safe
1 GW
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2006
- Messages
- 5,681
It took me a moment to realize what you were talking about...
Yes, in the "perfect scenario" where the "efficiency peak" and the "power peak" are one in the same then you will get the kinds of high efficiencies that you have pointed to. This is one of those "apples" verses "oranges" situations were we are talking about two tihngs at once. The PWM has NOTHING to do with this... this is all about matching the voltage to the rpms so as to hit the "sweet spot" of efficiency within the "normal" physics of the motor. That's why in the past I've stressed the idea that you need to align these two things and then the controller will automatically produce a very efficient overall powerband.
Back to the "myth" however...
The PWM "effect" simply gives you a little "extra" torque in areas that are nice to have... if you use a very high current limit YOUR LOSSES ARE STILL BAD. (PWM doesn't change the overall motor charactoristics that much, just a little "extra" in certain rpms)
The point here is that it's the motor configuration and the current limit that determine MOST of how your overall system behaves, not PWM.
The myth stands as a myth...


The PWM "effect" simply gives you a little "extra" torque in areas that are nice to have... if you use a very high current limit YOUR LOSSES ARE STILL BAD. (PWM doesn't change the overall motor charactoristics that much, just a little "extra" in certain rpms)
The point here is that it's the motor configuration and the current limit that determine MOST of how your overall system behaves, not PWM.
The myth stands as a myth...