I've built the prototype but now realize a problem: Does it protect my switch? I thought I'd simply connect an oscilloscope across the motor and check for a spike on the trace, but can see nothing. I'm embarrassed to say I never bothered learning much about how to use oscilloscopes. Perhaps they can reveal a difference between old circuit and New! Improved now with FWBR Technology! version. I've attached 3 pictures, one of a really cool tool just recently invented called an oscilloscope : ), and two of the prototype. I'm also thinking of 2 other ways to detect spikes, and the lack thereof.
1) My clothes iron has a small, orange light to show power ON. I believe those neon bulbs light with ~70 volts. If the spike is that high, it might light that lamp.
2) I am a big fan of Dave Vernier's Lab Quest 2 for graphing voltage, pressure, temperature, CO2, sound, and a whole lot more. I'm going to call Vernier and see if its response time is quick enough to show the spike.
Learning lots, especially how much I don't know,
Bruce
Nik_2213 said:
Been a few years since I played with 'bots but, IIRC, my 'trad' motors with brushes just kept finding better ways to kill their control circuitry.
Directly across the brushes, I had well-rated uf capacitors...
Flanked by pf for their superior ESR speed...
Flanked by hefty back-to-back Zeners rated about 150% of supply voltage for spike-topping.
Plus, hefty, fast 'protective' diodes across the electronics.
One 'amusing' trick was to wire a small neon bulb ( >60 V ?) across a nominally suppressed 'brush' motor and watch it flicker...
Hence the need to have spare motor-control boards to hand...
D'you wonder that brushless / stepper motors were gleefully embraced, despite their drivers' complexity ??
Thanks for the thoughts, Nik.
I'm not well-enough educated to understand some of your terms (i.e. IIRD, pf for their superior ESR speed, fast protective diodes across the electronics) but I DID, at Baluncore's suggestion connect a 25 amp full wave bridge rectifier across the motor wires. I then thought to compare the light from one of those small neon bulbs rated, I hear at ~70. I put it across the motor wires and tried one test WITHOUT the FWBR, and one WITH the FWBR. I was able to get a light from the leon bulb hooked up to an inductor where I suddenly cut the power. It flashed at 12 volts, but actually flashed down at 3 volts. So I was prepared to see the improvement my FWBR provided. Imagine my puzzlement when the neon bulb NEVER FLASHED, with or without the FWBR. I'm wondering if it has nothing to do with induced EMF when the switches suddenly turn off. Maybe just too much power for the switch to handle? It says "24V, 25A" right on the switch. I've ordered these MOSFETs:
5Pcs Mosfet IRL2505PBF IRL2505 60V 100A TO-220 N-Channel Mosfet which are way more than the rating ("just" 60A on the MOSFET in the switch I have the keeps blowing. Do you think that might help?
Bruce