hshah8970
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How much current your motor need ? perhaps the current that it need , is higher than allowed value of your opamp , and hence , it's current limiter will work ( as hiccup ) and it can be the reason of this effect .then immediately slows down and stops.
Hi againi didn't know what inrush current was, as i'm new to dc motors and electronics
Hi HumzaFor the past few days, I've been struggling with my oscillating OPA549 opamp when I try to drive a simple DC motor with it.
Please help with your suggestions to solve this problem and possibly offer an alternative to the RC snubber that will resolve the issue. Thank you.
Humza.
The possibly misleading point with this thread is that the existence of oscillations hasn't been yet verified. OPA549 isn't particularly wide bandwidth, not more than 1 MHz. There may be an oscillation problem though, but many others as well.You can improve stability a great deal by reducing the feedback factor.
The possibly misleading point with this thread is that the existence of oscillations hasn't been yet verified. OPA549 isn't particularly wide bandwidth, not more than 1 MHz. There may be an oscillation problem though, but many others as well.
The opamp I'm using is OPA549 that has a maximum current limit of 10A thus the opamp's current limit is not an issue because the motor is drawing 5A at max. .
Apparently he does. It's the bad with cross posting... https://www.edaboard.com/threads/255149/Hshah8970, I suppose you are aware of the necessity to provide a resistor R(CL) to set the current limit capability?
For example R(CL)=7.5 kohms for a limit of Imax=5A .
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