Difference between revisions of "Pulse burst positioning"

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==How to use==
 
==How to use==
 
Pulse burst is the minimalistic yet high performing position setpoint method available. Suitable signal may be generated by various means:
 
Pulse burst is the minimalistic yet high performing position setpoint method available. Suitable signal may be generated by various means:
*[[PLC]]
+
*[[PLC]] with at least two digital outputs
 
*A simple timer & counter circuit
 
*A simple timer & counter circuit
 
*Microcontroller [[GPIO]] pin
 
*Microcontroller [[GPIO]] pin

Revision as of 23:13, 12 February 2014

Illustration of input step pulse & direction signals, motor position and move done output as function of time.

Pulse burst positioning is a setpoint method based on pulse and direction signals. In pulse burst mode, controller need only to generate a burst of pulses with direction signal to begin a motion relative to current position. Motion will comply with pre-configured acceleration and velocity limits of the drive.

Pulse burst positioning properties

  • Simplicity - easy to understand and implement point-to-point motion
  • No real-time pulse train controller needed - smooth motion profile is generated inside the drive
  • Exact - setpoint signal path is fully digital
  • Change setpoint on the fly - not necessary to wait for motion to finish before sending new pulses

How to use

Pulse burst is the minimalistic yet high performing position setpoint method available. Suitable signal may be generated by various means:

  • PLC with at least two digital outputs
  • A simple timer & counter circuit
  • Microcontroller GPIO pin
  • Or any programmable device with controllable digital outputs

Practical example

Drive parameterization

In Argon the following configuration enables burst pulse mode:

  • Set CM as Position control
  • Set CRI as Pulse train & direction
  • Set CAL and CVL to your desired acceleration and velocity values
  • Wire J5 connector according to this diagram

Doing incremental move

The C-style code below generates the signaling.

void IncrementalMove( int distance )
{
  int i;
 
  /* set direction output pin */
  if(distance<0)
    SetDirectionOutputPin(0);
  else 
    SetDirectionOutputPin(1);
 
  /* generate step pulses to start motion. quantity of pulses = distance */
  for( i=0; i< abs(distance); i++ )
  {
    Delay_ms(0.001); /* wait 1 microseconds or more */
    SetPulseOutputPin(1);
    Delay_ms(0.001); /* wait 1 microseconds or more */
    SetPulseOutputPin(0);
  }
}
  • SetPulseOutputPin sets the digital state of HSIN1 pin on Argon
  • SetDirectionOutputPin sets the digital state of HSIN2 pin on Argon

Monitoring when motion is complete

Returns true when motion has successfully finished. False if timeout expired or drive faulted.

bool WaitForMoveDone( double timeout )
{
  double waited=0;
 
  while(waited<timeout)
  {
    if( GetMotionCompletePinState() == true ) 
      return true; /* motion is now complete, return true*/
 
    if( GetFaultPinState() == true ) 
      return false; /* drive is in fault state, return false*/
 
    /*motion is not complete, wait some time and poll again*/
    Delay_ms(10); /* 0.01 seconds */
    waited=waited+0.01;
  }
 
  /*return false because timeouted */
  return false;
}
  • GetMotionCompletePinState reads the GPO1 pin state from Argon
  • GetFaultPinState reads the GPO3 pin state from Argon

Usage example

IncrementalMove(500);
WaitForMoveDone();
IncrementalMove(1000);
WaitForMoveDone();
IncrementalMove(-1500);
WaitForMoveDone();