Guest
Hi Group,
Being that I have a 120VDC motor and I am full-wave recifing the mains
and then using a MOSFET to chop the sine.
I generally turn on the FET at the zero cross and then off sometime
later to control the motor average current, thus speed of the motor.
The only problem is that by reducting the "power" it also reduces the
stalling torque of the motor so if driving a variable load, the system
will slow and speed up.
Another method I would like to try is to allow the voltage to reach the
peak and then turn on the FET for a small duty cycle. Say 1mS or so.
Since the motor is now getting the 166V peak with say a small kick of
voltage, what if any, will be the reaction to the motor rpm or motor
current while driving a load? Will this method get me anything in
terms of drive speed?
Thanks!
PDRUNEN
Being that I have a 120VDC motor and I am full-wave recifing the mains
and then using a MOSFET to chop the sine.
I generally turn on the FET at the zero cross and then off sometime
later to control the motor average current, thus speed of the motor.
The only problem is that by reducting the "power" it also reduces the
stalling torque of the motor so if driving a variable load, the system
will slow and speed up.
Another method I would like to try is to allow the voltage to reach the
peak and then turn on the FET for a small duty cycle. Say 1mS or so.
Since the motor is now getting the 166V peak with say a small kick of
voltage, what if any, will be the reaction to the motor rpm or motor
current while driving a load? Will this method get me anything in
terms of drive speed?
Thanks!
PDRUNEN