How do you mean?What will happen?
Burgerman wrote:How do you mean?What will happen?
Do you mean the chair fell on its side, why?
Have you been messing about with motor compensation? If you set it too high it runs away. Sees a load, then the wheel that sees the most load, accelerates out of control. Its a positive feedback loop. This is what the manufacturers are afraid of. Thats why they hide the OEM level tools from those that dont understand what they are doing.
If thats not it, then I need a lot more information.
Burgerman wrote:Question too vague.
It should climb a 10 degree slope easily enough. And shouldnt stop.
It should DECEND a 10 degree slope and it should stop when you tell it to do so.
Provided you have motor compensation set correctly. If its too low it will not perform properly up, or down the slope. It will behave like "weak" motors.
If set too high it will behave the opposite way. And be jumpy and will accelerate when climbing a slope. And may stop suddenly if you try to decend a slope.
But the problem here is that your translations and descriptive powers are inadequate and this may be nothing to do with motor compensation Not even really sure what you are asking.
one day ago I lowered the compensation from 40 to 30 mohm
I did this because the chair was too snappy for me.
I tried it on the flat and on small slopes, everything was fine.
Today on a bigger slope I started at minimum speed, then when I raised the speed the chair turned quickly on itself and fell on its side.
what happened?
Burgerman wrote:one day ago I lowered the compensation from 40 to 30 mohm
I did this because the chair was too snappy for me.Thats not what motor compensation is for. It has far reaching effects. You must put it back and then reduce turn speed, min turn speed, increase turn acceleration/turn deceleration. And minimum turn acceleration/deceleration.
q700m wrote:according to me one engine was running and the other stopped, but I didn't understand why
Burgerman wrote:Cannot be overvoltage stop, because that stops both motors.
Scragger7 wrote:You didn't accidently push the joystick hard left/right when you upped the speed (presuming you change speed while driving) and cause it to roll.
q700m wrote:specific question
when climbing a slope with the motor compensation lowered, what happens?
Burgerman wrote:q700m wrote:specific question
when climbing a slope with the motor compensation lowered, what happens?
If you choose say speed 2, and climb the slope te chair will slow. If you choose a too high compensation it may even speed up or run away. The CORRECT level is where it invisibly assists turns, slowing, climbing a threshold etc. It is not intended to make controls feel "weaker" because that then affects many other things that its intended to do properly. Use other settings like turn speed, minimum turn speed, and forward and reverse accelleration for that.
DONT reduce turn acceleration, min turn acceleration, or turn deceleration or min turn deceleration, as these should alsways be set to a high figure for accuate linear control. On my chairs these 4 are all set to 100.
Burgerman wrote:By first of all setting all 4 turn acceleration settings and turn deceleration settings to 100.
Forward acceleration to 100 too but most people wouldnt like that! So say 70.
Then by assessing it in several ways.
Start by driving forwards and backwards with speed set to low, like speed 1 or 2. And see if it does so reliably and the same speed on a ramp, a turn in place and a threshhold.
Then turn it to 0. Or the lowest it can be set to on your specific chair. And then try driving in the same way. On the same obstacles. The same speeds. Try turn in place. THIS s an essential step because then you will feel the exact thing it actually does! It probably wont start rolling. Or rolls too far without slowing down properly. It likely will not turn in place unless you set speed to a higher setting like 4 or 5. This allows you to feel what it is doing.
Then set max speed to 1 or 2. THEN try driving up a slope or long ramp. If compensation is too LOW then it will stop. Or will slow severely.
Then try a turn in place on a nice thick carpet. It may refuse to turn. Or may only turn unreliably or need to move forwards or backwards befor a turn will begin.
Then try running it up to a threshold. Stop. Then try and drive forwards. It will stop and not climb it. It will feel like the battery is dead, or that you are driving in glue.
Now return the chair to the manufacturers "recommended" setting. And try those same things again.
When set CORRECTLY, when set to speed 2 for e.g and you arrive at a ramp, slope, it will not slow very much at all. Maybe very very slightly.
Try all the other things above. It should turn in place reliably etc.
Now you know what it does. So now start with the manufacturers base setting. And try adding 5mOhm. Then do your tests again. It will probably start, climb thresholds, and slow less on a ramp. Will turn in place more easily. But the chair may begin to feel "jumpy". Too responsive. If not, try adding another 5mOhm. And do the same tests again. It will perform better still. If you add more 5mOhm increments it will sonner or later start to be very jumpy and harder to move around smoothly. At this point it is becoming dangerous. If you were to add yet more, the chair MAY decide to run away and be unstoppable, or spin out of control no matter what you do.
So its a compromise between great control and a step too far. But now that you can FEEL what it does you can easily use the chair and fine tune it. I can feel the difference of a 5mOhm change very easily if its already close to correct. I cant tell the difference if I add or remove 20mOhm if its already too low.
If you have no base setting (say an uknown set of motors, start at 30mOhm. Then increase in 5mOhm steps - not more - and test carefully. As above. Then you wil find the sweet spot. You cannot feel this sweet spot UNLESS you set the turn accelarations and decelerations to 100 first. And forward acceleration to say 60 or so. And obviously you need normal hands/control skills. Without that dont try any of this.
Burgerman wrote:one day ago I lowered the compensation from 40 to 30 mohm
I did this because the chair was too snappy for me.
Thats not what motor compensation is for. It has far reaching effects. You must put it back and then reduce turn speed, min turn speed, increase turn acceleration/turn deceleration. And minimum turn acceleration/deceleration.I tried it on the flat and on small slopes, everything was fine.
Today on a bigger slope I started at minimum speed, then when I raised the speed the chair turned quickly on itself and fell on its side.
what happened?
No idea.
Burgerman wrote:Not that will help. Its a mechanical or electrical issue.
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