0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
PWM was used in electronic throttles long before DCC came along. One of the original reasons was claimed to be smoother running than regular DC. As motors became more efficient, they also became more sensitive to the pulses.
If you are really worried about the magnitude of the PWM pulses, two 5.1v zener diodes, back to back, in series with one of the motor leads will work. In each direction, one of the zeners is fully conducting (drops only 0.7v) and the other will drop the full zener voltage (5.1) so 5.8v are across the two diodes and only 6.2 can reach the motor. By having two zeners back to back, it works in either polarity. The other nice thing is that the PWM pulse shape should still be preserved, just with reduced magnitude of the pulses (which is what you want),*** as long as the zeners have a fast enough switching time to keep up. I don't know how high a frequency those decoder PWM streams can use. *** I can't seem to find any specs on zener switching times, even in their data sheets! Maybe they are too slow for this. You are essentially chopping the top off the pulses.The only downside is that the engine won't move until the average PWM voltage gets over 6, so the first half of your speedsteps might act like "nothing" - the motor won't turn. Of course, you can adjust the DCC CV parameters so that speed step 1 is 50% of full, and that would take care of that problem.
That frame is so simple it could be printed out of sintered stainless steel by SW. It could also be extended under the walkway with a hole for tapping and mounting the coupler. Based on the dimensions you mentioned it meets the printing requirements. (Attachment Link)
Peteski: I don't know if it was used in commercial throttles. I can remember articles on building throttles that used it, usually with an SCR for control. Apparently, today, SCRs are obsolete for this purpose, and more complicated circuits that can be fed DC are used.
John,Thanks for that drawing.BTW- the base of the coupler is not at the same height as this frame.It would have to sit lower.David has a receiving pad for the coupler built into the shell and it is just right for a 1015.So I don't think that extra would be needed.
Question for you shapeways guys...I see that Shapeways offers printing in several varieties of brass, would that work for the printed frame, and be heavy like the custom brass frame made by u18b?
I see. Thread drift: Any idea of the resolution for that process?..Could it be useable, to say, make a relatively simple cast detail part?