macmet
Materials
- Jul 18, 2005
- 863
Hello Everyone,
I have a general question regarding PIDs that I hope is easy to answer. I've done a search of this forum and I'm not sure I've seen the answer, but if I have, I didn't understand it or missed it.
In PID controllers, the D is the derivative term. I saw somewhere it described as the rate of the change made to the output value based on the error. (i.e. the cruise control on a car going up a slight hill vs. a steep hill).
My question is, if D is a rate, why is the units used for Kd given in time? AB, Bailey, Honeywell, Siemens and Yokogawa all use a unit of time for the Kd value according to my search. How is that time applied?
I apologize if I overlooked this question elsewhere on here, but I searched for it without luck.
I have a general question regarding PIDs that I hope is easy to answer. I've done a search of this forum and I'm not sure I've seen the answer, but if I have, I didn't understand it or missed it.
In PID controllers, the D is the derivative term. I saw somewhere it described as the rate of the change made to the output value based on the error. (i.e. the cruise control on a car going up a slight hill vs. a steep hill).
My question is, if D is a rate, why is the units used for Kd given in time? AB, Bailey, Honeywell, Siemens and Yokogawa all use a unit of time for the Kd value according to my search. How is that time applied?
I apologize if I overlooked this question elsewhere on here, but I searched for it without luck.