Hi All, I was thinking about how would be the best way to use switches to
recover magnetic field collapse energy in motors and stuff, and remembered
the Gray Patent with the two battery switch setup. I am trying to think of the
best way to implement it into a design.
I can't find the patent drawing at the moment but I'll try to find it and post it
if someone else has it please post it.
So anyway I made this sketch.
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
EDIT: here's the patent drawing.
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
I think it's viable and would like to experiment with it somehow, but I am a bit
ignorant of what is available to do the switching, and I don't want to start
trying things that are not ideal if there is a better way.
The only thing I can think of to do the switching in a robust way is relays.
And I'm not good with relays, plus that would limit the switching frequency.
My thoughts are that if the correct switching frequency was used for the
batteries or battery type the best result could be gotten. Switching
frequency would also be related to loading for best effect I think as well.
However it could be done at a fixed frequency for simplicity in implementation,
but for testing and experimentation things need to be adjustable.
I'm starting to work through some overall switching solutions with a load
device in mind.
Any idea's for ways to do the actual switching are welcome, meaning
hardware and control circuitry. Also using two sets of two batteries and
switching from series for recovery and to parallel for loading would be good
but more complicated, it could help to keep things cool though.
Cheers.
recover magnetic field collapse energy in motors and stuff, and remembered
the Gray Patent with the two battery switch setup. I am trying to think of the
best way to implement it into a design.
I can't find the patent drawing at the moment but I'll try to find it and post it
if someone else has it please post it.
So anyway I made this sketch.
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
EDIT: here's the patent drawing.
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
I think it's viable and would like to experiment with it somehow, but I am a bit
ignorant of what is available to do the switching, and I don't want to start
trying things that are not ideal if there is a better way.
The only thing I can think of to do the switching in a robust way is relays.
And I'm not good with relays, plus that would limit the switching frequency.
My thoughts are that if the correct switching frequency was used for the
batteries or battery type the best result could be gotten. Switching
frequency would also be related to loading for best effect I think as well.
However it could be done at a fixed frequency for simplicity in implementation,
but for testing and experimentation things need to be adjustable.
I'm starting to work through some overall switching solutions with a load
device in mind.
Any idea's for ways to do the actual switching are welcome, meaning
hardware and control circuitry. Also using two sets of two batteries and
switching from series for recovery and to parallel for loading would be good
but more complicated, it could help to keep things cool though.
Cheers.
Comment