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#1
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Victor Brakes
How do u hook a victor up so that you can reverse the polarity and cause the motors to stop. Could this cause a type of brake?Could there be a way to include it into the programming so that we can control it from the control board?
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#2
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Re: Victor Brakes
All Victors except the SC (Spin Control) versions are capable of running motors forward and reverse. PWM values* of 128-254 run a motor forward, values of 126-0 run the motor in reverse. Yes, running a motor in the opposite direction that it's turning will rapidly stop the motor. Of course it won't just stop at zero speed, it'll start turning in the opposite direction unless you put it in neutral.
Also, if a motor is turning full power full speed in one direction, and you instantly change it to full power in the opposite direction, you run a good chance of blowing a fuse or breaker somewhere. This draws a LOT of current. *There's a deadband of 12 or so around 127 where it's still in neutral, but I can't remember the exact size. It's probably actually 134-254 and 122-0. |
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#3
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Re: Victor Brakes
Also, the Victors have a Brake/Coast jumper (check the manual) when this jumper is set to Brake and the victor is in the neutral range, it will short the leads of the motor causing a resistance to motion. I believe you can somehow hook the brake coast jumper pins to the robot controller to have selectable braking.
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#4
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Re: Victor Brakes
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#5
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Re: Victor Brakes
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Nope, guess I was remembering something else... but anyway... check this thread out? http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/sh...906#post449906 Last edited by Cody Carey : 25-10-2006 at 20:24. |
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#6
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Re: Victor Brakes
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#7
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Re: Victor Brakes
It should also be noted that there is a function called dynamic braking, in which the Victor shorts it's output creating a short across the motor windings. This causes drag on the motor that is proportional to the speed in which it is spinning. It only engages when the Victor receives a neutral signal.
It is controlled by a jumper setting, and there is round about method of remotely turning this on and off. It can't hold a motor stopped on it's own, but it will slow down a free spinning motor. Some teams use dynamic braking on the victors that control their main drive motors. It has the effect of eliminating any coasting a robot might otherwise have. Most teams, however, do not use dynamic brakes, feeling that the sudden stops produce more strain on the drive train and victors then is worth it. More common uses are for motors controlling long arms that otherwise 'droop' when no power is applied. Could you describe what you want a brake for? Edit- The method that I know of for remotely turning the dynamic brake on and off is to wire the jumper pins to a limit switch, and toggling the switch with a servo (or other mechanism). I don't know exactly how the pins function, so I couldn't say what the result of applying voltage from a digital out might be. Can you simply cause digital out to create a short? If so, that would be a much simpler way of doing it, although possibly illegal. -Andy A. Last edited by Andy A. : 25-10-2006 at 20:29. Reason: Elboration |
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#8
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Re: Victor Brakes
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#9
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Re: Victor Brakes
This site shows how to control the brake/coast setting from the RC.
http://www.ifirobotics.com/forum/vie...956098 63b6c6 |
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#10
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Re: Victor Brakes
It's also important to note that the retarding torque provided by dynamic braking is directly proportional to the speed the motor is rotating at.
Trick Question: Assume a frictionless CIM motor, with some internal resistance, spinning at, oh, 100 rpm. When does it stop spinning if you turn on dynamic braking? The answer should tell you why dynamic braking isn't necessarily useful. |
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#11
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I don't know if this thought will help, but what about regenerative braking?
I figure(correct me if you see errors), put a single-pole, double throw contact switch between motor, victor and leads to diodes then to a battery. By switching to the leads with diodes the motors are turned into generators by the forward motion of the robot. The diodes are so the battery doesn't back into the motors causing them to run at full. |
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#12
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Re: Victor Brakes
Quote:
Quote:
Last edited by Tristan Lall : 25-10-2006 at 23:05. |
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#13
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Re: Victor Brakes
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to replace the jumper, and control the relay with the RC. |
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#14
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Re: Victor Brakes
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As far as I know, this rule was uniformly interpreted as written during 2006 inspections, meaning that the use of a Spike or other relay to trigger the brake/coast settings would not have been permitted. |
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#15
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Re: Victor Brakes
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Eric |
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