It is true that the Pull In Current is higher for a relay or solenoid than the Hold Current. Most AC devices take care of this automatically. As they pull in, the increase of metal inside the coil increases the inductive reactance raising the impedance and lowering the current.
High speed devices have either a dual coil or use a stepped current driver.
A good place to learn this is drivers for car fuel injection.
http://www.stealth316.com/2-fuelinjection.htm
http://www.national.com/mpf/LM/LM1949.html#Overview
This PDF application note shows the desired stepped current to the injector showing the initial current and the hold current. Note due to inductance, the initial voltage is much higher than the hold voltage.
http://www.national.com/ds/LM/LM1949.pdf
Electronics Help
- Technician1002
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- Davidvaini
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yep, pwm is great for reducing power consumption, and being able to control the speed of a motor as well.
look for a cheap RC speed controller on ebay.
Speed controllers will take your PWN signal, and use it to control the voltage, and amps coming from another power source, to a motor.
This is how most high end RC cars work.
Speed controllers will take your PWN signal, and use it to control the voltage, and amps coming from another power source, to a motor.
This is how most high end RC cars work.
jackssmirkingrevenge wrote:I wonder... if you put flammable vapours inside a lady... could you get her to diesel?
POLAND_SPUD wrote:Anything is possible with the proper 3-way valve.
- Technician1002
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Info on driving an RC servo with the Arduino is easy to find.
http://principialabs.com/arduino-serial-servo-control/
http://principialabs.com/arduino-serial-servo-control/
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Also quite easy to do as demonstrated here. Though I suspect the OP needs a motor for a different purpose.Technician1002 wrote:Info on driving an RC servo with the Arduino is easy to find.
http://principialabs.com/arduino-serial-servo-control/
- Technician1002
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A servo and an RC speed controller use the same signal.
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Ah, I didn't notice jhalek90's post and that you were adding to it. Along similar lines, Pololu makes good motor drivers but they get quite expensive. In any case it's still probably more difficult than the MOSFET route he's already talking about... Provided he can find one capable of PWM.
- Technician1002
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MOSFET's do PWM just fine. When coupled into a SSR, speed is often limited. MOSFETS are common in inverters for car stereo amplifiers, power supplies, and RC motor control. Any MSOFET that can be used for high speed switching is fine for PWM.
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That's the catch though, it has to be suited for it. The nature of some MOSFETs is to stay on (in the case of N-channel) even after the signal on the gate it removed due to input impedance. I had one in my sights but the datasheet only states that it's been tested at 1Hz. If anyone can point me to a tried and true MOSFET good for PWM @ max. 10 amps I'd be much appreciative.
Check into IRFZ40 or IRFZ42. (these are not logic level gate drive)PVC Arsenal 17 wrote:If anyone can point me to a tried and true MOSFET good for PWM @ max. 10 amps I'd be much appreciative.
I used them for my own designed RC Racing Speed Control. (Back in 1988).
They still work to this day. Used on 9T brushed motors.
I can give a partial schematic upon request via PM.
It had 6 MOSFETS in parallel and did not require a heat sink.
See following for data sheet as well:
http://search.digikey.com/scripts/DkSea ... FZ40PBF-ND
- Technician1002
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Almost any MOSFET used in the inverter power section of a high power car stereo amp will work fine. They are designed for low voltages (12 volt car power instead of 160V rectified house current) and work at high speeds with fast recovery times.
Other good sources is old RC speed controls, old computer UPS, DC brush less motors, 18 volt drill speed control, and other lower voltage high current devices.
Other good sources is old RC speed controls, old computer UPS, DC brush less motors, 18 volt drill speed control, and other lower voltage high current devices.