peace
Cant we do this?
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two ESC's in parallel will go boom for sure, I've been thinking, as you did, to disassemble two ESC's and use the power blocks to double the available amp but not sure if one "control stage" can do the job correctly??? -
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-ChiefComment
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I wouldn't waste two ESCs. Boom is virtually guaranteed.
Unless it's specifically designed for parallel output, an ESC needs to be driving the outputs exclusively. You can parallel more output boards, but you can't parallel the input (micro) portion.
At my previous employer (tdipower.com) we made power conversion modules. AC-DC rectifiers (ie, switching BECs) could be paralleled quite easily. DC-AC (BL ESC equivalent) inverters had a communication bus in order to be able to parallel them. Essentially, you ended up with one master that drove everything and a bunch of slaves doing the same thing at the same time. It got ugly REAL QUICK if they weren't synchronized.
AndySpektrum Development TeamComment
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Depends on the topology of the power sections you are using. You may need to boost the signals feeding the second board of FETs. The analog coming back would be fine. If the ESC has current measurement, you might run into problems there.
Save yourself money - buy the right ESC to begin with.
AndySpektrum Development TeamComment
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get a pair of cheap 80A Mystery and see if you can pull 160A out of it... I have some and I could do the test but I'm not interrested in waisting $40, that's what I paid for them!Comment
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Thanks i do that all the time but I still want to experiment thanks for the help.
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Don't know if the back EMF will be enough for the ESC's to sense if in parallel. In addition, if the ESC's are slightly out of sync on the output, With multiple pulses overlapping, this could lead to a high current DC component and burn up a motor.Government Moto:
"Why fix it? Blame someone else for breaking it."Comment
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Dom,
It will be plenty. The input is a high impedance, so there is very little change to the signal level seen by both ESCs. The problem is that they need to be perfectly synchronized (within a few us) so that they are both driving the FETs at the same time. That, quite simply, isn't going to happen. The alternative is to remove the micro from one ESC, and have it's outputs driven by the other micro. This is exactly how I built the dual-90 ESCs several years ago (I only made a handful - those who have them might chime in).
And Mr. X: Your signature is appropriate, if you look in the mirror. "Ego leads to self destruction. " If you knew who it is that you were railing against, you might not be so inflated. Here's somebody who has been a positive contributor to the hobby for 20+ years, somebody who has set multiple records in some of the toughest classes, and you go dissing him?!?! Wake up, dude.
AndySpektrum Development TeamComment
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I started a project two years ago with a noted esc designer to do just this, two power blocks and one 'brain'. We abandoned the project after several failures. I don't remember the problems just now but I took his word for it.
Mini Cat Racing USA
www.minicatracingusa.comComment
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Spektrum Development TeamComment
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Andy, I dont think too many of these cheapo's we have been buying are going to have current sense circuitry (if thats what you where reffering to earlier) so I'm going to go out on a limb and assume that the biggest issue might be the driver voltage level being high enough as more FET's come into the circuit?
I have been studying the speedos I have with stacked boards now and the HexTronic 120 only have an addition 6 solder joints (not power or output) and 2 of those connections appear to be for board integrity (structural) not electrical connectivity. The MGM's I have with stacked FET boards have 8 extra connections but I know these guys have a current measurement circuitry. The rest of the guys I have you cant see nothing unless you break out the soldering iron.
You and I go back half a dozen years (and I appreciate you taking the time to over the years for edjamacating me!) and I would like to hear your comments/ thoughts/worrys/concerns on attempting this sort of garage sperament'n. Not that I'm worried about thowing away 100 bux, its being lulled into a false sense of how easy this might appear, yet be far more complex. Oh yeah. I'm solder certified as well as ESD trained and I have the tools at work so disregard the garage comment. Just slang.
JohnChange is the one ConstantComment
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It was chinese but not one of the cheapies. The guy is absolutely brilliant. He was the FIRST to have telemetry built in to the esc (like castle does now on the ICE controllers) I OEM'd aircraft controllers from him and the quality was the best I have ever seen from anyone, anywhere. The company is hifei. They make the Seaking controllers. Rock solid stuff. After a while, he got so busy he and I just kinda gave up on the single controller for two motors. If you ever work it out, let me know. I'll get him to build them!Mini Cat Racing USA
www.minicatracingusa.comComment
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