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Re: [Paparazzi-devel] Discrete power supply for servos and autopilot
From: |
Tilman Baumann |
Subject: |
Re: [Paparazzi-devel] Discrete power supply for servos and autopilot |
Date: |
Thu, 05 Apr 2012 11:28:14 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux i686; rv:11.0) Gecko/20120327 Thunderbird/11.0.1 |
On 05/04/12 11:11, Gareth Roberts wrote:
Hi Tilman,
What about something like this? http://www.national.com/pf/LM/LM2678.html
Does not quite go low enough I would say.
Buck-boost should be ok as long as you have sufficient filtering on
the output.
That was my thought. But you automatically get inductors in your design.
I hate sourcing them.
The critical stuff is all fed off the 3.3V reg anyway, which is linear.
Exactly. I will even try to get a smooth 5V supply. For all the other
electronics. Telemetry, GPS and so on.
The RC receiver will be pretty noise tolerant as it's designed to run
off cheap BECs in ESCs, most of which are switched-mode anyway.
I was thinking 5A 5V unfiltered here. More might perhaps be better, for
complex planes with more servos?
What do experienced RC-ler expect from their BEC?
I've used ppz with two cells before, although it usually implies an
aircraft so small you wouldn't want a mount like this.
Still, I like the idea to be universal. I will consider Buck-Boost again.
TI has a nice powersupply design tool. I can simulate a lot there.
As for the simplest option:
Looking at this:
http://paparazzi.enac.fr/wiki/Lisa/M_v20#Powering_the_Board
you drive the servos seperately from the autopilot normally.
If you close the jumper JP1 you just need to connect 5V straight to
the servo side of the Lisa (the BEC in your ESC would do fine,
assuming it's a stock Bixler).
That way you don't need any external components or additional wiring
at all.
I would like to keep them separate.
Diydrones also do something similiar to your proposal w/o electronics:
https://store.diydrones.com/Bixler_SkySurfer_Chassis_No_Pan_Tilt_p/bx-chassis.htm
Hehe, that is exactly where I got the idea from. :)
Cheers
Tilman