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#31
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
Mark,
Are you looking at the servo signal into the Jag, the waveform on the motor outputs, or both? I'm curious as to what the waveform on the motor output looks like. Is the peak voltage out of the Jaguar (on the scope) 2V less than the battery voltage? Can you post pictures of the scope traces? -David |
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#32
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
I mean it's weirder than I thought it'd be.
The bottom line seems to be that the Jag at 100% provides 2v less power than the Victor. It has nothing to do with the multimeters, they work fine. They might under report the power based on the output waveforms, but the results are certainly usable and close enough for the average FRC team. The PWM signals have the appropriate ranges for each device. They also are fine. The Victor and Jag (via scope) both have the expected designed output waveforms at anything other than full power. The Jag's is a lot more vigorous of course. The Jag does something funny. The power output waveform begins at lowest duty cycle by oscillating in the range, say ~2v (rather than 0v as expected) to battery voltage. As power is increased, the lower bound rises towards the upper bound which remains steady at battery voltage. At ~90% the upper bound of the waveform begins collapsing as the last 10% is transistioned. The upper limit of the waveform begins to drop to meet the still rising lower bound. Although the lower bound stops 2v down and waits for the upper bound to fully collapse to meet it. Eventually, at 100% duty cycle they meet at a point 2v less than the battery voltage. So peak voltage on the Jag output is 2v less than the battery voltage. ---- My scope is an old 40MHz Kenwood that doesn't get used a lot. The multimeters are Craftsman sale specials. Certainly I'd like someone else to repeat the results before saying I didn't make some measurement mistake. Last edited by Mark McLeod : 11-12-2010 at 14:03. |
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#33
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
Quote:
For the record, did you observe this same behavior on more than one Jag? And, are we talking Black or Tan Jags here ? |
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#34
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
Good point.
The odd behavior was on a tan jag. I just tested a black jag and it did not have the problem. The multimeters work fine on the Black Jag too. |
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#35
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
Quote:
Did you measure the battery voltage when the Jaguar was at full output, to make sure something wasn't loading it down? The rising of the low-level voltage is probably happening because there's no load, but it'll be a good idea to check that. |
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#36
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
I monitored the battery voltage throughout the tests and it didn't drop.
I will try again with motor loads tomorrow since I've come this far. I don't know if the tan jags have different rev levels, so that originals have a problem but later revisions do not. Last edited by Mark McLeod : 10-12-2010 at 20:20. |
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#37
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
Mark,
I am guessing you are still measuring open circuit on the controllers. The FAN5109 gate driver used in the grey Jags has "adaptive gate drive" and so maybe responding to the lack of a load. The bootstrap cap might be having some effect as well and there is feedback to the micro from each of the bootstrap circuits. (VbootA and VbootB) Are you hanging the scope across the output of the controller or are you connecting the probe ground to the negative power supply input and then connecting the probe to one of the output terminals? |
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#38
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
Yes, these measurements were still taken with no load on the speed controller outputs. I'll apply loads tomorrow to see what that looks like.
Usually I ran with the probe ground to the negative power supply input because I was hopping around testing both the Victor and Jag speed controllers as well as the PWM inputs to both at various times. But I also tested with the probe ground to one of the output terminals and saw no difference. The multimeters were applied just across the speed controller outputs. P.S. The other caveat is that I could by chance be working with a damaged tan jag. I'll test with others to see if it's a broad issue. Update: Nope, I tested three tan/gray jaguars and they all exhibited the same odd response. They were never-been-used 2010 KOP Jags. Last edited by Mark McLeod : 11-12-2010 at 13:42. |
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#39
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
^Reported
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#40
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
I tested with a globe motor load and the oddity disappears, so the odd collapsing waveform and the 2v drop seems to just be a characteristic of the adaptive gate Al brought up and the lack of a load as Alan suggested. It shouldn't affect normal operation.
There was a .15v drop through the Jag at 100%, but my battery is down a bit so that's not a full measurement. The gray/tan jag gives full power at 100% with a load, and 2v less without a load. With a load the waveform is the typical duty cycle switching between 0 and battery voltage for increasingly longer times as the throttle changes. The CIM and the window motors show a cleaner 100% than the globe motor for some reason. Up to 100% everything about the power output waveform is identical. At 100% I see the periodic tiny drop to 0v on the CIM and Window motors, but for the globe the scope displays a messier plot. The CIM also drew the battery down a bit more than the others of course. Last edited by Mark McLeod : 11-12-2010 at 14:26. |
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#41
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
Quote:
I ask because Gdeaver reported in an earlier post that the Black Jags use locked anti-phase switching. |
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#42
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
The black Jag behaves straight-forward that way with or without a load.
A long time at 0v/short time at max volts, progressively shorter time spent at 0v, until it's full time at max volts. The top end dips only in response to dropping battery voltage as the load draws more power. |
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#43
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
So this whole thread just the result of measurement error?
Put simply, it would be physically impossible for a Jaguar (or a Victor) to have an actual 2V drop while driving a motor and not be on fire: It is WAY too much heat to dissipate. |
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#44
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
Quote:
I wonder why infineon claims each power transistor can dissipate 100 Watts? Anyways, I would appreciate getting back to the original topic. I recently obtained a Jaguar that has this problem. (I'm not sure what was done to it.) The only damage I see is around the traces on ONE of the MOSFETs. However, I get no voltage both in Forward and Reverse. |
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#45
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Re: Grey Jaguar No Power Out
I think the discussion was fruitful, and produced a useful bit of knowledge: An inexpensive multimeter (affordable by any team), set to read DC volts, should read the same voltage at the power inputs and the motor outputs of a Jaguar (either tan or black, or a Victor) when the Jag (or Vic) is being commanded full throttle and has a motor connected.This knowledge is useful for helping teams to diagnose/troubleshoot Jag/Vic problems. Thanks Mark for the effort you put into running the tests. Last edited by Ether : 12-12-2010 at 03:36. |
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