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#1
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remote control air regulator
Any one ever used a remote controlled air regulator? Something like the Parker EPP4 series?
TIA |
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#2
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Re: remote control air regulator
Have not used it, but ....
You would still need a regulator mechanically set to 60 psi. Make sure it does not trap air in your system when the system is vented. |
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#3
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Re: remote control air regulator
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Also R82 refers to a "single primary adjustable, relieving, pressure regulator". It does not say how it must be adjusted. I'm not arguing the point, just trying to understand the scope of the applicable rules. Maybe it is worth a GDC query. Last edited by wireties : 31-03-2016 at 23:43. Reason: to be more descriptive |
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#4
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Re: remote control air regulator
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Last edited by FrankJ : 01-04-2016 at 08:49. |
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#5
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Re: remote control air regulator
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Reading through that, you're also going to have a fun boot-up. Lost control signal means it drops the regulated pressure to 0, so your system is going to be unpressurized while the roboRIO is booting. I can see some uses for regulating catapult power and such, I think 488 effectively made an exploded version of this for their catapult in 2012, but I don't think it should pass muster for a main regulator. Last edited by Kevin Sevcik : 01-04-2016 at 09:05. Reason: Misunderstood the regulator operation |
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#6
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Re: remote control air regulator
This would highly concern me If used as a primary regulator. Used as a secondary regulator, I could accept much more easily myself.
That said, something like this is far enough outside of what we normally see that I would probably call Al and/ or HQ to get support on making the call. If anyone wants to use one, I would STRONGLY recommend getting it out there on the Q&A as early as possible. |
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#7
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Re: remote control air regulator
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So, what happens when the Main Breaker is hit? Which is lost first? Control Signal or Power? Let's say the Control Signal is lost first, then the Regulator becomes set to 0 PSI. That means it is trapping air. If you have the vent plug on the low pressure side, then the EPP4 will not let the high pressure air pass. If the vent plug is on the high pressure side, then you need to make sure it lets air pass in reverse. |
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#8
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Re: remote control air regulator
The valve requires power is operate. As soon as it looses power all internal valves close. (per data sheet). So with a simultaneous loss of control signal and power, you might see it start to vent, but is would quickly fail closed. The actual pressure would depend a lot on the volume of the downstream side
Actually the data sheet shows that it is not relieving regulator so that specific model shouldn't be legal as a primary regulator. The relieving function requires active control of the regulator. The power failure mode (main switch off) would be to stop controlling presssure & not release down stream pressure when upstream is vented and vice versa preventing proper operation of a single point vent valve. (Maybe this would be a place for clever use of a check valve to allow the downstream to vent to the upstream side.) Another complication is the 24 VDC supply voltage. That would mean powering it through the PCM, which disables when robot is disabled or a custom circuit. Last edited by FrankJ : 01-04-2016 at 11:11. |
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#9
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Re: remote control air regulator
To clarify my statement for everyone, you have to really look at the diagram on how the regulator works. There's two servo controlled valves in the regulator. Those valves control pressure in a chamber above the plunger in the regulator. That chamber acts like the spring in a mechanical regulator. Here's what happens in the different situations, I think:
Power loss: Servo valves close and stop operating. Chamber maintains pressure. Regulator does the standard relieving regulator thing at last setpoint pressure. Control signal loss: Per data sheet, exhausting servo valve opens, sets chamber pressure to 0 psi, which makes it like a fully closed mechanical regulator. 0 psi output. Power loss and Control signal loss: Probably depends on the order and mechanics of those servo valves. I'd guess the likely outcome is a slight decrease in setpoint, and then it maintains that pressure. I guess if the command signal drifts up before power loss, maybe a slight increase in setpoint? The latter would be the most concerning for me. I wouldn't want this as a main regulator in case a weird wiring fault, short-circuit, or something put a bad voltage on the control line. It looks like 5V is the midpoint in the 1-145 psi range, which would be ~70 psi, so a wiring short on your analog output would put you out of spec. A bad wiring short might put it at max range and dump 120 psi into your system. With mechanical regulators, inspectors can at least be fairly confident that once they're set, they're not going to randomly change. That's not really the case with an electronically controlled regulator. |
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#10
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Re: remote control air regulator
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Just thinking out loud... |
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#11
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Re: remote control air regulator
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I'm not a strong advocate here - just playing it out, exploring the tech. I posed a Q&A, we'll see what they say. |
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#12
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Re: remote control air regulator
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#13
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Re: remote control air regulator
You can't exceed the desired voltage from a properly operating passive circuit. However, it's not a fail-safe. You can't ignore the potential loss of the ground connection going to the bottom of the resistor ladder, or the potential shorting of the "top" resistor.
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#14
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Re: remote control air regulator
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Our resetting breakers are a more complicated passive circuit and we use those to protect many things on the robot. Heck, the power wires running to all our electronics are more complex "lumped" circuits. And an open ground connection results in no controlling voltage and the minimum output pressure. Still the worst fanciful failure imaginable gets you ~70PSI, not 120PSI, as the highest possible potential in the passive control circuit is 5VDC. Last edited by wireties : 01-04-2016 at 15:29. |
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#15
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Re: remote control air regulator
You're doing a reasonable job of considering some failure modes, but you seem to be dismissing what I think are the likely failures, and you definitely haven't addressed the worst case ones.
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You can't just invoke the laws of physics and say nothing will go wrong. You have to see where the laws take you when your assumptions are violated. The robot rules regarding pneumatic systems are very specific, and they do a good job keeping pressures at the appropriate levels unless many things go wrong at once. I don't see an electronically-controlled primary regulator managing to fit in that framework, because it can let full pressure through with just a single failure. |
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