Strider17
Mechanical
- Dec 17, 2004
- 31
Gentlemen:
I am working on a project that has a proprietary motor
control board that is used to control 6 DC motors on a medical
device. During development and in the field there have
been situations where the motors have been connected
wrong, wired wrong, accidental shorts etc which has
fried the MOSFET on our control board which results in
major ($) rework. The EE's have
said there is no way to protect them because a fuse,
etc, is slower to blow than the MOSFET. Question:
Is there a way to protect a semiconductor device from
such problems? This seems to me to be a problem
that someone must have encountered before. Please be
kind with your replies, I am an ME not an EE. Thanks.
The more you know, the more you
know you don't know....
I am working on a project that has a proprietary motor
control board that is used to control 6 DC motors on a medical
device. During development and in the field there have
been situations where the motors have been connected
wrong, wired wrong, accidental shorts etc which has
fried the MOSFET on our control board which results in
major ($) rework. The EE's have
said there is no way to protect them because a fuse,
etc, is slower to blow than the MOSFET. Question:
Is there a way to protect a semiconductor device from
such problems? This seems to me to be a problem
that someone must have encountered before. Please be
kind with your replies, I am an ME not an EE. Thanks.
The more you know, the more you
know you don't know....