VELCROW
Mechanical
- Apr 30, 2008
- 92
I have a system where the motor has a torsionally compliant mounting to ground. When I accelerate the motor, I get a ringing in the output, and I am not accelerating the load nearly as much as I would expect given the motor torque available and the estimates for (reflected) load inertia and friction. The acceleration is measured at the motor shaft, so windup between the shaft and load is not being measured.
1. Is the energy lost to ringing responsible for the lack of acceleration?
2. I would like to model this in Excel. I can do this with a straightforward system of springs, dampers, and masses by just iterating the dynamic equations ( for linear systems, acceleration is the sum of forces divided by mass, v=v_prev+a*dt, x=x_prev*v*dt, spring force based on x pos of ends, etc.) My problem is that for a constant torque motor it does not seem like the output is at all affected by the compliance.
As a mental model, if I provide current to get torque T on a motor solidly mounted to ground, the motor shaft and load will accelerate with alpha=T/J. If the mounting is now just a frictionless surface, the housing will spin. But doesn't the motor shaft and load see the same torque as it did before, with the reaction provided by the opposite acceleration of the housing? For a limited time with true constant torque, and no limit on speed, it seems like the load acceleration is independent of the motor mounting. Is this right? If so, the compliance of the motor mounting should not be causing the ringing, and I need to look at the rest of what I thought was a pretty stiff system.
Thanks
1. Is the energy lost to ringing responsible for the lack of acceleration?
2. I would like to model this in Excel. I can do this with a straightforward system of springs, dampers, and masses by just iterating the dynamic equations ( for linear systems, acceleration is the sum of forces divided by mass, v=v_prev+a*dt, x=x_prev*v*dt, spring force based on x pos of ends, etc.) My problem is that for a constant torque motor it does not seem like the output is at all affected by the compliance.
As a mental model, if I provide current to get torque T on a motor solidly mounted to ground, the motor shaft and load will accelerate with alpha=T/J. If the mounting is now just a frictionless surface, the housing will spin. But doesn't the motor shaft and load see the same torque as it did before, with the reaction provided by the opposite acceleration of the housing? For a limited time with true constant torque, and no limit on speed, it seems like the load acceleration is independent of the motor mounting. Is this right? If so, the compliance of the motor mounting should not be causing the ringing, and I need to look at the rest of what I thought was a pretty stiff system.
Thanks