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#31
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
The motor I have here at work failed in a way that it opened the case and exposed the interior of the inductor. It is a 3.9 microhenry RF choke in series with the motor. The shunt cap is .039 microfarad. The motor interior looks OK but the choke is open circuit. It would appear that the thermal protection is a good fix. Please stand by...
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#32
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor, excellent post
The response times for circuit breakers are typically much longer than for equivalent-value fuses. If you go this route (and if it's determined to be FRC2011-legal), make sure to check that the response time of the device is within whatever time you decide is acceptable. Based on what I'm reading, it sounds like it would need to trip within 1 sec @ 7A (assuming one per motor) to prevent the "smoking" issue.
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#33
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
Alex,
The trip characteristic for the snap action breakers would likely require something like the 1 amp type. A 3 amp breaker may never trip on 7 amps. |
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#34
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
Quote:
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#35
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
By now, everyone should have read Team Update #5 where the thermal protected wire for the Tetrix motors is now approved for your use. Enjoy.
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#36
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
I hope they have a lot in stock!
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#38
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
how do i post my own post? i need help
please help me |
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#39
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
I burnt a motor today using a 3:1 gear ratio (not counting gearbox). The smoke came from the gearbox, but both the gearbox and motor smelled. By my calculations, our robot's fastest speed would occur at a 6.48:1 gear ratio (not counting gearbox). I checked my calculations, but why does the tetrix motor smoke like this?
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#40
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
Your motor is smoking because you are stalling it and drawing too much current. Don't expect it last long - and have someone else check your calculations.
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#41
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
Could anyone using the Tetrix fuse protected motor power cable answer a couple questions:
1. Does it prevent burning up the Tetrix motors (eg. live up to its promise)? 2. Does the fuse act like a circuit breaker (eg. when it cools down it works again) or do you need to replace the fuse/power cable once it has prevented a motor stall ($9 vs. $30 for motor)? 3. If it is a "fuse" that is destroyed while preventing damage to the motor; can just the fuse (hopefully less that $9) be replaced on this cable without violating the FIRST rules? 4. Is this the cable people are referring to regarding thermal protection? Thanks. |
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#42
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
We recieved our fuse protected power cable and it has so far worked very well. It does not use a fuse, it uses some sort of solid state circuit that inturrupts the power. The circuit then resets after a short time.
Very good investment. |
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#43
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
Quote:
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#44
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
Yamil,
It is an inductor. Search for my other post on this subject. I give the values and a method for repairing a motor with an open inductor. This is not a competition legal fix, but one that will give you motors to use for prototyping and practice. |
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#45
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Re: pic: burnt up TETRIX motor
Quote:
And besides, now that it's been identified as an inductor and not a current-limiting resistor, there's a pretty good practical reason to retain it (over and above what the rules dictate). |
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