Sunday, July 26, 2009

Servomechanisms and their application areas


In many applications, servomechanisms allow high-powered devices to be controlled by signals from devices of much lower power. The operation of the high-powered device results from a signal (called the error, or difference, signal) generated from a comparison of the desired position of the high-powered device with its actual position. The ratio between the power of the control signal and that of the device controlled can be on the order of billions to one.

All servomechanisms have at least these basic components:

  • a controlled device,
  • a command device,
  • an error detector,
  • a comparator,
  • a device to perform any necessary error corrections (the servomotor).

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In the controlled device, that which is being regulated is usually the position. This device must, therefore, have some means of generating a signal (such as a voltage), that represents its current position, which is send to the feedback elements. These elements generate a signal called the feedback signal, which is in a form which is comparable with the input. Now, the comparator compares the two signals and sends the change in the two values as the error to the error detector. Now, this error detector sends a signal to the command device which on the nature of the signal drives the servo motor, which repositions the controlled device.

Applications

Servomechanisms were first used in gun laying (aiming), military fire-control and marine-navigation equipment. Today, applications of servomechanisms include their use in

  • Automatic machine tools
  • Satellite-tracking antennas
  • Celestial-tracking systems on telescopes
  • Automatic navigation systems
  • Antiaircraft-gun control systems
  • Roll stabilization of ships
  • Radar servo tracking systems

Radar Servo Tracking System

The purpose of a tracking system is to determine the location or direction of a target on a near-continuous basis. An ideal tracking system would maintain contact and constantly update the target’s bearing (azimuth), range and elevation. The output of the tracking system can be sent to a fire control system, which stores the information and derives the target’s motion and therefore its future position.

In a servo tracking system, the radar antenna is initially trained on a target after which it automatically remains pointed at the target as it follows its motion. Furthermore, the system provides continuous position information to the operator and possibly to a fire control system. The antenna is rotated by a motor which provides a negative position feedback signal to a controller.

The commanded input signal is the desired azimuth of the antenna. The error signal drives the motor to reposition the antenna until the position feedback indicates the antenna is at the desired azimuth, at which point the error signal is zero and the motor stops. This servo-mechanism can be combined with a tracker, which determines the azimuth as the target, which the system now uses as the input.

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Here, the input comes from the tracker. The combination is called a radar servo-tracking system. The tracker takes the return signal and position information and determines the location of the target.

References:

www.britannica.com

www.fas.org

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