HandleUserName
Mechanical
- Dec 15, 2014
- 3
Hi,
I am trying to control a mass in the pitch and yaw axes with +/- 0.1 degree accuracy. I am new to all of this and have a couple of questions. So far my plan is to use absolute rotary encoders of 12+ bits resolution coupled with the mass to know it's position. This is for solar tracking applications where the sun moves ~1 degree every four minutes, so I will need to be moving the mass at minimum once every 24s. The sun's position is found using a solar positioning algorithm and should be accurate to .0003 degrees (may change but still most likely negligible). The motors will use slew drives to position the mass.
So my questions are:
1) Would a stepper motor like this be sufficient?
Assuming the torque ratings are within my parameters (I require about 20Nm), the integrated gearbox for this motor has a backlash of <=1.5 degrees. Am I right in thinking this only comes into play when I change the direction of rotation? Or would the movement about my 2nd axes (one motor per axis) also cause inaccuracy from the backlash?
2) From what I have read BLDC motors are more desirable but harder to implement (and more expensive) for precision/accurate solar tracking. Would you need to have an encoder coupled with the BLDC as well as the mass (after gearing) to achieve my desired accuracy? And also would some sort of braking system be necessary? I am confused as to how exactly one controls position with a BLDC motor.
I would rather opt for the simpler solution provided it is sufficient for my application. If anyone has any suggestions or reading material I have left out that would be great also. Thanks!
I am trying to control a mass in the pitch and yaw axes with +/- 0.1 degree accuracy. I am new to all of this and have a couple of questions. So far my plan is to use absolute rotary encoders of 12+ bits resolution coupled with the mass to know it's position. This is for solar tracking applications where the sun moves ~1 degree every four minutes, so I will need to be moving the mass at minimum once every 24s. The sun's position is found using a solar positioning algorithm and should be accurate to .0003 degrees (may change but still most likely negligible). The motors will use slew drives to position the mass.
So my questions are:
1) Would a stepper motor like this be sufficient?
Assuming the torque ratings are within my parameters (I require about 20Nm), the integrated gearbox for this motor has a backlash of <=1.5 degrees. Am I right in thinking this only comes into play when I change the direction of rotation? Or would the movement about my 2nd axes (one motor per axis) also cause inaccuracy from the backlash?
2) From what I have read BLDC motors are more desirable but harder to implement (and more expensive) for precision/accurate solar tracking. Would you need to have an encoder coupled with the BLDC as well as the mass (after gearing) to achieve my desired accuracy? And also would some sort of braking system be necessary? I am confused as to how exactly one controls position with a BLDC motor.
I would rather opt for the simpler solution provided it is sufficient for my application. If anyone has any suggestions or reading material I have left out that would be great also. Thanks!