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#1
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
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Last edited by Ether : 19-12-2013 at 21:41. |
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#2
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
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#3
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
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To be clear, the derivation assumes the motors will be used to drive a load (like a drivetrain or heavy arm for example) with a reflected inertia much larger than the rotor inertia, so the dynamic contribution of the rotor inertia can be ignored. |
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#4
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
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I agree that you can calculate a stall torque, stall current, free speed, resistance, and free current for the motor combination, but just because those numbers may be meaningful does not necessitate that the single motor equations are true. In other words, just because you have formulas for combined stall torque, stall current, free speed, resistance, and free current, why is it that these equations are still valid for values of V, I, omega, and Torque other than those at stall torque and free speed: V = I*R + omega / Kv Torque = Kt * I I may be missing something, but I have not seen any proof that these equations continue to hold, and I like to see proofs . |
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
Many teams that put 3 motors on a drivetrain gearbox want to know the acceleration characteristics when full voltage is applied to all 3 motors. Finding the single-motor "equivalent" motor curve permits the use of existing spreadsheets and models that don't support multiple mixed-motors on the gearbox. Quote:
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
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#7
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
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What I am wondering about is your statement that Quote:
I agree that you can calculate numbers for free speed, stall current, and stall torque for the combined motors. It makes intuitive sense why you could use the single motor equations, given that you can find a Kv, Kt, and R, how do you prove (I don't necessarily disagree; I just don't agree) that T = I * Kt and V = I * R + omega / Kv [Edit: To be clear, how do you prove that these statements apply for the combined motors; I already know that they apply to a single motor] I presume that I have been unclear in my questions, because I have been asking essentially the same question, phrased differently, the last couple posts. |
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#8
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
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It's straightforward algebra. It follows naturally from the assumptions that 1) all three motor speeds are the same (since they are mechanically linked) and 2) the individual motor torques are additive. As you can see, the combination behaves exactly like a single motor with torque = Tstall*(1-Speed/Sfree), where: Tstall = T1s + T2s + T3s .... and .... Sfree = (T1s + T2s + T3s)/(T1s/S1f + T2s/S2f + T3s/S3f) Last edited by Ether : 20-12-2013 at 02:00. |
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#9
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
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#10
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
Yes; those are what those constants should be (and what the resistance is). But as for Kt, it makes sense for it to be that (I say as much in the attachment to my previous post). Prove it. I may be sounding a bit picky, but I really dislike taking anything or granted that I can't see the derivation of. And I can't see how you derived that Kt other than to say it is combined motors' stall torque divided by their combined stall current. But why is it valid to say that? Why do Torque and Current still relate linearly? Intuitively, it makes sense. However, I have not been able to figure it out with actual equations.
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#11
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
Worthy of note: If you combine motors with substantially mismatched free speeds, the free current for the combination can be large, and thus the value of Kt for the combination at high speeds will be less than the value calculated at stall. I think this may be what James was trying to say. edit: If you look at the last graph, you'll see that the 550 probably won't last long in this setup. Last edited by Ether : 21-12-2013 at 14:29. Reason: added note and new graphs |
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#12
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
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#13
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
Creating a tool to help with this problem has been one of my back burner projects for a while now. I was never satisfied with just matching free speeds for different motors as there are many different ways to match motors, including matching free speed, stall torque, max power, max efficiency and matching slope. Depending on the application, you may want to choose a different matching condition.
As for the tool itself, I've worked through many of the thought processes mentioned in this thread and have a ~90% complete tool that combines up to 3 motors at any quantity using different operating voltages and fuses and matched by the conditions mentioned above. I then give the user the choice of plotting the torque or speed on the x-axis as well as giving the choice of plotting the super motor. I've never gotten the workbook to a fully releasable version, which is why I haven't posted it yet, but it seems prudent to post it now. Plus, this conversation has me motivated to finish it through. I just uploaded the latest version to my motor performance white paper: http://www.chiefdelphi.com/media/papers/2292 Last edited by akeisic : 21-12-2013 at 14:34. |
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#14
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
Ether,
Joe Johnson and I worked through this for two motors some time ago. Joe had a post on it back in either 2002 or 2003. His terminology and mine were different, but recently I made sure our two analysis methods came to the same conclusion. They did and yours matches our conclusions, but adds one more motor. We did this analysis to try to kill the myth that you had to match free speeds. Joe went into detail about loading conditions that will cause one motor to actually be pushing the other, therefore the slower motor would contribute negative work to the system. Again, your analysis corroborates our conclusions back then. I attached my hand calculations to prove Joe and my analysis methods were the same. I now use Joe's terminology because it is easier to put in Excel. Paul |
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#15
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Re: combined free speed of 3 motors
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