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RC-Monster Admin
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Posts: 14,609
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Des Moines, IA
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02.28.2007, 01:13 AM
Actually, Rene told me he was talking about "Trancil diodes". I never heard of these, but it sure sounded like he was talking about zener or avalanche diodes to me. I did a search and came up with nothing. Have you heard of Trancil?
When a neon bulb conducts, isn't it still a relatively low current device since it's just ionizing a gas? If so, I wouldn't think it would have enough of a shunting effect...
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User replaceable parts were meant to be broken.
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Posts: 27
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Pennsylvania
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03.01.2007, 02:22 AM
I've never heard of a "Trancil" diode, but it is possible that it may just need translated.
Anyway, most high voltage spikes from collapsing motor fields (especially on sub 30 volt motors) can reach spikes of several hundered volts, but are extremely low current (In the micro-milliamp range). 99% of speed controls use FETS that over the years, the designers have come up with extremely effective ways to control output harmonics, spikes, saturation, etc. I still advocate the use of snubbers in any circuit where you control a magnetic coil. Any time you remove voltage that the mosfets don't have to deal with, you increase the reliability of the device.
Does TVS suppression do anything in our situation? Probably very little. Thousands of speed controls are in use every day without failure, but I use it on mine.
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RC-Monster Admin
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05.02.2007, 04:17 PM
Yeah, it's transil.. my bad.. it's a kind of an avalanche diode..
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RC-Monster Admin
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Posts: 14,609
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Des Moines, IA
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05.02.2007, 05:37 PM
Most FETs, especially ones for PWM motor applications use a reverse biased zener/trancil/avalanche diode to shunt that reverse polarity spike over a certain value to protect the FETs.
Off topic, but somewhat related, story:
I once had an unknown inductance coil that when used with a simple oscillator circuit powered from a 4 AA batteries produced over 1,000v from the collapsing magnetic field! Felt like a cattle fence! :036: I had it set up so it charged through a resistor over several seconds and then dump the voltage all at once to a set of pads outside a project enclosure. The best part is I put a sign on the box that said "Don't touch" and left it unattended on a table. You can imagine how many yelps I heard. :017:
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RC-Monster Dual Brushless
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Posts: 3,794
Join Date: May 2005
Location: georgia
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05.02.2007, 10:05 PM
ahhahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha thats funny, if i were there i'd be one of them
Work because i gotta, play because i wanna
People here hate Nitro, I love it. I start it, run it about 50 ft from me and it dies, I go after it. Perfect exercise
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RC-Monster Admin
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Posts: 14,609
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Des Moines, IA
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05.02.2007, 11:28 PM
It was pretty funny. Since it was at home, it was the kids doing the yelping. I would just say "The box TOLD you not to touch, so why did you?". So not only did they get zapped, I added insult to injury by scolding them for it. :)
Perfectly safe though since the current was miniscule...
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RC-Monster Carbon Fiber
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Posts: 96
Join Date: May 2007
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05.13.2007, 11:48 PM
talking bout smoking a mm controller...would it be safer to run a ubec or simply put a RX pack with the internal bec disabled?
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RC-Monster Admin
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Des Moines, IA
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05.13.2007, 11:52 PM
If over 2s/6 cells; yes. Although, most linear regulators simply shut down when they get too hot.
Welcome to the forums BTW!
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