Dave, Thanks very much. That fits with what I was looking at. For some reason I was thinking it was something fancier than that. dan --- In AVR-Chat@yahoogroups.com, "Dave Hylands" <dhylands@b...> wrote: > Hi Dan, > > Current sensing resistors are basically very low resistance, high > precision resistors, typically in the < 1 ohm range. > > By measuring the voltage drop across one of these, you can determine the > current going through it. > > For example, say a stepper motor is rated at 3.2V and 2.0A. You can > actually provide the stepper with a much high voltage, say 24V, and > monitor the current. When the current reaches 2.0A, then you cut the > voltage. When it drops a bit, you turn the voltage back on. So basically > you're performing PWM on the current. This is how "chopper" based > stepper drivers work. > > -- > Dave Hylands > Vancouver, BC, Canada > http://www.DaveHylands.com/ > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: dv7839 [mailto:danvernon@e...] > > Sent: Friday, April 02, 2004 10:49 AM > > To: AVR-Chat@yahoogroups.com > > Subject: [AVR-Chat] What is a current sensing resistor > > > > > > I hope this isn't too far off topic. I was doing some > > research for an > > AVR powered stepper motor driver design when I came across a > > reference > > to a current sensing resistor. Could someone please explain > > what this > > is, and why one might use it? > > > > thanks, > > dan > > > > > > > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > > > > > > > > > > > >
Message
Re: What is a current sensing resistor
2004-04-02 by dv7839
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