op-amp to drive +/-10V analog servo from old +/-5V controller
Hi all,
I am trying to control a +/-10V analog servo drive from a +/-5V controller output. The problem is that the servo is running only at half the speed.
My searching lead me to the use of a single supply rail-to-rail operational amplifier. But I'm not an electronist and couldn't find a ready to build solution/schematic.
Here is an IC, OP295, that I can get locally. Could I use it for my application?
Has anyone here done this before and could advise me further?
Any help will be really appreciated.
Re: op-amp to drive +/-10V analog servo from old +/-5V controller
If you want +-10v output then you will need a split rail op-amp and a plus-minus power supply. Is that a problem?
The circuit requires only 2 resistors and a couple of decoupling capacitors for luck.
Re: op-amp to drive +/-10V analog servo from old +/-5V controller
Thanks for your reply!
My only problem is that I need to build it with the components that are available locally. I need this thing asap. No matter how expensive.
Re: op-amp to drive +/-10V analog servo from old +/-5V controller
If you can solder, and have suitably sized iron and solder, then together with a bit of vero board (or whatever breadboard solutions you can find locally) then it's a pretty straight-forward build. Have a look at http://electronics-course.com/non-inverting-amplifier for the schematic you need (Robin's answer is correct - you'll need a couple of resistors - choose any value 1k-10k for Rf and Rg (but they must be the same as each other) - see equation (8).
Robin is also correct with the split rail supply requirement - see if you can find a DC-DC converter with a suitable input voltage for what you have available and +/- 12V through +/-15V output.
Re: op-amp to drive +/-10V analog servo from old +/-5V controller
Thanks Doddy!
Now it is a bit more clear.
Luckily I found out there is a +/-12V power output from the servo drive. :thumsup:
Do I need two op-amps one for positive and one for negative? Should I look for any characteristics of the chips as I found dozens of them... Do I need any capacitors in addiction to the identical value resistors?
Re: op-amp to drive +/-10V analog servo from old +/-5V controller
If you're driving a single servo (I don't know the interface to these, but I'm going off your post) - and the drive is +/-10v wrt a common ground, then you need only one non-inverting amplifier.
Capacitors - pick a couple of 100nF ceramic capacitors and locate them close to the op-amp, between positive&ground, and between negative&ground.
Regarding which op-amp - how quickly will the signal change?, the one you originally picked had, I think, a gain/bandwidth product of a pretty miserly 75kHz, but if the signal is just driving an axis then I that'd be absolutely fine. If it was driving a spindle then it should still okay given the low gain you're looking at.
Re: op-amp to drive +/-10V analog servo from old +/-5V controller
Also the gain is only 2 (ratio of feed back resistor to input resistor) so the needed gain / bandwidth is fairly modest as well
Re: op-amp to drive +/-10V analog servo from old +/-5V controller
I don't think we need worry about the slew rate :uncomfortableness:
Re: op-amp to drive +/-10V analog servo from old +/-5V controller
I have selected some of the available op-amps but I cannot decide. I dunno why are so many of them... :single_eye:
They are ordered by price with the expensive first: LM301; LT1001CN8; LF442CN; NJM4580; BA15218; LF356N; UA747-14P; MC33078P; NE5534N; LM318N08; NJM4580L.
I do not get how I use only one op-amp if I have +5V and -5V input and I need +10V and -10V output? I see in the schematic only one input and one output plus ground.
Re: op-amp to drive +/-10V analog servo from old +/-5V controller
This goes back to my previous reply where I presented an assumption that your servo only needs a signal, variable from -10V to +10v with respect to a common ground. So, one signal, capable of any voltage between -10V..+10V. For that, a single Op-Amp, the output of which is connected to the servo, and the other servo input connected to ground.
It's possible, though without any literature we have no means to corroborate, that the servo requires a differential drive - with one signal increasing from 0..+10V, whilst the other input decreases from 0..-10V, in which case you certainly would need 2 op-amps, or a specialised op-amp that provides the differential drive. Such a signalling regime is good for noise immunity.
Can you offer any of the literature that you have for the servo just so we can be certain of the advice offered?