Difference between revisions of "High Speed Motor Control"
RyanDeeter (talk | contribs) |
RyanDeeter (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
===Theory of Parallelogram Design=== |
===Theory of Parallelogram Design=== |
||
====Equations of Motion==== |
====Equations of Motion==== |
||
Commanding the arm is much easier for a user to do in x- and y- coordinates than in motor angles or encoder counts. Therefore, equations were required that would translate x- and y- coordinates into angles from horizontal and then into encoder counts. Equations to express the reverse (encoder counts |
Commanding the arm is much easier for a user to do in x- and y- coordinates than in motor angles or encoder counts. Therefore, equations were required that would translate x- and y- coordinates into angles from horizontal and then into encoder counts. Equations to express the reverse (encoder counts to angles to x- and y- coordinates) were also needed to evaluate the accuracy of the execution with respect to the command path. |
||
<math> x = L \cos (\theta_1)\ + \cos (\theta_1+\theta_2)< |
*<math> x = L \cos (\theta_1)\ + \cos (\theta_1+\theta_2)</math> |
||
<math> y = L \sin(\theta_1)\ + \sin(\theta_1+\theta_2)< |
*<math> y = L \sin(\theta_1)\ + \sin(\theta_1+\theta_2)</math> |
||
<math> \theta_1 = |
*<math> \theta_1 = \frac{-(2 L \sin(\theta_2)) x + (L + 2 L \cos(\theta_2)) y} {(2 L \sin(\theta_2)) y + (L + 2 L \cos(\theta_2)) x}</math> |
||
*<math> \theta_2 = cos^{-1} \left(\frac{x^2+y^2-L^2-(2L)^2}{2L^2} \right)</math> |
|||
Note: In the code, <math>\theta_2 \, </math> is written out explicitly in the equation for <math>\theta_1 \, </math>, but was defined as above for ease of reading. |
|||
===Basket Design=== |
===Basket Design=== |
||
===Materials and Construction=== |
===Materials and Construction=== |
Revision as of 13:46, 9 March 2010
Overview
The project suggested was to design a system for high speed motor control using the PIC 32. To demonstrate the motor control, a two degree of freedom (2DOF) robot arm was designed to throw and catch one ball with itself.
Team Members
- Sam Bobb (Electrical Engineering senior)
- Daniel Cornew (Mechanical Engineering junior)
- Ryan Deeter (Mechanical Engineering junior)
Mechanical Design
Theory of Parallelogram Design
Equations of Motion
Commanding the arm is much easier for a user to do in x- and y- coordinates than in motor angles or encoder counts. Therefore, equations were required that would translate x- and y- coordinates into angles from horizontal and then into encoder counts. Equations to express the reverse (encoder counts to angles to x- and y- coordinates) were also needed to evaluate the accuracy of the execution with respect to the command path.
Note: In the code, is written out explicitly in the equation for , but was defined as above for ease of reading.
Basket Design
Materials and Construction
Electrical Design
Overview
Circuit Diagram
Components
GUI
Usage
Programming
Code
Overview
PIC C Code
MATLAB Code
Results
It was awesome.