![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I did something similar to this a while back to power an old military
artificial horizon. I don't think I ever actually drew out a schematic - too simple; I just wired it up on a perf board. Vcc was 5 volts, regulated by a 7805, from 12 volts in my case, but 24 volts should work too. I used a 555 to generate the clock, which was 400 Hz * 9=3600 Hz. That clock was fed to a 4 bit counter. The output of that counter was fed to the input lines of a 74154 decoder. http://www.datasheet.in/datasheet-ht...uctor.pdf.html http://www.datasheet.in/datasheet-ht...ilips.pdf.html http://www.datasheet.in/datasheet-ht...ments.pdf.html http://www.datasheet.in/datasheet-ht...uctor.pdf.html On the output side of the decoder, 3 bits each were used for each phase. Phase A was y0, y1 and y2 fed through 1n914 diodes as a "wired or" circuit. Phase B was y3, y4, and y5. Phase C was y6, y7 and y8. Y9 went to reset on the counter. Now we have 3 phases of square waves at 5 volts. feed those phases backwards through 3 small 120v to 5v transformers. Total cost - $10 or so at Radio Shack. The fact that they are square waves, not sine waves has no effect at all as far as I could see. You are just running a tiny 3 phase synchronous motor. 3 phase, 400 cycle military instruments are super cheap on ebay. You can mostly set up a complete IFR panel for really cheap! "karel" wrote in message ... "Robert Bonomi" wrote in message ... In article . com, wrote: I've got an ARU 44 gyro and I'd like to power it off my 24VDC system. It needs 115VAC 3 phase, and about 75W to 100W. Is there an off the shelf unit that can do this, or maybe someone knows of a schematic to build my own? I'm an electronics engineer so I can do this, but inverters are not my specialty so any guidance would be greatly appreciated. WAG says it's probably 400 cycle, as well. not 60Hz. Design can be fairly simple, particularly if you use a micro-controller for the 'logic' of phase generation. start with a clock that is 2 X phases X frequency, Feed it into a counter, that counts from 0 to (phases-1). Hang a number of comparators on the counter outputs, one that triggers for each value. Send each comparator output through a flip-flop. (this gives you a 50% duty-cycle output for each phase, and at the right frequency.) [now for the "analog stuff ![]() low-pass filter to sine-wave. Amplify to get the needed voltage/current levels. Voila! And how does this manage to produce 110 volts from 24? Some kind of transformer wil be required. Step-up rectifying might be an option but will be hard at these power levels, i.e. require huge condensers. But I'm afraid I am no more able than you to really fill O/P's request for a schematic PS does anyone know how important the true sine wave is for this kind of equipment? |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
WINGS: When do the clocks start ticking? | Andrew Gideon | Piloting | 6 | February 3rd 04 03:01 PM |