2014-12-04 0:11 GMT-03:00 Jon Elson <el...@pico-systems.com>: > There are basically two ways to run resolvers. You can > excite the rotor and get two > varying voltages from the stator coils. These will > generally be in phase with the > excitation, or 180 degrees out of phase. > > Or, you can excite the two stator coils with signals that > have some phase relationship, > (usually 90 degrees) and measure the time of the zero > crossing of the rotor signal, > which will be roughly constant amplitude. > > it sounds like this system may be using the excite the > stator scheme. >
Hello Jon and thank you for the explaination! So in theory I could use them as normal resolvers and output them to LinuxCNC as several people did. The problem is I don't know if it's worth to spend money on hardware just to test if this is going to work, or if it's better to use encoders from scratch which I know they will work. -- *Leonardo Marsaglia*. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Download BIRT iHub F-Type - The Free Enterprise-Grade BIRT Server from Actuate! Instantly Supercharge Your Business Reports and Dashboards with Interactivity, Sharing, Native Excel Exports, App Integration & more Get technology previously reserved for billion-dollar corporations, FREE http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=164703151&iu=/4140/ostg.clktrk _______________________________________________ Emc-users mailing list Emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users