A servo is used to control the velocity and position of any automated device such as medical equipments, robots, and industrial machines.
A servo is used to control the velocity and position of any automated device such as medical equipments, robots, and industrial machines. Electromechanical element like a servo motor helps the device to attain the desired motion and a servo drive works as an electronic amplifier to the motor. The servo control system monitors the feedback signals of the motor and constantly adjusts the motion to avoid any deviations from the expected behavior of the machines. The control system addresses numerous mechanical needs of improving the transient response timings, reducing the steady-state errors, diminishing the sensitivity of loading parameters as well as decreasing the fluctuations in voltage.
Servo systems increase the system bandwidth. Quicker response times allow higher machine output. Reducing the steady-state errors leads to the accuracy of the servo system. Finally decreasing the sensitivity for loading parameters ensures that the servo systems endure fluctuations in both the output and input parameters.
Servo drives function as an effective mediator as they receive command signals from the control system, amplify the signals and subsequently transmit the electric current to the motor to produce a motion that is proportional to those command signals. Characteristically the desired velocity is represented by the command signals. However, the signal also represents the desired position or torque. With help of the velocity sensor the servomotor reports the actual velocity to the servo drives. The drives then alter the voltage frequencies to correct the errors in the velocity.
Servo Controls" can be generally classified into two essential categories of problems. The first category deals with the command tracking. It keeps track if the command is being actually followed by the motion. In general, the commands in the rotary motion controls are torque, acceleration, velocity, and position. In case of linear motion, force is applied instead of the torque. The particular component of servo controls that directly handles it is frequently identified as the “feed-forward” control. It helps in determining the internal commands so that the motion commands of the user are performed with no errors.
The second feature addresses all the disturbance rejection traits of the system. The disturbances can range from inaccurate motor parameter evaluations applied on the feed-forward controls to torque disturbances in the motor shafts. These problems are addressed by using the familiar Proportional Integral and Velocity Position Loop or P.I.V. and Proportional Integral and Derivative Position Loop or P.I.D.
A servo control is efficiently designed to address all the problems that a machine can face and it effectively prevents the possibility of any such mishaps.
Article by Jenny, content writer at Inter-Dev Internet Marketing Company, on behalf of Servotronix.com – Custom Servo Drives
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