they would not be surpassed by integrated modules. Odds are if you tear down a retail home reciever you find modules in plenty of them. |
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#11
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Re: Motor Controllers
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#12
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Re: Motor Controllers
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#13
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Re: Motor Controllers
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#14
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Re: Motor Controllers
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We used these last season. They're toolless, and we've never had a problem with them falling off or breaking. They're designed for larger wires than the CAN wires, but they still work fine. They're a little bulky, but not big enough to cause problems. |
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#15
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Re: Motor Controllers
My personal favorite is the Victor 888, but I chose the Spark because it does basically the same thing, costs about half, and it's still available. I would say the only case where I wouldn't use the Spark or Victor is if I wanted to do built-in PID control, where I would use the Talon SRX.
I've used Jaguars a number of times (against my will) and all I can say is NEVER AGAIN. They take up a ton of room, are prone to breaking (I had one that screeched at me), using CAN is practically impossible, and therefore it doesn't do much more than the Victor 888 or Spark. Can you not just crimp or solder them (cue debate on crimping vs soldering)? |
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