zappedagain
Electrical
- Jul 19, 2005
- 1,074
I'm very familiar with speed control for a BLDC. Is it possible, without a mechanical brake, to stop a BLDC at a given position? Maybe decelerate very slowly and then hold the motor phases at a given state to lock the motor at a fixed angle?
i suspect I may need a linear system to do this, unless the PWM frequency is high enough that it doesn't cause me to jitter.
If this works, how accurately can I control the stopping position? Degrees? Arc-seconds?
Or is a BLDC just the wrong technology to attempt this?
My application has a mirror mounted on the motor shaft. I'd like to be able to stop the motor at a fixed position for calibration on occasion. Presently we do this by blocking the beam from the mirror so it can keep spinning without affecting the optical signal. For simplicity, I'd rather just stop the motor.
Z
i suspect I may need a linear system to do this, unless the PWM frequency is high enough that it doesn't cause me to jitter.
If this works, how accurately can I control the stopping position? Degrees? Arc-seconds?
Or is a BLDC just the wrong technology to attempt this?
My application has a mirror mounted on the motor shaft. I'd like to be able to stop the motor at a fixed position for calibration on occasion. Presently we do this by blocking the beam from the mirror so it can keep spinning without affecting the optical signal. For simplicity, I'd rather just stop the motor.
Z