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#1
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Re: Brake vs. Coast in the Drive
That's not entirely true. They are all connected to the same vehicle, so putting 2 on Coast puts more electrical load on the 2 on Brake.
But my guess is that they are designed to handle it. |
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#2
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Re: Brake vs. Coast in the Drive
Are the 4 motors being used as 1 motor per wheel (such as mecanum), or 2 motors to control both sides of the robot via a gearbox (like most 6WDs)?
I'm assuming the former, but you can never be sure. To add on to this discussion: What are the advantages and disadvantages for each, with different drive trains? |
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#3
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Re: Brake vs. Coast in the Drive
I don't think it is necessarily a very bad thing, but it will cause some extra battery drain. One motor will be converting the other motors mechanical energy back into electrical energy.
Given the same duty cycle, brake mode and coast mode have different response curves. It is almost like you have them mis-geared together, with one having a higher ratio than the other. Or from another point of view, it is as if you are sending different throttle commands to motors that should be driven in unison. I have to admit that boiling the math into a forum post is a bit beyond me; There are just too many circular dependencies! What it comes down to is that a coasting motor is floating for the part of the cycle that the braking motor is shorted. It is a similar effect as using a victor and a jaguar in parallel. They provides different effective drive voltages, and this results in a fight. |
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#4
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Re: Brake vs. Coast in the Drive
Quote:
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#5
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Re: Brake vs. Coast in the Drive
Quote:
link: http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/at...2&d=1295820836 Last edited by Ether : 10-11-2011 at 17:56. Reason: added links |
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#6
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Re: Brake vs. Coast in the Drive
I'd really love to see a graph of the effect of this hybrid use-case, with feet per second on the X axis and power consumption on the Y axis. Repeat the test for all coast, all brake, and half and half.
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#7
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Re: Brake vs. Coast in the Drive
We ran exactly the hybrid combination you described in our 2-motors-per-transmission drive train this year, and it worked well all year with no problems. We like the moderate braking it provides without being too severe.
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#8
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Re: Brake vs. Coast in the Drive
We did this in 2011 with black jags on CAN bus with no ill effects, our motors were 2 cims per side in tough-boxes(2 motors per gearbox) chained at 14.4 fps.
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#9
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Re: Brake vs. Coast in the Drive
Quote:
What were the advantages/disadvantages of it? Did it do exactly what you want, or were there some things you wished it could do, but didn't? If so, what? Did it put any strain on the motors? By that, I mean did your motors get broken/overheated really quickly? Thanks! |
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#10
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Re: Brake vs. Coast in the Drive
Quote:
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#11
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Re: Brake vs. Coast in the Drive
Thanks!
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