2018-05-14 07:13 AM
Hi,
When not using the motor profiler and instead writing all details by hand into the Motor Control Workbench (with Hall Sensors, Manual editing of PI variables disabled) at Motor - Parameters, there are fields for Inertia and Friction. So far, so good. Just the units are a bit confusing:
Inertia: uN*m*s2
Friction: uN*m*s
I thought that inertia had the units kg*m² and friction N*m, which I wasn't able to match with the given units.
Any clues how to do this right? Also does u stand for micro in this case or for something else?
Thanks,
Martin
Solved! Go to Solution.
2018-05-15 07:30 AM
Hello Mr. Martin,
Yes sure, you are right, in that form the units are a bit confusing. Thank you for reporting this problem, we will try to improve them.
About 'u', yes, it
stands for micro (1E-6)
and
`N` stands for Newton the
SIunit of Force(
1 Newton is equal to 1 kg
·
m·
s-2)https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/07948745d4db778de832933915f84be8bd9b4ded
So: N·m·s² = kg·m²
Hope this can help.
Best Regards.
2018-05-15 07:30 AM
Hello Mr. Martin,
Yes sure, you are right, in that form the units are a bit confusing. Thank you for reporting this problem, we will try to improve them.
About 'u', yes, it
stands for micro (1E-6)
and
`N` stands for Newton the
SIunit of Force(
1 Newton is equal to 1 kg
·
m·
s-2)https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/07948745d4db778de832933915f84be8bd9b4ded
So: N·m·s² = kg·m²
Hope this can help.
Best Regards.
2018-05-15 11:27 PM
Nice, Palano. That works perfectly for the Inertia.
Can you also explain how to make sense of N*m*s instead of N*m? Or explain what kind of friction is meant here if not frictional torque?
Many thanks!
2018-05-17 07:43 AM
Hello Mr. Martin,
As you correctly said, the unit of measurement of the Friction Torque is [N·m]
The item required in the form of our tool, measured in [N·m·s], is the coefficient of the Friction Torque.
Friction
Torque
[N·m] :
TF= β·�?‰where �?‰
is the angular velocity (Rad/s) and β
is the coefficient required by MC-Workbench [N·m·s].
If not directly available, the the ST-MotorProfiler could be an effective way to detect it; in alternative, use external equipment like torque meter and speed meter.
With Best Regards.
2021-06-27 06:26 PM
The question has been moved from the "Motor Control Hardware" section to the "STM32 Motor Control" section (the question is about the STM32 MC SDK).
Best regards