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by dwpdwpdwpdwpdwp
3665 days ago
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Yes, and I'm compelled to add that robots are typically actuated by servo motors and/or hydraulics, which are very commonly under the control of PID loops. Those PID loops allow the actuators to reach their set-points (whether position, velocity, etc.). To obtain 'smooth' motion, those set-points are usually streamed to the actuator at 60+ Hz, and it is the generation of those set-points that can become very complex; the stream of set-points is not commonly generated by the output of a PID controller. |
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The industry standard update rate for servo systems is ~1kHz (although it depends on the application), and I have seen systems with >5kHz torque bandwidths. The torque dynamics associated with a typical PM machine used for servo systems are easily in the 10's or 100's of microseconds, so 60Hz control would not cut it.