Sujet : Re: Interesting inductor
De : erichpwagner (at) *nospam* hotmail.com (piglet)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 14. Mar 2024, 14:03:07
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <ususib$1k56p$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4
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john larkin <
jl@650pot.com> wrote:
On Wed, 13 Mar 2024 22:32:27 +0000, Clive Arthur
<clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:
On 13/03/2024 04:18, John Larkin wrote:
<snip>
I'm hassling with inductors now too, but at the other end of the speed
spectrum.
We want a programmable inductor, from maybe 1 mH to 500 mH or so,
maybe 100 mA. Sounds like an inductive DAC, a series string of
inductors with shorting relays. If the step inductance ratio were,
say, 1.8:1 we could have some hidden bits, more than the customer
sees, so we could get pretty close to his requested value.
We could test all 2^n steps, make a list, and select the closest to
his request.
We're simulating loads to an engine control computer, torque motors
and solenoids and steppers.
Gyrator?
We just yesterday had a brainstorm session about that. How can one
make a programmable electronic fake inductor?
A real inductor stores energy, and can do things like high voltage
flyback. So a fake inductor should store energy, or pretend to. It
could be done with a current shunt, a fast ADC, some math in an FPGA,
a fast DAC, and a big power amplifier with big power supplies. Too
much work.
I wonder if you could reduce the power supply needs a bit by switchmoding
the incoming current into big storage capacitors so the gyrator does some
energy storage and could make flybacks up to some limit?
-- piglet