eckener
Electrical
- Aug 1, 2013
- 32
Hi All... We are building a special effects film dolly. The motors have been sized and we are trying to estimate the current draw during the very fast accelerations... Doesn't seem to be too problematic for constant speed segments of our move profiles, but figuring out the current draw for accelerations has us a bit stumped.
Is there a relatively easy short-hand way to do this? perhaps using the torque constant (Kt)of the motor? or another formula that we have just been missing.
We have already figured out all our mechanical loads, wheel frictions, air drag forces, moments, gear- ratio, etc... We have this all in a spreadsheet where we plug in the acceleration rate and top speed. For simplicities sake, it spits out us a constant torque value on the motor shaft over that period of time to achieve that desired acceleration...
Now we want to find out how many amp hours that will approximately take.
We tried a couple motor sizing softwares, but they really didn't give us this information.
We did convert the whole shebang (including losses) into Work Done(Joules), then into Watts and then into Amps. When we compared that to the simple equation, Torque/Kt, the Torque/Kt was about 2-1/2 times higher... maybe this is because the voltage was not changing in this equation? Should we cut the voltage in half?
Its a brushless DC Servo motor (actually 4 of them.. Kollmorgen AKM series)
320Volt DC Battery Pack
Elmo Drivers
200 pound dolly with payload
3.91:1 gear reduction on motors.
6" diameter drivewheels.
27.4.mph top speed
14.65 ft/sec/sec accelerations (typical)
Thank you for reading.
Is there a relatively easy short-hand way to do this? perhaps using the torque constant (Kt)of the motor? or another formula that we have just been missing.
We have already figured out all our mechanical loads, wheel frictions, air drag forces, moments, gear- ratio, etc... We have this all in a spreadsheet where we plug in the acceleration rate and top speed. For simplicities sake, it spits out us a constant torque value on the motor shaft over that period of time to achieve that desired acceleration...
Now we want to find out how many amp hours that will approximately take.
We tried a couple motor sizing softwares, but they really didn't give us this information.
We did convert the whole shebang (including losses) into Work Done(Joules), then into Watts and then into Amps. When we compared that to the simple equation, Torque/Kt, the Torque/Kt was about 2-1/2 times higher... maybe this is because the voltage was not changing in this equation? Should we cut the voltage in half?
Its a brushless DC Servo motor (actually 4 of them.. Kollmorgen AKM series)
320Volt DC Battery Pack
Elmo Drivers
200 pound dolly with payload
3.91:1 gear reduction on motors.
6" diameter drivewheels.
27.4.mph top speed
14.65 ft/sec/sec accelerations (typical)
Thank you for reading.