Burgerman wrote:Quite obviously, it has no other way to steer.
Tank steering works in the absolute opposite sense. You cant mix the two.
If it has tank steer on the drive motors, and you use only this, then the "casters" will not caster! They have no trail, they are symetrical, wrong geometry.
Burgerman wrote:Its not r-net is it...
Answer the questions anyway!
And show a video of the problem. Because I dont know what "too sensitive" actually means.
Burgerman wrote:Says "couldnt find that video" ?
If its spinning out and trying to swap ends then that just physics. Front drive rear caster is unstable. It will drive great in reverse.
Yes send profile of before and after.
Burgerman wrote:OK.
That is EXACTLY what I would expect to happen. That is because the mass (centre of mass, centre of gravity) and you, are all behind the drive wheels. That is quite literally physics in action. It creates an unstable chair. So any small turn is automatically increased/accelerated. Which then causes it to accelerate into an even tighter turn. And then again and you spin. The chair wants to go backwards.
Drive it in reverse and it will go straight...
If you take a manual push wheelchair. and then push it and release it, it will travel away in a straight line.
If you take a manual push wheelchair, and turn it around so its bigwheels are in the front and then push it away backwards, it will do EXACTLY what your chair does.
This is why I never ever want a front drive wheelchair. Here are your options:
1. Turn the seat around so the drive wheels are in the rear and the casters at the front! A rear drive chair. Now it will drive straight, and be stable.
If you dont want that:
2. You need to fit a GYRO like this: https://industrial.curtisswright.com/en ... yro-module
That will DETECT when the chair begins to swing out and use the motor power to correct it before it gets bad enough to feel. The problem is that while it works, with careful programming it feels horrible. You can feel that its trying to take control every time you do any sharp turn.
Of course you will need to use the same brand as your control system.
Personally I would junk the ENABLE 50?? and just fit 120A R-Net. And an R-Net gyro.
What is your MOTOR COMPENSATION set to? That also aids in preventing the chair being unstable (a little).
And you should set TURN ACCELERATION. MINIMUM TURN ACCELERATION. TURN DECELERATION. MINIMUM TURN DECELERATION (ALL 4) to 100.
Then you should set TURN SPEED to a low setting. To start with. And MINIMUM TURN SPEED ALSO TTO A LOW SETTING TOO.
GRADUALLY increase Motor Load Compensation in small steps at a time like 5mOhm. Or the chair can become dangerous and run away and be unstoppable.
Does that help?
It's very difficult to ride in a straight line, and any slip-up makes the rear end spin out, lol.
FelipeOliveira
Burgerman wrote:I might not be able to help.
But can have a look. You either need a gyro, or turn the seat around 180 degrees so its going the right way...
Front wheel drive is a (the) problem.
http://www.wheelchairdriver.com/gopro/unstable.mp4It's very difficult to ride in a straight line, and any slip-up makes the rear end spin out, lol.
FelipeOliveira
That is EXACTLY what I would expect to happen. That is because the mass (centre of mass, centre of gravity) and you, are all behind the drive wheels. That is quite literally physics in action. It creates an unstable chair. So any small turn is automatically increased/accelerated. Which then causes it to accelerate into an even tighter turn. And then again and you spin. The chair wants to go backwards.
Drive it in reverse and it will go straight...
If you take a manual push wheelchair. and then push it and release it, it will travel away in a straight line.
If you take a manual push wheelchair, and turn it around so its bigwheels are in the front and then push it away backwards, it will do EXACTLY what your chair does.
This is why I never ever want a front drive wheelchair. Here are your options:
1. Turn the seat around so the drive wheels are in the rear and the casters at the front! A rear drive chair. Now it will drive straight, and be stable.
If you dont want that:
2. You need to fit a GYRO like this: https://industrial.curtisswright.com/en ... yro-module
That will DETECT when the chair begins to swing out and use the motor power to correct it before it gets bad enough to feel. The problem is that while it works, with careful programming it feels horrible. You can feel that its trying to take control every time you do any sharp turn.
Personally I would junk the ENABLE 50?? and just fit 120A R-Net. And an R-Net gyro.
What is your MOTOR COMPENSATION set to? That also aids in preventing the chair being unstable (a little).
And you should set TURN ACCELERATION. MINIMUM TURN ACCELERATION. TURN DECELERATION. MINIMUM TURN DECELERATION (ALL 4) to 100.
Then you should set TURN SPEED to a low setting. To start with. And MINIMUM TURN SPEED ALSO TTO A LOW SETTING TOO.
GRADUALLY increase Motor Load Compensation in small steps at a time like 5mOhm. Or the chair can become dangerous and run away and be unstoppable.
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