Angle measurement for balancing robot.


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  1. #1


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    If you need gyros, try the analod devices ADIS16250 or ADIS16255

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    Henrik,

    Do you need 180º or 360º for your angle measurement?

    I "think" it should be 180º.

    -----------------------------
    Last edited by sayzer; - 5th February 2007 at 07:01.
    "If the Earth were a single state, Istanbul would be its capital." Napoleon Bonaparte

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    Hi,
    I'd say +/-45 degrees from "down" will be more than enough. The problem, again, is that it needs (I'd like it) to be an absolute value in reference to gravity.

    /Henrik Olsson.

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    Wink I got my two-wheel balancer working

    Henrik,

    during the last weekend I had a breakthrough using the kalman filter code you provided here from the nuts&volts article. I got my robot balancing based on combined gyro and accelerometer approach. Up to now I also used only one axis of my 2-axis accelerometer (therefore containing also an error due to the measurement of the robots acceleration itself: this error seems to be filtered away by the kalman code). The regulation is only PD-control, not PID, but I plan to extend it to PID to get better control of absolute position. I have a demonstration video (6MB) which is too large to be uploaded here. If you send me your email address, I will mail it to you.

    All approaches based on using only the accelerometer or the gyro were not successful so far: the pure accelerometer approach has a too noisy signal to be used for this kind of control and for the pure gyro approach I was not yet able to really compensate for the drift only by software.

    Have fun, Dirk.
    Last edited by uffi; - 26th February 2007 at 17:10. Reason: removed e-mail address

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    Default Sweet!

    Hi Dirk,
    That's absolutely great!
    I haven't had time to work on mine for a while. I did get it to balance fairly well using the SHARP sensors though but nothing have been done to it since then.

    So based on your experience (and mine, so far) I think that we can rule out using just an acceleromter or gyro. I kind of had that feeling from the begining but was I would be glad to be proven wrong.

    Now, if we only could port that filter code to PBP. Hmmm...I wonder if there's a way to compile just the filter code and use the assembler code from within PBP.

    Thanks for the update, I appreciate it!

    /Henrik Olsson.

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    Hi Henrik,

    Just wondering if you used your new PID "Code Example" on the Balancing Robot?
    <br>
    DT

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    Hi Darrel,
    Yes I did. The robot was the reason I wrote it. It a 18F2431 for each wheel running a PID compensated velocity servo at 1220Hz thanks to your interrupt routine. The main CPU runs the PID for the actual balancing at 100Hz.

    Any chance you see some way to improove it?

    /Henrik Olsson.

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