Good news! The very first fully assembled ION servo drive boards have arrived. I jumped straight to programming the thing. Few parts of code have been already ported from Argon and everything has worked flawlessly so far.
The drive is equipped with ARM Cortex M4 processor with hardware floating point unit (FPU). I ran small test of FPU performance and found out that simple floating point arithmetic operations execute 20-30 times faster compared to non-FPU code. This means, all control code can be written with floating point math yielding ultimate precision and dynamic range without sacrificing servo bandwidth.
That’s excellent! I appreciate it’s still under development, but wondered whether the anticipated 5A continuous current is peak or RMS current? Any idea on max current?
Kind regards,
Jason
Current ratings are given as peak value of sine:
http://granitedevices.com/wiki/Peak_value_of_sine
Based on the latests tests drive seems to be doing fine at least with 7-8A continuous currents.
Official current limits will be determined later. There probably will be adaptive current limit which is based in drive temperature. So if you cool it well (air flow), then it will output more.
That’s great – thanks :)
Do you have a ballpark price for these yet?
The price target for the device under development is “less than VSD-E”. More of this can be told once HW design is final and we receive manufacturing quotes.
The plan is to make several versions of ION with different capabilities and prices.
Very good, thanks.