Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

diode? 1

Status
Not open for further replies.

bigheadted

Electrical
Jul 22, 2005
53
0
0
GB
the reference to an inveter drive at work is 0-10v, the reference under general opperating conditions doesnot exceed 2.5v to achive the required speed. The reference comes from a PLC analogue output. before my time there was an issue that when the plc was first switched on it set its output to -10v which the drive didnt like, so a diode was put in series with the reference to prevent the reverse voltages. my question is, how would the forward bisa volt drop of the diode affect the drive. surely it will drop the refernce voltage the drive sees by 0.6v, which is quite a large proportion of the running refernce level. am i correct? does the volt drop across a diode depend on the currentr flowing through it?
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

Could the reference be changed to use a 4-20mA loop instead of a voltage signal? That would eliminate the diode volt-drop problem while allowing the diode to remain and provide better noise immunity too. Most drives have the option of voltage or mA input.


----------------------------------
image.php
Sometimes I only open my mouth to swap feet...
 
good idea, although im not sure the company will meet the expense as it would mean either a plc change or some sort of converter device and there are 48 of these drives around the plant. i really have two options, attempting to offset the reference in th plc to account for the volt drop, (measurment today indicated that it averages 0.4v) or i believe you can get low forward bias voltage diodes. both of which are not ideal
thanks
 
Google 'schottky diode' for your low V[sub]f[/sub] diode. Be aware that they have limited reverse blocking capability, often only 30 - 40 volts.

----------------------------------
image.php
Sometimes I only open my mouth to swap feet...
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top