Sie sind auf Seite 1von 19

CONTROLADORES DE MOTORES DE CD.

Controlador de motor DC dual 24V 5A


Cod.artculo: MD49

Precio: MXN$1,340.00
(IVA incluido)

En Existencia:1 Artculos Cantidad: Descuentos por cantidad:

Cantidad Precio

6+ MXN$1,206.00

12+ MXN$1,139.00

Descripcin Enviar a un amigo The MD49 is a robust serial dual motor driver, designed for use with our EMG49 motors. Main features are: 1. Reads motors encoders and provides counts for determining distance traveled and direction of rotation. 2. Drives two motors with independent or combined control. 3. Motor current is readable. 4. Only 24v is required to power the module. 5. Steering feature, motors can be commanded to turn by sent value. 6. Variable acceleration and power regulation also included 7. Protection against short circuit output, over current and incorrect voltage. Also included is an error LED and error byte for diagnosis of faults.

Controlador de Motor DC 24V/20A


Cod.artculo: MD03

Precio: MXN$1,510.00
(IVA incluido)

En Existencia:18 Artculos Cantidad: Descuentos por cantidad:

Cantidad Precio

6+ MXN$1,359.00

12+ MXN$1,283.50

Descripcin Enviar a un amigo

MD03 - 24V 20A H Bridge Motor Drive.


Voltage Current Control 1 Control 2 Control 3 5v logic supply and 5v - 24v for the motor 50mA Max for logic and up to 20A for the motor 0v - 2.5v - 5v Analogue for Reverse - Stop - Forward 0v - 5v (or PWM equiv.) with separate direction control

- RC Mode - Controlled by standard Radio Control system. Direct connection to RC receiver. (1mS - 2mS pulse with 1.5mS center off). - I2C Interface, full control, acceleration and status reporting. Up to 8 modules on bus. SCL speed up to 1MHz

Control 4

Current limiter - Preset at 20A Temperature limiter - Reduces power gracefully if module overheats Size - 113mm x 52mm x 30mm

MD03 Documentation

Controlador de motor 18v25


Cod.artculo: 1381

Precio: MXN$1,000.00
(IVA incluido)

En Existencia:5 Artculos Cantidad: Descuentos por cantidad:

Cantidad Precio

6+ MXN$900.00

12+ MXN$850.00

Descripcin Enviar a un amigo The Pololu Simple High-Power Motor Controller makes basic control of brushed DC motors easy, with our free Simple Motor Control Center software enabling quick configuration over USB. The controller supports four interface modes: USB, TTL serial, analog voltage, and hobby radio control (RC). This version operates from 5.5 to 30 V and is efficient enough to deliver a continuous 25 A without a heat sink. It ships with the power capacitor and connectors included but not soldered in, allowing for custom installations. The Pololu Simple Motor Controllers are versatile, general-purpose motor controllers for brushed, DC motors. A wide operating range of up to 5.540V and the ability to deliver up to several hundred Watts in a small form factor make these controllers suitable for many motor control applications. With a variety of supported interfacesUSB for direct connection to a computer, TTL serial for use with embedded systems, RC hobby servo pulses for use as an RC-controlled electronic speed control (ESC), and analog voltages for use with a potentiometer or analog joystickand a wide array of configurable settings, these motor controllers make it easy to add basic control of brushed DC motors to a variety of projects. Although this motor controller has many more features than competing products, a free configuration utility (for Windows 7, Vista, Windows XP, and Linux) simplifies initial setup of the device and allows for in-system testing and monitoring of the controller via USB.

Simple High-Power Motor Controller 18v25 or 24v23 simplified connection diagram.


Key Features

Simple bidirectional control of one DC brush motor. 5.5 V to 30 V operating supply range. 7 A to 25 A maximum continuous current output without a heat sink, depending on controller model Four communication or control options: USB interface for direct connection to a PC. Logic-level (TTL) serial interface for direct connection to microcontrollers or other embedded controllers. Hobby radio control (RC) pulse width interface for direct connection to an RC receiver or RC servo controller. 03.3 V analog voltage interface for direct connection to potentiometers and analog joysticks. Simple configuration and calibration over USB with free configuration program (Windows 7, Vista, Windows XP, and Linux compatible).

Documentation and other information

Pololu Simple Motor Controller Users Guide (Printable PDF: simple_motor_controllers.pdf) Users manual for the Pololu Simple Motor Controllers. Pololu USB Software Development Kit The Pololu USB SDK contains the code you need for making your own applications that use native USB to control the Jrk Motor Controller, Maestro Servo Controller, Simple Motor Controller, or USB AVR Programmer.

Application Note: Using AutoHotkey with Pololu USB Products An application note about using AutoHotkey for Windows to control Pololu USB products. File downloads

Simple Motor Controller Windows Drivers and Software (release 101020) (6MB zip) Simple Motor Controller Linux Software (release 101119) (115k gz)
This ZIP archive contains the installation files for the Simple Motor Control Center, the Simple Motor Controller command-line utility (SmcCmd), and the required USB drivers for Microsoft Windows. This tar/gzip archive contains the binary executable files for the Pololu Simple Motor Control Center (SmcCenter) and the Simple Motor Controller command-line utility (SmcCmd) for Linux. Use tar -xzvf filename.tar.gz to extract it.

Firmware version 1.03 for the Simple Motor Controllers (271k fmi)

Use this file with the Pololu Simple Motor Control Center to upgrade your Simple Motor Controllers firmware. This update fixes some minor bugs. See the instructions in the Upgrading Firmware section of the users guide for more information. Recommended links

Flowstone module for Simple Motor Controllers

This Flowstone module, made by DSP Robotics, enables communication between the Flowstone PC software and Pololu Simple Motor Controllers.

Controlador motor DC 24v12


Cod.artculo: 1379

Precio: MXN$800.00
(IVA incluido)

En Existencia:3 Artculos Cantidad:

Descripcin Enviar a un amigo The Pololu Simple High-Power Motor Controller makes basic control of brushed DC motors easy, with our free Simple Motor Control Center software enabling quick configuration over USB. The controller supports four interface modes: USB, TTL serial, analog voltage, and hobby radio control (RC). This version operates from 5.5 to 40 V and is efficient enough to deliver a continuous 12 A without a heat sink. It ships with the power capacitor and connectors included but not soldered in, allowing for custom installations. The Pololu Simple Motor Controllers are versatile, general-purpose motor controllers for brushed, DC motors. A wide operating range of up to 5.540V and the ability to deliver up to several hundred Watts in a small form factor make these controllers suitable for many motor control applications. With a variety of supported interfacesUSB for direct connection to a computer, TTL serial for use with embedded systems, RC hobby servo pulses for use as an RC-controlled electronic speed control (ESC), and analog voltages for use with a potentiometer or analog joystickand a wide array of configurable settings, these motor controllers make it easy to add basic control of brushed DC motors to a variety of projects. Although this motor controller has many more features than competing products, a free configuration utility (for Windows 7, Vista, Windows XP, and Linux) simplifies initial setup of the device and allows for in-system testing and monitoring of the controller via USB.

Key Features

Simple bidirectional control of one DC brush motor. 5.5 V to 40 V (24v12 and 24v23) operating supply range. 12 A maximum continuous current output without a heat sink, depending on controller model Four communication or control options: USB interface for direct connection to a PC. Logic-level (TTL) serial interface for direct connection to microcontrollers or other embedded controllers. Hobby radio control (RC) pulse width interface for direct connection to an RC receiver or RC servo controller. 03.3 V analog voltage interface for direct connection to potentiometers and analog joysticks. Simple configuration and calibration over USB with free configuration program (Windows 7, Vista, Windows XP, and Linux compatible).

Note: A USB A to mini-B cable (not included) is required to connect this controller to a computer.

Additional Features

Comprehensive users guide with plenty of connection diagrams and sample code. Adjustable maximum acceleration and deceleration to limit electrical and mechanical stress on the system. Adjustable starting speed, maximum speed, and amount of braking when speed is zero. Optional safety controls to avoid unexpectedly powering the motor. Input calibration (learning) and adjustable scaling degree for analog and RC signals. Under-voltage shutoff with hysteresis for use with batteries vulnerable to over-discharging (e.g. LiPo cells). Adjustable over-temperature threshold and response. Adjustable PWM frequency from 1 kHz to 22 kHz (maximum frequency is ultrasonic, eliminating switching-induced audible motor shaft vibration). Error LED linked to a digital ERR output, and connecting the error outputs of multiple controllers together optionally causes all connected controllers to shut down when any one of them experiences an error. Field-upgradeable firmware. USB/Serial features: Controllable from a computer with native USB, via serial commands sent to the devices virtual serial (COM) port, or via TTL serial through the devices RX/TX pins. Example code in C#, Visual Basic .NET, and Visual C++ is available in the Pololu USB Software Development Kit Optional CRC error detection to eliminate communication errors caused by noise or software faults. Optional command timeout (shut off motors if communication ceases). Supports automatic baud rate detection from 1200 bps to 500 kbps, or can be configured to run at a fixed baud rate. Supports standard compact and Pololu protocols as well as the Scott Edwards Mini SSC protocol and an ASCII protocol for simple serial control from a terminal program. Optional serial response delay for communicating with half-duplex controllers such as the Basic Stamp. Controllers can be easily chained together and to other Pololu serial motor and servo controllers to control hundreds of motors using a single serial line.

Two Pololu Simple Motor Controllers enable mixed RC-control of Dagu Wild Thumper 4WD all-terrain chassis.

RC features: 1/4 s pulse measurement resolution. Works with RC pulse frequencies from 10 to 333 Hz. Configurable parameters for determining what constitutes an acceptable RC signal. Two RC channels allow for single-stick (mixed) motor control, making it easy to use two simple motor controllers in tandem on an RC-controlled differential-drive robot (you might find our RC servo Y splitter cables useful for connecting two SMCs to a single RC receiver). RC channels can be used in any mode as limit or kill switches (e.g. use an RC receiver to trigger a kill switch on your autonomous robot). Battery elimination circuit (BEC) jumper can power the RC receiver with 5 V or 3.3 V. Analog features: 0.8 mV (12-bit) measurement resolution. Works with 0 to 3.3 V inputs. Optional potentiometer/joystick disconnect detection. Two analog channels allow for single-stick (mixed) motor control, making it easy to use two simple motor controllers in tandem on a joystick-controlled differential-drive robot. Analog channels can be used in any mode as limit or kill switches.

The connector-free version allows flexibility in choice of connectors and placement of the power capacitor (e.g. on the other side of the board) to accommodate compact installations or to make room for a heat sink. Note: The power capacitor has a significant effect on performance; the included capacitor is the minimum size recommended, and bigger ones can be added if there is space. A bigger capacitor might be required if the power supply is poor or far (more than about a foot) from the controller. The included terminal blocks are only rated for 16 A, so we recommend soldering thick wires directly to the connector-free version of the board and using higher-current connectors for applications that will exceed the terminal blocks ratings.

Documentation and other information

Pololu Simple Motor Controller Users Guide (Printable PDF: simple_motor_controllers.pdf) Users manual for the Pololu Simple Motor Controllers. Pololu USB Software Development Kit The Pololu USB SDK contains the code you need for making your own applications that use native USB to control the Jrk Motor Controller, Maestro Servo Controller, Simple Motor Controller, or USB AVR Programmer.

Application Note: Using AutoHotkey with Pololu USB Products (Printable PDF: application_note_autohotkey.pdf) An application note about using AutoHotkey for Windows to control Pololu USB products. File downloads Simple Motor Controller Windows Drivers and Software (release 101020) (6MB zip) This ZIP archive contains the installation files for the Simple Motor Control Center, the Simple Motor Controller command-line utility (SmcCmd), and the required USB drivers for Microsoft Windows. Simple Motor Controller Linux Software (release 101119) (115k gz) This tar/gzip archive contains the binary executable files for the Pololu Simple Motor Control Center (SmcCenter) and the Simple Motor Controller command-line utility (SmcCmd) for Linux. Use tar -xzvf filename.tar.gz to extract it. Firmware version 1.04 for the Simple Motor Controllers (266k fmi) Use this file with the Pololu Simple Motor Control Center to upgrade your Simple Motor Controllers firmware. See the instructions in the Upgrading Firmware section of the users guide for more information. Recommended links Flowstone module for Simple Motor Controllers This Flowstone module, made by DSP Robotics, enables communication between the Flowstone PC software and Pololu Simple Motor Controllers.

RoboClaw Controlador dual 5A


Cod.artculo: 1495

Precio: MXN$1,760.00
(IVA incluido)

En Existencia:2 Artculos Cantidad:

Descripcin Enviar a un amigo The RoboClaw 2x5 Amp is an extremely efficient, versatile, dual channel synchronous regenerative motor controller. It supports dual quadrature encoders and can supply two brushed DC motors with 5 Amps continuous and 10 Amp peak. With dual quadrature decoding you get greater control over speed and velocity. Automatically maintain a speed even if the load increases. RoboClaw also has a built in PID routine for use with an external control system. RoboClaw is easy to control with several built in modes. It can be controlled from a standard RC receiver/transmitter, serial device, microcontroller or an analog source, such as a potentiometer based joystick. RoboClaw is equipped with screw terminal for fast connect and disconnect. All modes are set by the onboard dip switches making setup a snap! Being a synchronous regenerative motor controller means when ever RoboClaw is slowing down or breaking the batteries are being charged. With the advance circuitry it can also change direction during full throttle without damage! RoboClaw also includes a jumper selectable 5V BEC and lithium cutoff mode which protects your batteries from damage. Features: -6 V to 30 V operating supply range ( a separate logic supply is needed if the main power source is over 17V). -5 A per channel (10 A peak). -High Speed Direction Change -5V BEC Built In -Battery Level Monitoring -Up to 8,000,000 PPS -Decoder Hardware Based -Thermal Protection -Regenerative Breaking -Serial, RC or Analog Control Downloads: -Data Sheet -Arduino Library and Examples.

Puente H motor DC 36V20CS


Cod.artculo: 1457

Precio: MXN$1,110.00
(IVA incluido)

En Existencia:5 Artculos Cantidad: Descuentos por cantidad:

Cantidad Precio

6+ MXN$999.00

12+ MXN$943.50

Descripcin Enviar a un amigo This discrete MOSFET H-bridge motor driver enables bidirectional control of one high-power DC brushed motor. The compact 1.81.2-inch board supports a wide 5.5 to 50 V voltage range and is efficient enough to deliver a continuous 20 A without a heat sink. This version outputs an analog voltage proportional to the motor current, and an extra control input allows for coasting in addition to the driving and braking offered by the other Pololu high-power motor drivers. Overview

The Pololu high-power motor driver is a discrete MOSFET H-bridge designed to drive large DC brushed motors. The H-bridge is made up of one N-channel MOSFET per leg, and most of the boards performance is determined by these MOSFETs (the rest of the board contains the circuitry to take user inputs and control the MOSFETs). The MOSFET datasheet is available under the Resources tab. The board has an absolute maximum voltage rating of 50 V; higher voltages can permanently destroy the motor driver. Under normal operating conditions, ripple voltage on the supply line can raise the maximum voltage to more than the average or intended voltage, so a safe maximum voltage is approximately 44 V. Note: Battery voltages can be much higher than nominal voltages when they are charged, so the maximum battery voltage we recommend is 36 V unless appropriate measures are taken to limit the peak voltage. The versatility of this driver makes it suitable for a large range of currents and voltages: it can deliver up to 20 A of continuous current with a board size of only 1.8" by 1.2" and no required heat sink. With the addition of a heat sink, it can drive a motor with up to about 32 A of continuous current. The module offers a simple interface that requires as few as two I/O lines while allowing for both sign-magnitude and locked-antiphase operation, and an optional third control input unique to this board allows for coasting. This board also features

a current-sensing circuit that measures bidirectional motor current with a magnitude up to 30 A and outputs an analog voltage. Integrated detection of various short-circuit conditions protects against common causes of catastrophic failure; however, please note that the board does not include reverse power protection or any over-current or overtemperature protection. We recommend you use the integrated current sensor to keep the driver from delivering more current than it can safely handle. Using the Motor Driver Connections The motor and motor power connections are on one side of the board, and the control connections (5V logic) are on the other side. The motor supply should be capable of delivering the high current the motor will require, and a large capacitor should be installed between V+ and ground close to the motor driver to decrease electrical noise. Two axial capacitors are included and one or both can be installed by soldering them into the V+ and GND pins (labeled '+' and '-' on the bottom silkscreen) along the long edges of the board. Such installations are compact but might limit heat sinking options; also, depending on the power supply quality and motor characteristics, a larger capacitor might be required. There are two options for connecting to the high-power signals (V+, OUTA, OUTB, GND): large holes on 0.2" centers, which are compatible with the included terminal blocks, and pairs of 0.1"-spaced holes that can be used with perfboards, breadboards, and 0.1" connectors. Warning: Take proper safety precautions when using high-power electronics. Make sure you know what you are doing when using high voltages or currents! During normal operation, this product can get hot enough to burn you. Take care when handling this product or other components connected to it. The logic connections are designed to interface with 5V systems (5.5 V max); the minimum high input signal threshold is 3.5 V, so we do not recommend connecting this device directly to a 3.3 V controller. In a typical configuration, only PWMH and DIR are required, but PWML can be used to enable coasting if both PWML and PWMH are driven low. PWML is pulled high and PWMH is pulled low internally. The two fault flag pins (FF1 and FF2) can be monitored to detect problems (see the Fault Flag Table below for more details). The RESET pin, when held low, puts the driver into a low-power sleep mode and clears any latched fault flags. The V+ pin on the logic side of the board gives you access to monitor the motors power supply or pass it on to low-current devices (it should not be used for high current). The board also provides a regulated 5V pin which can provide a few milliamps (this is typically insufficient for a whole control circuit but can be useful as a reference or for very low-power microcontrollers). This pin can be shorted to VCS to power the current sensor, or VCS can be supplied with 5 V externally. If the 5V output pin is used to power VCS, it should not be used for any other purpose as the current sensor will draw close to the limit of the current the 5V pin can supply. When the current sensor is powered by applying 5 V to VCS, the CS pin outputs 66 mV/A for currents between -30 and 30 A centered at 2.5 V (typical error is less than 1.5%).

Pinout

PIN

Default State

V+

5V (out)

VCS GND CS OUTA OUTB PWMH PWML DIR RESET FF1 FF2 LOW HIGH LOW HIGH LOW LOW

Description This is the main 5.5 30 V motor power supply connection, which should typically be made to the larger V+ pad. The smaller V+ pads along the long side of the board are intended for power supply capacitors, and the smaller V+ pad on the logic side of the board gives you access to monitor the motors power supply (it should not be used for high current). This regulated 5V output provides a few milliamps. It can be shorted to VCS to power the current sensor. This output should not be connected to other external power supply lines. Be careful not to accidentally short this pin to the neighboring V+ pin while power is being supplied as doing so will instantly destroy the board! Connect 5 V to this pin to power the current sensor. Ground connection for logic and motor power supplies. ACS714 current sensor output (66 mV/A centered at 2.5 V). A motor output pin. B motor output pin. Pulse width modulation input: a PWM signal on this pin corresponds to a PWM output on the motor outputs. Control input that enables coasting when both PWML and PWMH are low. See the motor control options section below for more information. Direction input: when DIR is high current will flow from OUTA to OUTB, when it is low current will flow from OUTB to OUTA. The reset pin, when pulled low, puts the board into a lowpower sleep mode and clears any latched fault flags. Fault flag 1 indicator: FF1 goes high when certain faults have occurred. See table below for details. Fault flag 2 indicator: FF2 goes high when certain faults have occurred. See table below for details.

Included Hardware A 20-pin straight breakaway male header, two 100 uF capacitors, and two 2-pin 5mm terminal blocks are included with each motor driver. (Note: The terminals blocks are only rated for 15 A; for higher power applications, use thick wires soldered directly to the board.) Connecting large capacitors across the power supply is recommended; one way to do it is between the '+' and '-' holes, as shown below. The four mounting holes are intended to be used with #2 screws (not included).

Pololu high-power motor driver CS with included hardware.

Pololu high-power motor driver CS in a breadboard.

Motor Control Options The motor driver can be used in several different modes:

Sign-magnitude (drive-brake): With PWML disconnected or held high, apply a pulse-widthmodulated (PWM) signal to the PWMH pin. The duty cycle of the PWM controls the speed of the motor and the DIR pin controls the direction. During the active (high) portion of the PWM, the motor outputs drive the motor by putting the full V+ voltage across the motor in the direction determined by the DIR pin; during the low portion of the PWM, the motor outputs brake the motor by shorting both motor terminals to ground. This means that the motor alternates between drive and brake at the PWM frequency with the percentage of the driving time determined by the duty cycle. Sign-magnitude (drive-coast): Connect the same PWM signal to both the PWMH and PWML pins. The duty cycle of the PWM controls the speed of the motor and the DIR pin controls the direction. During the active (high) portion of the PWM, the motor outputs drive the motor by putting the full V+ voltage across the motor in the direction determined by the DIR pin; during the low portion of the PWM, the motor outputs are disconnected and the motor is allowed to coast. This means that the motor alternates between drive and coast at the PWM frequency with the percentage of the driving time determined by the duty cycle. Drive-coast operation can draw less power than drive-brake operation, but drive-brake operation can produce a more linear relationship between duty cycle and motor speed. Variable braking (brake-coast): With PWMH disconnected or held low, apply a PWM signal to the PWML pin (the state of the DIR pin has no effect on this mode). During the active (high) portion of the PWM, the motor outputs brake the motor by shorting both motor terminals to ground; during the low portion of the PWM, the motor outputs are disconnected and the motor is allowed to coast. This means that the motor alternates between brake and coast at the PWM frequency with the percentage of the braking time determined by the duty cycle. Locked-antiphase: With PWML disconnected or held high and PWMH held high, apply a PWM signal to the DIR pin. In locked-antiphase operation, a low duty cycle drives the motor in one direction and a high duty cycle drives the motor in the other direction; a 50% duty cycle turns the motor off. A successful locked-antiphase implementation relies on the motor inductance and PWM switching frequency to smooth out the current (e.g. making the current zero in the 50% duty cycle case), so a high PWM frequency might be required.

Motor Driver Truth Table PWMH PWML DIR OUTA OUTB Operation H H L GND V+ Forward H H H V+ GND Backward L H X GND GND Brake Low H L X V+ V+ Brake High L L X Z Z Coast
X = dont care (same for input H or L); Z = high impedance (outputs disconnected) PWM Frequency The motor driver supports PWM frequencies as high as 40 kHz, though higher frequencies result in higher switching losses in the motor driver. Also, the driver has a dead time (when the outputs are not driven) of approximately 3 us per cycle, so high duty cycles become unavailable at high frequencies. For example, at 40 kHz, the period is 25 us; if 3 us of that is taken up by the dead time, the maximum available duty cycle is 22/25, or 88%. (100% is always available, so gradually ramping the PWM input from 0 to 100% will result in the output ramping from 0 to 88%, staying at 88% for inputs of 88% through 99%, and then switching to 100%.) Real-World Power Dissipation Considerations The motor driver can tolerate peak currents in excess of 200 A. The peak current ratings are for quick transients (e.g. when a motor is first turned on), and the continuous rating of 20 A is dependent on various conditions, such as the ambient temperature. The main limitation comes from heating and power dissipation; therefore, at high currents, the motor driver will be extremely hot, and performance can be improved by adding heat sinks or otherwise cooling the board. The drivers printed circuit board is designed to draw heat out of the MOSFETs, but performance can be improved by adding a heat sink. The MOSFETs have a theoretical maximum continuous current of 90A at 25C, but dissipating enough heat to keep the MOSFET at this temperature is impractical for most applications; close to 35 A of continuous current should be achievable without too extravagant of a heat sink. For more information on power dissipation see the data sheet for the MOSFETs on the Resources tab. Because there is no internal temperature limiting on the motor driver, the entire system should be designed to keep the load current below the 20 A limit. An easy way to achieve this is to select a motor with a stall current below that limit. However, because a good motor can have stall currents dozens of times higher than the typical operating current, motors with stall currents that are hundreds of amps can be used with this driver as long as the running current is kept low. For example, a motor with a 100 A stall current might run well at 10 A, leaving a safe margin for the current to double for several minutes at a time or to triple for several seconds. If the motor does stall completely for a prolonged period, however, the motor or driver are likely to burn out. Warning: This motor driver has no over-current or over-temperature shut-off. Either condition can cause permanent damage to the motor driver. We recommend you use the current-sense output CS to monitor your current draw if your application will put the driver close to its limits of operation. Fault Conditions The motor driver can detect three different fault states, which are reported on the FF1 and FF2 pins. The detectable faults are short circuits on the output, under-voltage, and over-temperature. A short-circuit fault is latched, meaning the outputs will stay off and the fault flag will stay high, until the board is reset (RESET brought low). The under-voltage fault disables outputs but is not latched. The over-temperature fault provides a weak indication of the board being too hot, but it does not directly indicate the temperature of the MOSFETs, which are usually the first components to overheat. The fault flag operation is summarized below.

Flag State Fault Description Disable Outputs Latched Until Reset FF1 FF2 L L No fault No No L H Short Circuit Yes Yes H L Over Temperature No No H H Under Voltage Yes No

File downloads

IPD048N06L3 G datasheet (222k pdf) Allegro ACS714 current sensor datasheet (678k pdf)
Datasheet for the Infineon IPD048N06L3 G OptiMOS 3 Power-Transistor.

SENSORES .

Technical Specifications Image Gallery

RS485 click 3.3V


RS485 Click 3.3V is an accessory board in mikroBus form factor. The onboard SN65HVD12differential line transceiver is suitable for high speed bidirectional data communication on multipoint bus transmission lines. It is designed for balanced data transmission and complies with EIA standards RS-485 and RS-422. This transceiver features a differential line driver and differential line receiver. Board is set to use 3.3V power supply by default.

CAN SPI click 3.3V


CAN SPI click 3.3V is an accessory board in mikroBus form factor. It is the best solution to add CAN connectivity to your microcontroller with SPI interface. Board features SN65HVD230 can transciever circuit which provides CAN serial communication physical layer in accordance with the ISO 11898 standard. It is designed for operation in especially-harsh environments, these devices feature cross-wire protection, loss-of-ground and overvoltage protection, overtemperature protection, as well as wide common-mode range. Board is designed to use 3.3V power supply only.

THERMO click
THERMO Click is an accessory board in mikroBUS form factor. It features MAX31855K thermocouple-to-digital converter as well as PCC-SMP connector for K-type thermocouple probes. TheMAX31855K has temperature range between -270 and 1372C with sensitivity of about 41V/C. It has built-in 14bit ADC converter. THERMO Click communicates with target board via SPI interface (Read-only). The board is designed to use 3.3V power supply only. It has a LED diode (GREEN) that indicates the presence of power supply.
THERMO click Examples [225.78KB]THERMO click User Manual [447.58KB]mikroBUS specification [142.87KB]

$29.00

4-20 mA T click
4-20mA T Click is an add-on board in mikroBUS form factor. Its a compact and easy solution for adding 4-to-20mA industry standard communication protocol to your design. It features ADuM1411Quad-chanel digital isolator, MCP4921 12-bit DAC as well as XTR116 4-20mA current loop transmitter. 4-20mA T Click communicates with target board microcontroller via three mikroBUS SPI lines (SDI, SCK, CS). The board is designed to use 3.3V and 5V power supply. LED diode indicates the presence of power supply.
4-20 mA T click User Manual [486.19KB]4-20 mA T click Examples [433.98KB]mikroBUS specification [142.87KB]

$26.00

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen