I had an idea involving a 555, transistors and diodes that i think will work. The problem with that method is that i get a square wave instead of the normal AC sine wave. Would that matter to an AC motor?
I had an idea involving a 555, transistors and diodes that i think will work. The problem with that method is that i get a square wave instead of the normal AC sine wave. Would that matter to an AC motor?
I think motors complain voiceferously to square waves, but a 555 can output various waveforms with a little work, I am pretty sure they brew up function generators using them. http://www.physics.udel.edu/~nowak/p...imer%20lab.pdf
http://www.simplecircuitdiagram.com/...-using-555-ic/
Why not use a PIC ? You are already good at them, yes?
Oh here is a circuit you might glean some use from project 100 watt . . . http://datasheetreference.com/2n3055-datasheet.html
swap out the transformer for the voltage you want, scale it down, in terms of power used / produced
Last edited by Archangel; - 6th February 2010 at 02:27.
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I could use a PIC but im not sure why. Wouldnt that just turn things on/off to generate an AC output? That would result in a square wave too.
Thanks for the links. Ill have a read through them.
A 6VAC motor? What frequency does it want?
Is it really AC only, or is it a "universal" motor that runs on AC or DC? Does it have brushes?
Building a converter to drive it should be easy enough, but I'd be curious to know more about the specifics of the motor first.
steve
Unfortunately i dont know much about the motor. I tried searching google for its number but i didnt find anything useful.
Heres what it says on the label:-
41TYZ-A synchronous motor
AC 6V 50/60Hz 1.5/2W
5r/min Cw/CCw
Ahhh. It's a synchronous motor, so it not only wants AC, but it wants AC at 50/60 Hz and it probably wants at least a modest approximation of a sine wave. A square wave will probably make it unhappy...
Is efficiency a big issue? Gonna plug it into the wall, or run it off a battery?
If efficiency isn't really an issue, then a hardware solution with an op-amp based sinewave generator feeding an audio amplifier type driver is probably easiest.
steve
Im not too bothered about efficiency. It will be run from a mains transformer but the 12V DC needs to be turned on/off using a transistor and the motor will be connected with 64 LEDs (on the DC side). I can use a more powerfull transistor than normal but i dont want it to be using too much current.
Ill have a look for op-amp sinewave circuits. Ive not done much with op-amps before so this is the perfect learning opportunity
An OPA triangle generator with clamping diodes on the output, plus a bridge audio amp ( TDA2005 i.e ) could produce an acceptable waveform ...
"Sine" generator is not so difficult to build nor ...
don't you think ???
Alain
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Why insist on using 32 Bits when you're not even able to deal with the first 8 ones ??? ehhhhhh ...
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IF there is the word "Problem" in your question ...
certainly the answer is " RTFM " or " RTFDataSheet " !!!
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