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#1
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Spikes2
A few questions really..... i can't access the usfirst webpage from college( "access forbidden"?"!)
so i have a few questions... Firstly How do you wire them up? Secondly Do you get some in the kit of parts? Thirdly Would it suffice to use a simple relay from the battery to stop the speedcontrollers being overloaded backwards? |
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#2
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Re: Spikes
first to wire them up, look at the spike. you will see four metal slits for crimps to go. OK look at the symbol and the letter. if there is a -M that means this go to the wire of the negative side of your component or motor. and then +m for the positive side. then on the other side of the spike there is a 12v. this 12v goes to the positive side of the circuit board and the last slit goes to the negative side of the circuit board. that is how you wire that up.
second yes you do get the spike in the kit of parts. |
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#3
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Re: Spikes
Here's the online manual from innovation first...
http://innovationfirst.com/FIRSTRobo...sersManual.pdf |
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#4
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Re: Spikes
thanks for quick reply....
do spikes blow up like victors?! we bkeep blowing thme up.... |
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#5
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Re: Spikes
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#6
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Re: Spikes
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Do not wire a Spike in-line with a Victor. Among other potential problems, the Spike can only handle 20A of current while the Victors can handle over 40A current spikes. Please check your wiring of your robot for short circuits and make sure your wiring matches the 2004 Power Distribution Document. Under normal robot operation, you should not have any major issues with the Innovation FIRST hardware. We cannot help you if you don't give us enough details on how you have your system setup or the problems you are facing. Steve |
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#7
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Re: Spikes
i'm not bad mouthing them or anything...... just keep having problems iwth the victors........... the robot is wired to the exact power requirements as per that doc.... we have tried rewiring the board....
The latest explosion was oneof the transistors on the topside of the victor.... we were running it with no load on its side to show the system to some new people. it blew up , and stopped working in one direction, whilt taking it back to storage , it blew again and has since stopped moving that wheel. I found a topic that says about wiring up a spike to run both ways... i'll try and get the software guy to write the code for that. What sort of system setup info do you require? The electronics are all mounted on a board. I'll try and take a digital camera and photo it for you... as far as i know , tehre are no schematics for the electronics... Last edited by Denman : 10-11-2004 at 10:15. Reason: oops accidnetly hit send |
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#8
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Re: Spikes
A couple of years ago, we had a system where we kept blowing up Victors. One would blow, and we would replace it. That one would blow, and we would replace it again.
After doing this costly replacement routine a few times, we found that one of the wires between the motor and the Victor was contacting the robot frame, providing a nasty short. It took us a while to find it, as it was intermittent. After a few continuity checks, we found the culprit, islotated the short, and fixed the problem. No more Victors were fried. Denman... maybe you have an intermittent short to the frame, or a unseen short to some other grounding device. Trace those wires, make sure they are all insulated and isolated. Good luck, Andy B. |
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#9
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Re: Spikes
i'll go and have a look now.... be back in bout half an hour
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#10
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Re: Spikes
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By following the IFI wiring guidelines (and good electrical practice) we have managed to fry two Victors in five years and no Spikes. The first victor died because of a grounding short such as Andy describes. Since then we have attached the victors to frame through plastic screws. The second died when a drill motor brush came loose and shorted the victor output under load. We have found the IFI hardware to be pretty bullet proof when used correctly. Although it is possible that you have a bad unit, it is much more likely that you have a wiring fault, especially if you have blown more than one unit in the same configuration. Good luck. |
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#11
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Re: Spikes
sorry, i said i would be back in half an hour... then someone managed to make the battery catch fire.... (the wire we are using for our forklift is metallic, and it fell off onto the battery terminals...........) luckily it didn't damage anything.
Al, i had a look, and yes, the speed controllers are wired up into the motors So i suppose i just remove them and wire the speed controllers directly to the motors. And thus it is nothing to do with "putting a back current on the speed controlllers (ref our mentor )) |
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#12
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Re: Spikes
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Sounds pretty bad. Did the battery catch fire or just the wire? Possibility for really bad fumes if the battery. Was anyone hurt? Are you saying yes to controllers wired to spikes and motors? |
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#13
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as for your problem from what i can tell on this thread this is your setup Battery = Breaker = Fuse Box = 40/30 amp Fuse = Victor 88* = Spike = Motor which is Incorrect, when running a motor (drill, CIMs, FP .. etc) you can only have Victors running and taking the load of your motors. the Correct Circuit would look like Battery = Breaker = Fuse Box = 40/30 Amp Fuse = Victor 88* = Motor Spikes are only to be used on Things that require only on and off commands such as your Compressor , Silenoids, and some of the lower end Motors that dont require variable speed. That Setup Is non Negotiable, despite what may feel to be a better setup, or more efficient Short Cuts , such is Using Higher Gauge wires to lower resistance, or using the incorrect fuses to allow more power to flow in, are unstable practices that may back fire at unpredictable times, FIRST knows whats it is doing and has its guide lines reflecting functionality and safety all in one. If your going to be showing Rookies how to setup electronics you must make sure they learn it the FIRST way first, then they can think outside of the box all they like while following the rules. as for other aspects that of victor that have nothing to do with anythign else on the board that u might wanna consider for your Solution Brake/ Coast - lil Jumper on the Victor (If im wrong plz correct me, i know lil about the workings of this function) I believe the Brake Function Causes the Victor to Draw Power to counter the Motors Movement and stall it. perhaps you may wanna try and see if switching the jumper changes anything, they are standard computer jumpers so if for some reason you have lost yours, any old computers mother board and some old ISA cards can povide you with the jumper. Calibration - The lil Depression Switch you can only get to with a needle You mentioned something about only going one direction? The Victors Require Calibration to mesh up with the calibration on your joysticks. The OI has a range of -126 to 126 (from what i remember) for the joysticks, -126 being fastest backward speed and 126 being Fastest Forward Speed and ZERO (the Mid point Number) would be your neutral (Using the dashboard program from IFI can help u calibrate in a snap) anyways your joy stick could be off center yet your victor thinks it is centered so this off set with provoke the victor to run oppsite direction of the offset, if the offset is incredibly bad your ranges could be Fastest Foward Speed 126 and your neautral -126 (-126 becoming your new Zero)... that means that since there nothing under -126 then you simply cant go backward because that would be out of range. that could explain your one direction problem. Ive had times when Victors All sudden Need to be Recalibrate for seemingly no reason. it could be a short causing the victor to reset to its original position which may Completely be off with your controls (Calibrate Both together!!!!) For instructions on Recalibrating see the Victor Manual. it tends to be a two person operation. so get someone who will not move the controls while this occurs and move them when they Have to. last Recommendations -Get a Compressed Air Can and clean all your parts from metal and other debris. -Check all your crimps and solders, any bad job on any of these can cause power loss and heavy resistance even if its just one crimp and even if its just one cable. My Roll Of Pennys -Osc- |
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#14
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Re: Spikes
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