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#1
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Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
What is the cheapest and easiest way to slow down a permanent magnet 12VDC motor (think Van Door motor)? I was thinking of wiring a halogen lightbulb in series.
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#2
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
Big resistor?
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#3
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
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Or are you talking about limiting the unloaded speed? Just give it less voltage. Quote:
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#4
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
I need to electrically slow down the motor. Sorry I wasn't clear on that. I only have a 12VDC supply. The motor will probably pull something like 4 amps continuous its application. It will be running continuously for maybe 5 hours. Wouldn't the resistor get very hot and need lots of cooling?
I have two or three of these motors I'll be using in the system. I'm wondering if I could get what I want by just wiring them all in series. Also, would anyone happen to know what is inside this box? Thanks. |
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#5
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
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At full speed, the circuit allows the full positive and negative cycles of the AC to pass. When you turn down the speed dial, the circuit will only pass a equal portion of the positive and negative cycles. Say you only want to provide the motor ~50% power, the circuit would pass 4.15 ms of the negative cycle as it approaches 0Vac and 4.15ms of the positive cycle as it moves away from 0Vac. This adds up to 8.3ms per cycle, half of the full 16.6ms normal AC cycle. I really hope that helps. This again is where "A picture paints a thousand words" really is true. |
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#6
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
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That sounds analogous to the Pulse Width Modulation we currently use (our speed controllers/victors) to control some of the motors on the robot, except that in your description you are "super-imposing" a duty cycle on an AC sine wave. [/DISCLAIMER] Am I even close?? |
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#7
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
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. Just kidding!!As a matter of fact, I almost used the Victor's operation to try to help describe it. There are some subtle differences, but that is what both of these circuits do, modify the duty cycle of the power supplied to the motor. |
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#8
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
I'm wondering if there is anything from an automotive location that would do it. I believe the motors are actually windshield wiper motors, or they could possibly be window motors. How does a car's windshield wiper system get the different speeds? Does it have all different resistors to get the different speeds?
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#9
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
<Off topic> Are any of the rest of you wondering what sanddrag is up to? The smoke and now this. </off topic>
Sanddrag, I don't know what wipers you're talking about, but I think that they just switch the motor on and off, I think they're verying wipe frequency, not speed. |
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#10
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
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Last edited by Madison : 19-12-2005 at 19:28. Reason: The parade is apparently on Jan. 2. Isn't it typically on the first? |
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#11
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
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For the wiper control, yes, I don't know what I was talking about either. I guess in southern California I don't use my wipers often enough to remember what they look like when they move. ![]() Last edited by sanddrag : 19-12-2005 at 18:13. |
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#12
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
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#13
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
another easy way to drop voltage: silicon diodes have a fixed 0.7V drop. If you have diodes that can handle the current, you can put them in series till you get down to the voltage you want.
BTW, the easiest and cheapest way to slow down a motor is to wack it with a sledge hammer, and the 'right' way to slow down a DC motor is to increase the strength of the magnets. The stronger the field, the more torque it will have and the slower it will run (due to the EMF voltage). |
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#14
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
The wipers have resistors for the different speeds. If equipped with intermitent wipers (almost all vehicles these days) then there's also a timer, this is what greencactus was mentioning.
Depending on the vehicle the resistors and timer can be part of the switch, a separate unit somewhere, or part of the wiper motor. My 1987 Chevy Caprice has a circuit board mounted to the wiper motor where all this is. The blower motor (for heat, defrost, a/c) for a vehicle also uses resistors to get the different speeds. These resistors would be attached to a single board in the heater box. They are in the heater box to help keep them cool with the moving air. |
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#15
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Re: Cheapest and easiest way to slow down a motor
Sanddrag,
So many questions, so little time. You can go to a junk yard and get a couple of wiper controls. They are big resistors (low ohms but high power dissipation) and they should be easy to wire up for what you need. The router control device you saw is like a lamp dimmer for AC motors only. It contains a Triac that switches on for only a portion of the AC sine wave cycle. Did you need to run all motors at the same low speed at the same time? If so you could buy a variable voltage supply. If the motors don't need direction control, a pot and a power transistor will likely do what you need. Make sure that the transistor is attached to a heatsink of some type. 2n3055 should do but anything Radio Shack has in NPN 5-10 amp range should work. Try a 10K pot to start and see what results you get. I think the junk yard is the best bet. Last edited by Al Skierkiewicz : 20-12-2005 at 07:44. |
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